Department of Ecology News Release - January 30, 2020
Updated: March 29, 2020

$22 million in grants available for streamflow restoration projects

Newaukum River in the Upper Chehalis watershed

OLYMPIA  – 

 

UPDATE: Ecology has extended the application deadline for the Streamflow Restoration competitive grants. Applications are now due by 5 p.m. on April 30, 2020. For additional details about the extension and more information on applying for these grants, please visit our website

Up to $22 million in grants is now available for projects that will protect rivers and streams while providing water for rural homes in Washington. The Washington Department of Ecology is accepting applications as part of its streamflow restoration competitive grant program.

The grant funding is intended for water storage projects, fish habitat improvements, water rights acquisitions, or improvements in water management and infrastructure.

“We funded some really strong projects in our first year, and we’re looking forward to seeing what applications are submitted this time,” said Vanessa Brinkhuis, Ecology’s streamflow restoration planner. “We’re really looking for projects that will measurably improve streamflows.”

Funding is open to projects across the state, but priority will be given to projects based in watersheds and areas specified in the 2018 Streamflow Restoration law.

Eligible applicants are limited to tribal governments, public entities, and nonprofit organizations within Washington. Applications are due by 5 p.m. March 31.

This is the second year of grant funding. The Legislature intends to authorize $300 million for streamflow restoration projects over 15 years. In 2019, Ecology awarded $20 million to 16 projects in 11 watersheds. The grants are helping state and local agencies, tribal governments, and nonprofit organizations put local plans and projects into action.

 

Additional background

In January 2018, the Legislature passed the Streamflow Restoration law that helps restore streamflows to levels necessary to support robust, healthy, and sustainable salmon populations while providing water for homes in rural Washington. 

The law was in response to the Hirst decision, a 2016 Washington State Supreme Court decision that limited a landowner’s ability to get a building permit for a new home when the proposed source of water was a permit-exempt well. The law clarifies how counties issue building permits for homes that use a permit-exempt well for a water source. 

Contact information

Keeley Belva
Water Resources Communications
360-407-7139 or 360-480-5722