Community Corner

MCWD Offers Cash Grants to Richfield Homeowners to Protect Local Water Resources

The Minnehaha Creek Watershed District launches a new grant program this spring for people who want to beautify their property and benefit the environment at the same time.

The Minnehaha Creek Watershed District (MCWD) has kicked off a new program for Richfield and other area residents that could cover—with cash—up to half of the cost of many home landscape projects.

Polluted stormwater runoff is the biggest water quality problem in the city and in the state. The hope is that this program will encourage local homeowners to implement green initiatives in their homes’ landscapes, ultimately protecting local water resources.

“There is a real need to capture this runoff before it pollutes our valuable natural resources,” said Aldis Kurmis, the district's cost share specialist.  “We’re hoping these new grants will be an incentive for people to take action right in their own backyard.”

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In a natural environment, most rainwater soaks into the ground or is captured by trees or other plants. But in developed areas, like Richfield, rainwater runs off roads, parking lots and rooftops, carrying dirt, fertilizer, pesticides and other harmful material into lakes, streams and wetlands. 

According to the district, “The poor water quality that results from stormwater runoff affects recreation, fish and wildlife, and reduces property values near affected lakes and streams.”

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Grant-eligible home improvement projects that prevent this runoff from occurring include raingardens, which filter stormwater, and also pervious sidewalk and driveway pavement, which allows rain to pass through the material to a drainage system below. Cash grants from this new program would pay up to 50 percent of the cost for these kinds of projects—capping at $2,500 maximum per project. 

“It’s going to benefit everyone,” Watershed District Communications Director Telly Mamayek told Patch. “You don’t necessarily have to live on [a lake]."

“There are several options people can take to enhance their property and help the environment at the same time,” Kurmis added.

The total grant money available for locals under the Watershed District’s Stormwater BMP and Shoreline/Streambank Stabilization Cost Share program is about $265,000. Some of Richfield falls within the Minnehaha Creek Watershed District—a geographic area encompassing 181 square miles, including Minnehaha Creek, Lake Minnetonka, the Minneapolis Chain of Lakes and Minnehaha Falls. The group is funded by local taxpayers.  

For more information on the Stormwater BMP and Shoreline/Streambank Stabilization Cost Share program, contact the district's Cost Share Specialist Aldis Kurmis at 952-641 4523 or akurmis@minnehahacreek.org.


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