All Projects

39892 Results for
Recipient
Wenck Associates, Inc.
2011 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$146,988
Fund Source

This project will develop a watershed restoration plan that provides quantitative pollutant load reduction estimates and a set of pollutant reduction and watershed management strategies to achieve water quality standards for all impairments within the watershed. It will also an important framework for civic and citizen engagement and communication, which will contribute to long-term public participation in surface water protection and restoration activities throughout the watershed.

Anoka
Carver
Dakota
Hennepin
Ramsey
Sherburne
Washington
Wright
Recipient
RESPEC
2016 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$79,972
Fund Source

The goal of this project is to calibrate, and validate three watershed models using the Hydrological Simulation Program FORTRAN (HSPF) model. The contractor will produce HSPF watershed models that can be further developed to provide information to support conventional parameter TMDLs. The contractor will clearly demonstrate that the models generate predicted output timeseries for hydrology, sediment, nutrients, and dissolved oxygen which are consistent with available sets of observed data.

Aitkin
Carlton
Itasca
Kanabec
Mille Lacs
Pine
Recipient
Middle Fork River Watershed District
2025 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$31,636
Fund Source

This project will conduct water chemistry monitoring at two subwatershed sites based on flow conditions and targeting runoff events. The data collected will be submitted to the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) and used in the FLUX32 model for calculating pollutant loads.

Meeker
Stearns
Recipient
Upper Sioux Community
2024 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$966,000
Fund Source

The 2,165 acres of the Upper Sioux Indian Community are impacted by invasive species and are heavily infested with invasive buckthorn. The Tribe is requesting funds to restore and enhance 144 acres of oak savanna, floodplain forest, forested bluff lands, and granite outcroppings on tribal lands. Activities include buckthorn removal and installation and enhancement of native and culturally significant plants.

Yellow Medicine
Recipient
Upper Sioux Community
2024 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$80,750

The three (3) long-range goals of the Upper Sioux Community regarding the preservation and continuation of the Dakota langauge and culture are directly tied to the Mission Statement adopted in 1996 and delineated in the 2008 Dakota Language Revitalization Tribal Resoulution that promises to: "1) [m]ake Dakota Language revitalization the highest priority 2)... implement all strategies to revive the Dakota language; and 3)... take necessary steps to raise up a new generation of speakers."

Yellow Medicine
Recipient
Friends of the Falls
2021 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$2,800,000

Acquire, preserve, and improve land on the Central Riverfront in Minneapolis abutting the Upper Lock (but not the Lock structure itself) for recreation, conservation, natural restoration, and education.

Recipient
Wilderness Inquiry
2015 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,093,000

There has been a sharp decline in participation in outdoor recreation and education amongst youth, particularly in urban areas. Some argue that youth who have meaningful outdoor education experiences are more likely to become engaged in environmental stewardship and invested in outdoor resources as adults.

Statewide
Recipient
Wilderness Inquiry
2011 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$557,000

PROJECT OVERVIEW

Anoka
Benton
Carver
Chisago
Crow Wing
Dakota
Hennepin
Isanti
Kanabec
McLeod
Mille Lacs
Morrison
Ramsey
Scott
Sherburne
Sibley
Washington
Wright
Recipient
Lake SWCD
2017 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$71,000
Fund Source

This project is designed to complete an inventory and assessment of existing stormwater infrastructure in the cities of Two Harbors and Silver including mapping urban surface and sub-surface storm water flow to determine flow paths, pour points, and areas of limited storm water infrastructural capacity. The results of this assessment will be an assessment with prioritized and targeted opportunities for municipal infrastructure retrofits or best management practice installation on both public and private land.

Lake
Recipient
Friends of the Mississippi River
2022 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$213,000

Three urban natural areas, including an iconic Native American cultural site, will be restored to native prairie and forest, with a focus on important pollinator and culturally significant native plants.

Recipient
Upper MN Valley Regional Development Commission
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$6,980

The project included documenting all existing interpretive panels and markers of the U.S. - Dakota War in the MN River Valley and researching potential sites for new interpretive panels or markers. The end result is a written document with an inventory of existing marked U.S. - Dakota War sites in the MN River Valley, research of unmarked sites and an overall strategy of which sites could be marked to better tell the story. The report will provides guidance in telling a more complete story of the U.S. - Dakota War of 1862 through interpretive markers.

Swift
Recipient
Minnesota Department of Agriculture
2019 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$250,000

Establish and monitor 120 acres of intermediate wheatgrass (Kernza), a new perennial grain crop, in vulnerable wellhead protection regions of Minnesota to profitability reduce nitrate leaching to drinking water.

Statewide
Recipient
Scott Watershed Management Organization
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$34,500
Fund Source

Deteriorating water quality of Sand Creek and some of its tributaries are.linked to inorganic sediment from field erosion and channel instability. This project continues a successful 2010 Clean Water Fund effort that addresses turbidity and sediment by targeting select subwatersheds for the conversion of row crops to native grasses.

Scott
Recipient
Nicollet County Soil and Water Conservation District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$86,500
Fund Source

This project aims to significantly reduce the amount of sediment transfer from eroding bluff areas to Seven Mile Creek during spring snowmelt and rain events throughout the year. This will be accomplished by installing and maintaining drop structures and reinforcing the existing spalsh pool at the outlet pipe without destabilizing the surrounding bluffs. When applied in tandem, this project will reduce the peak flow rate to ravine areas while shielding and protecting the bluff itself from eroding.

Nicollet
Recipient
Swift SWCD
2023 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$285,000
Fund Source

Nitrate levels in the water supply for the city of Benson have slowly but steadily been increasing since 2012. This project aims to work with the landowners surrounding the Drinking Water Supply Management Areas (DWSMA's) for Benson and Appleton in Swift County to reduce or eliminate the amount of nitrate entering these water supplies. Proven and effective strategies will be implemented to achieve the goals set forth in this grant.

Swift
Recipient
U.S. Geological Survey
2016 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$455,000
Blue Earth
Carver
Dakota
Goodhue
Hennepin
Le Sueur
Nicollet
Ramsey
Scott
Sibley
Wabasha
Washington
Recipient
Saint Mary's University of Minnesota
2015 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$8,800
To hire a qualified archaeologist to conduct a survey in an attempt to locate the lost Fort L'Huillier.
Blue Earth
Recipient
Olmsted SWCD
2015 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$400,000
Fund Source

The South Branch of Cascade Creek Turbidity Reduction Project will construct three wetland retention structures within the upper half of the watershed for water quality improvement including sediment reduction, flood attenuation and wildlife habitat improvement. The project will construct wetland basins on the Meadow Lake Golf Course to provide water quality improvement on a previously untreated branch that flows into the upper end of the stream channel restoration project.

Olmsted
Recipient
Crow Wing County
2015 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$85,000
Fund Source

Crow Wing County is pursuing this grant to continue this proven community and landowner outreach campaign by developing new water planning tools and using print and social media strategies to effect a positive change in our watersheds. The County believes that landowners want to do the right thing and has the data to show that when doing the right thing can be presented in customer-focused, fact-driven, easy-to-understand format, they get engaged and conservation gets done!

Crow Wing
Recipient
Becker SWCD
2015 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$398,000
Fund Source

A joint effort of Becker and Clay Soil and Water Conservation District, the Buffalo Red Shallow Lakes and Mainstem Improvement Strategy will reduce nutrient and sediment delivery to 12 impaired lakes and impaired reaches of the Buffalo River through a targeted and prioritized approach to the implementation of Best Management Practices (BMPs). Numerous models have been combined with local knowledge to identify chief sources of constituents in the watershed and to isolate and prioritize implementation sites demonstrating the most significant gains in water quality.

Becker
Clay
Recipient
30,000 Feet
2024 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$72,000

30,000 feet will serve Over 600 youth and 20 community artist between FY 24 and 25 will participate in arts residencies rooted in African American History and Culture.
some of the art residencies will include:

Ramsey
Recipient
United Senior Lao-American Association (USLAA)
2022 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$20,000

Conservation of culture including art and local wisdom is one of the main missions of our organization. We operate in promoting and capturing values to create pride in Lao culture and identity, as well as create awareness of morality to the community as well. Our organization encourages and supports all cultures to develop, preserve and pass on the activities that we as an organization help operate with communities and outside agencies.

Statewide
Anoka
Dakota
Hennepin
Ramsey
Scott
Statewide
Anoka
Carver
Dakota
Hennepin
Ramsey
Scott
Sherburne
Recipient
Maritime Heritage Minnesota
2018 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$9,998

To edit the USS Essex log books in order to make them more publicly accessible.

St. Louis
Recipient
Maritime Heritage Minnesota
2011 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$6,990

Editing/Transcription is the second of three projects documenting and preserving the Maritime Heritage Minnesota's historical/archaeological investigation and assessment of the USS Essex Shipwreck, listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Five out of twenty-five of the vessel's previously digitized log books were edited, combined into .pdf e-books, transcribed and processed which included the creation of metadata for the digital images. The information resulting from this project is available for public access on Internet Archive.

Ramsey
Recipient
Maritime Heritage Minnesota
2011 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$6,462

As a pilot project  for the grantee, Maritime Heritage Minnesota (MHS) the goal was to digitalize 6-10 of the 62 known log books of the USS Essex log books held at the National Archives and Records Administration and the United States Naval Academy.

After twelve days not only did they digital the entirety of the 62 log books but they were able to digitalize a private journal of a USS Essex sailor as well as a hand written journal of a sailor who served on her maiden voyage within the time allotted for the project (101 hours). In total 21,499 images were produced. 

Ramsey
Recipient
Maritime Heritage Minnesota
2015 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$9,996
To digitize part of a collection of USS Essex log books in order to broaden public accessibility.
St. Louis
Recipient
Maritime Heritage Minnesota
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$6,990
To prepare RAW digital images of log books from the USS Essex, a shipwreck listed in the National Register of Historic Places, for public access via the Internet.
St. Louis
Recipient
City of Savage
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$130,000
Fund Source

The Credit River runs the entire length of the City of Savage before discharging to the Minnesota River. Both the Credit and Minnesota Rivers have been identified as not meeting state water quality standards for turbidity. A ravine running from Utica Avenue, east a distance of 2,600 feet to the Credit River, receives stormwater from more than 1,700 acres of the City. The long term and often very high flows of stormwater have resulted in significant erosion of the stream banks.

Scott
Recipient
U of MN - WCROC
2017 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$475,000
Statewide
Recipient
Ramsey County
2022 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$510,700
Fund Source

Design, engineering, and initiate construction of resilient site and trail improvements in the Snail-Grass section of Vadnais-Snail Lake Regional Park consisting of design, engineering, construction, contingencies, site/trail/utility improvements, pedestrian access and trail connections, playground modifications, site amenities, natural resource restoration, landscaping, signage and wayfinding.

Recipient
Ramsey County
2023 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,342,341
Fund Source

Supplement existing grant SG-22P4-06-06 for design, engineering and resilient site and trail improvements in the Snail-Grass section of Vadnais-Snail Lakes Regional Park consisting of design, engineering, construction, contingencies, site/trail/utility improvements pedestrian access and trail connections, site amenities, stormwater management, natural resource restoration, landscaping, signage, and wayfinding.

Recipient
Ramsey County
2020 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$209,288
Fund Source

Re-design and reconstruct park features and trail routes in Vadnais-Snail Lakes Regional Park. Redevelop the beach area so it is useful with water at varying elevations; improve the beach building; add/improve pedestrian connections, parking, site amenities, signage, stormwater and landscaping

Ramsey
Recipient
Valley Branch WD
2019 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$405,000
Fund Source

This project will continue to protect and improve Valley Creek, a world-class trout stream located in the Valley Branch Watershed District. Stabilizing Ravine 2E, which conveys runoff from a 150-acre watershed directly into the main stem of Valley Creek, will prevent 7 tons of sediment from depositing in the creek and silting over trout spawning sites on an annual basis. It will also reduce the annual total phosphorus load to Valley Creek and the nutrient-impaired Lake St. Croix by 51 pounds per year.

Washington
Recipient
Washington Conservation District
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$9,244
Fund Source

This project will collect up to one year of water quality and stream flow information on Kelle’s Coulee to aid in the development of the Valley Branch Watershed District Restoration and Protection study. The information being collected by the Washington Conservation District will be used in developing the models necessary to complete the TMDL for Kelle’s Coulee.

Anoka
Chisago
Isanti
Pine
Ramsey
Washington
Recipient
Barr Engineering-Minneapolis
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$149,101
Fund Source

Within the Valley Branch Watershed District (VBWD), there 47 Minnesota Department of Natural Resoruces (MN DNR)-protected basins with surface areas larger than 10 acres and three DNR-protected streams. Only Sunfish Lake is currently on MPCA’s 303(d) Impaired Waters List for aquatic recreation due to excessive nutrients. However, Bay Lake, Eagle Point Lake, Downs Lake, Goose Lake, Kramer Pond, and Echo Lake are on the draft 2012 Minnesota 303(d) Impaired Waters List for aquatic recreation due to excessive nutrients, and Kelle’s Coulee is on the draft 2012 list due to bacteria.

Ramsey
Washington
Recipient
Valley Branch Watershed District
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$453,300
Fund Source

Valley Creek is one of only a few high-quality, naturally reproducing trout streams in the Twin Cities. Stormwater runoff, which causes bank erosion and carries excessive sediment and contaminants into the creek poses the largest threat to this stream and to the phosphorus-impaired Lake St. Croix. Overall, two projects are expected to reduce sediment delivery to Valley Creek by 36 tons per year. The reduction in sediment load will also prevent 31 pounds of phosphorus, per year, from entering Valley Creek and Lake St. Croix.

Washington
Recipient
Valley Branch WD
2024 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$462,000
Fund Source
Washington
Recipient
Minnesota Land Trust, Washington County, Belwin Conservancy, MN Trout Unlimited and Valley Branch Watershed District
2011 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$1,245,000
Fund Source

This program seeks to permanently protect, restore and enhance priority lands within the watershed of Valley Creek, a coldwater fishery that flows directly into the St. Croix River. We propose to accomplish this protection by acquiring land and conservation easements and restoring the riparian woodlands, prairies, oak savannas, and in-stream areas that provide significant habitat for fish and other wildlife.

Washington
Partners: Carleton College and Veblen Farmstead. Preservation work at the Thorstein Veblen Farmstead National Historic Landmark, near Nerstrand, Rice County, Minnesota, will provide urgently needed stabilization and preservation of three outbuildings at the farmstead, including the original small barn, the large hay barn and the granary.The farmstead is a rare site that preserves and illustrates the pioneering immigrant experience on the prairie. People from across the country and from overseas have visited the property over the past several years.
Statewide
Recipient
Rice County Historical Society
2011 Fiscal Year Funding Amount
$10,000
To prepare a Historic Structures Report for the Thorstein Veblen Farmstead, a National Historic Landmark near Nerstrand.
Rice