Grants announced for 33 Indiana Lake and River Enhancement (LARE) projects

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DNR News            

Division of Fish & Wildlife 

 


 

Indiana Department of Natural Resources

402 W. Washington St.

Indianapolis, IN 46204-2748

 

For immediate release: Aug. 2, 2016

 

Grants announced for 33 Indiana Lake and River Enhancement (LARE) projects

New grants for the care of Indiana's water bodies totaling $1,296,000 have been awarded through the Lake and River Enhancement (LARE) program in the DNR Division of Fish & Wildlife.

The grants, awarded by DNR director Cameron Clark, fund 33 projects in 25 counties, encompassing watersheds of 36 lakes and streams.

Local sponsors submit applications for LARE assistance and commit to sharing a portion of the total cost. DNR's share comes from a fee paid annually by boat owners when registering their boats with the Bureau of Motor Vehicles.

The new grants include several projects to control erosion and enhance aquatic habitat on rivers and lakes. Thirteen grants for watershed land treatment were awarded to specific County Soil and Water Conservation Districts (SWCDs) to complement their efforts with local landowners to reduce the amount of sediment and nutrient runoff. Preventing these pollutants from entering water is more economical and effective than trying to remove them from lakes and streams.

Several projects target watersheds that have received recent national attention. Installing measures to reduce phosphorous on Indiana lands will help to reduce the amount of phosphorus that enters the western Lake Erie basin and Lake Michigan. In 2014, Toledo, Ohio residents experienced water shortages due to toxic algae blooms in Lake Erie caused in part by phosphorous from Indiana and Ohio. Other projects in the Wabash River and Ohio River drainage are in areas that have been highlighted as important watersheds to reduce Gulf Hypoxia (the Gulf of Mexico dead zone).

Other projects include creating habitat elements such as riffles and pools, stream meanders, and wetlands that will provide shelter for fish and other aquatic organisms. Such enhancements encourage biological diversity in the streams and more opportunities for game fish, mussels, amphibians, turtles and other aquatic organisms to thrive.

Some of the projects will use bio-engineering techniques to address bank erosion on rivers and lakes. These techniques use glacial stone, native plantings and fiber mats instead of concrete or riprap.  

Two projects will remove obsolete low-head dams on Little River and the Tippecanoe River. Removing dams that serve no current purpose improves stream habitat and allows fish and other aquatic animals to reconnect to upstream areas. Removing dams also eliminates recreational hazards. Multiple drownings occur at low-head dams throughout the country each year.

“We are pleased to partner with sponsoring organizations to improve aquatic habitat, reduce erosion and sedimentation, and create improved recreational opportunities for boating and fishing,” said Mark Reiter, director of DNR Fish & Wildlife. “This is a win-win for the citizens of Indiana and is funded largely by those who enjoy water resources through their annual boat registrations.”

The list of projects by water body, county, project and grant award:

 

August 2016 LARE Grant Awards

Water Body (County)

Project

Grant Award

Beauty Creek (Porter)

Engineering feasibility of channel erosion control

$52,000

Blue River (Washington)

Watershed land treatment

$30,000

Cedar Creek (DeKalb)

Watershed land treatment

$26,000

Deep River (Lake)

Engineering feasibility study of dam removal

$25,000

Driftwood River (Bartholomew)

Watershed land treatment

$30,000

Eagle Creek (Boone)

Streambank stabilization

$100,000

Eel River (Wabash)

Watershed land treatment

$45,000

Fox Lake (Steuben)

Bank stabilization

$25,000

Iroquois River and Carpenter Creek (Jasper)

Watershed land treatment

$30,000

Lake Galbraith (Marshall)

Water quality monitoring

$15,000

Little River (Huntington)

Dam removal

$80,000

Loefler and Scott ditches (Gibson)

Watershed land treatment

$10,000

Metz Lateral (Big Creek) (Posey)

Streambank stabilization

$15,000

Mississinewa River (Grant)

Design for streambank stabilization

$20,000

Mississinewa River (Delaware and Randolph)

Watershed land treatment

$25,000

Ohio River (Posey)

Engineering feasibility for streambank stabilization

$20,000

Pigeon Creek (Gibson)

Water quality monitoring

$8,000

Pretty Lake (LaGrange)

Water quality monitoring

$12,000

Silver Creek, Neiman Creek, Loon Creek and Wabash River (Wabash)

Watershed diagnostic study

$38,000

Spy Run Creek (Allen)

Stream habitat enhancement

$100,000

St. Mary’s River (Allen)

Streambank stabilization

$100,000

Sugar Creek (Boone)

Watershed land treatment

$45,000

Sugar Creek (Clinton)

Watershed land treatment

$45,000

Tippecanoe River (Kosciusko)

Dam removal

$40,000

Trail Creek (LaPorte)

 streambank stabilization

$64,000

Turkey Creek (Kosciusko)

Design for channel erosion control

$20,000

Turtle Creek (Sullivan)

Watershed land treatment

$30,000

Upper Tippecanoe River (Kosciusko)

Watershed land treatment

$45,000

Upper Tippecanoe River (Whitley)

Watershed land treatment

$45,000

Veale, Aikman and Hawkins creeks (Daviess)

Watershed land treatment

$45,000

Walnut Creek (Grant and Blackford)

Engineering feasibility for streambank stabilization

$20,000

Webster Lake (Kosciusko)

Bank stabilization on Kline Island

$41,000

Yellow River (Marshall)

Design for streambank stabilization

$50,000

Total = $ 1,296,000

 

To view all DNR news releases, please see dnr.IN.gov.

 

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Media contact: Greg Biberdorf, LARE program supervisor, DNR Division of Fish & Wildlife, (317) 233-1484, lare@dnr.IN.gov.