Ravalli Republic Online
http://www.ravallinews.com/articles/2004/01/08/news/news03.txt
Feds offer $7.1 million for private
conservation
By BUDDY SMITH Staff
Reporter
The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service has a $7.1 million pie for
private lands conservation, and landowners and
their partners can seek a slice of the funding
through March 8.
The federal government this week put out the call
for proposals for funding for "on-the-ground"
conservation efforts that benefit imperiled
species.
In its second year, the Private Stewardship Grants
Program last May funded 113 grants worth $9.4
million to individuals and groups to take on
conservation projects for endangered, threatened
and other at-risk species on private lands in 43
states.
In Montana and neighboring states, five projects
last year ranged from conserving Yellowstone
cutthroat trout to developing an outdoor captive
breeding program and long-term habitat for
trumpeter swans.
A ranch in Hawaii
used a grant to help protect endangered species by
improving habitat while reducing threats posed by
invasive species; groups and individuals in Idaho
helped restore Teton River fish habitat on private
lands, for instance.
"Most imperiled species do occur on private land,
so this is an incentive program for private
landowners to conserve the habitat and the species
that live there," said Diane Katzenberger, Fish
and Wildlife Service regional spokeswoman.
It does so by providing a partnership between
citizens and the federal government, she said.
Landowners and their partners may submit funding
proposals directly to the Fish and Wildlife
Service. The deadline to apply is March 8, and
agency spokesman Mitch Snow on Wednesday said the
funding could be sought by a variety of
individuals or partner organizations for voluntary
efforts on private lands.
"It's everything - from Scout Troops to folks like
the local chapter of Ducks Unlimited or the Izaak
Walton League. There's a huge range of groups," he
said.
The cost-share program exemplifies President
Bush's cooperative conservation initiatives,
Interior Department Secretary Gale Norton said in
a release.
Officials said the private stewardship grants
encourage and support landowners and their
partners to design and carry out species
conservation and habitat protection on private
lands. Such grant programs also put more money in
the hands of local citizens and organizations for
conservation.
"I would say it represents an increased initiative
to do what folks have recognized for several years
as probably the most effective way of getting
things done," Snow said.
Individuals and groups engaged in voluntary
conservation efforts on private lands that benefit
imperiled species, including federally listed
endangered or threatened species and other at-risk
species, compete for the federal grants.
"It's not entirely federal funding; there has to
be some local funding involved," Snow said.
President Bush proposed the private stewardship
program in a speech at Lake Tahoe, in June 2000,
when he was still Texas governor, according to the
Fish and Wildlife Service.