EPA Awards Over $11 million for Projects Promoting a Healthy and Resilient Gulf of Mexico Watershed

EPA Awards Over $11 million for Projects Promoting a Healthy and Resilient Gulf of Mexico Watershed

Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced over $11 million in grant funding for projects promoting a Healthy and Resilient Gulf of Mexico watershed. These awards will improve water quality, habitat, community resilience, and environmental education in the Gulf of Mexico watershed. A total of 26 projects were awarded in three EPA regions ( Region 4: 14 projects, Region 6: 11 projects, and Region 7: one project).

“EPA is very excited to recognize all of the projects across the Southeast promoting a healthy and resilient Gulf Coast for this year,” said EPA Region 4 Administrator Daniel Blackman. “From advanced contaminant tracking in Coastal Alabama to pollution source reduction at public places in Tennessee, these projects will go a long way toward improving community health and the environment across the Gulf of Mexico watershed.”

“We’re proud to recognize the Mississippi River Cities and Towns Initiative’s important efforts to increase water quality along the entire Mississippi River corridor by reducing pollution,” said EPA Region 7 Administrator Meg McCollister. “EPA’s decision to expand the Gulf of Mexico watershed to include our Region 7 states is a critical step to tackling the issue of marine litter. The community-driven work to reduce trash that will be supported by this grant will positively affect not only our local Midwestern environments, but also downstream communities all the way to the Gulf of Mexico.”

2022 Promoting Healthy & Resilient Gulf of Mexico Projects:

Region 4

Alabama 

University of Alabama $480,011 - Investigating sources of fecal pollution in the Mobile River Basin

University of South Alabama $498,144 - Advanced microbial source tracking to inform community health in coastal Alabama

The Nature Conservancy $499,993 - Mapping Bayou La Batre Stormwater for Community Resilience

The Nature Conservancy $499,914 - Building the Northern Gulf's Transportation Hub Resilience

Florida 

University of South Florida $446,442 - Improving Community Health through Microbial Source Tracking

Eckerd College $499,638 - Communities Count: Single-Use Plastic Data to Change Policy

City of Fort Myers $87,640 - City of Fort Myers Trash-Free Waters Program

City of Tampa $500,000 - Trash Free Tampa Bay

County of Santa Rosa $499,440 - Demonstration of innovative green stormwater infrastructure practices to address and improve impaired waters within the Pensacola Bay Watershed

Mississippi

Mississippi State University $499,478 - Incentivizing and empowering communities to reduce litter

MS Dept of Marine Resources $487,197 - Stormwater System Resilience through Green Infrastructure

Mississippi State University $299,881 - Green & Resilient Infrastructure Technical Skills (GRITS) Program

Mississippi State University $299,860 - Plan-It Marsh & Dunes: Advancing Career Skills & Outreach Education

Tennessee

Clean Memphis Organization $496,052 - Targeted Source Reduction: Public Schools & Public Places in Memphis

Region 6

Louisiana

Louisiana State University (LSU) $497,659 - MST and UV-LEDs to Mitigate Fecal Contamination in LA Rivers

LSU $499,582- A Multi-Pronged Approach to Trash Free Watersheds in Baton Rouge

Sustaining Our Urban Landscape $501,723- Building Community Resilience in Pontchartrain Park

Angela Chalk $342,856- Advancing GI in Communities of Color: The N Claiborne Zero Project

Mary Queen of Viet Nam Community Development $496,646- Village De L’Est Environmental Resilience with Green Infrastructure

EcoRise Youth Innovations $295,994- Building a Healthy, Resilient Louisiana

Texas

Texas A&M University - Corpus Christi $494,348 - Improving Community Health: MST and QMRA on the Texas Coast

University of Houston - Clear Lake $474,682 - Metagenomics for Microbial Source Tracking in Galveston Bay

Coastal Bend Bays and Estuaries Program Inc. $406,377- Up2U PLUS: Using an Empowering Anti-litter Message to Prevent Dumping

Lamar University $448,625- Conjunctive deployment of distributed stormwater infiltration and Bioretention infrastructures to mitigate flooding and related non-point source pollution in Beaumont and Port Arthur, Texas

Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service $297,079- Green Infrastructure for Texas High School Intern Program

Region 7

Missouri

Mississippi Rivers Cities and Towns Initiative $499,757- A Community Driven Approach to Trash Free Waters in St. Louis

Original source can be found here.

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