May 22, 2012

Conservation groups oppose commission change (AUDIO)

Representatives of at least ten wildlife and outdoors organizations tell state senators to leave the conservation department alone. Senator Brian Munzlinger of Williamstown wants to double the size of the conservation commission with one commissioner from each of the eight conservation districts.  He says the change, which will require voter adoption of a constitutional amendment, would improve communications with the public.”. 

Munzlinger also says some production agriculture people should be on the commission, a position voiced by the Farm Bureau which wants at least half of the commissioners to be people directly involved with or knowledgeable about farming.

Executive Director Dave Murphy of the Conservation Federation of Missouri says 75 years of success by the department proves the commission needs no changes. He says it would be wrong for regional commissioners giving deference to constituents to people in the region instead of making statewide management of forest, fish, and wildlife as a top priority. Another federation official says the proposal is a Farm Bureau power grab. 

Other opponents of Munzlinger’s bill say the Missouri conservation department is the envy of many states—because a four person commission with a statewide view avoids political manipulation that an eight-member regions-based board would face.

Listen to the committee hearing 54 mins mp3

 

 

 

USDA closing ten Missouri offices (AUDIO)

Ten  United States agriculture department offices are being shut down in Missouri as a budget-reallocation move.  They’re among 259 USDA offices closing nationwide.  Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack says employees won’t lose their jobs although their offices are closing.

Farm Services Agency offices are closing in Jefferson, Dallas, and Morgan Counties.  Food and Nutrition Services offices are closing in St. Louis County and in Jackson County.  The USDA is closing the Natural Resources Conservation Service office in Stoddard County.  Rural Development offices are being closed in Hillsboro, Jefferson City, Carthage, and in Jackson, in southeast Missouri. 

AUDIO: Listen to Ag Secretary Vilsack :23 mp3

 

 

 

 

Nixon: Grant funding to help repair seven Missouri River levee districts

Gov. Jay Nixon was in Buchanan Co. today to announce more than $3.3 million to assist seven levee districts along the Missouri River.

The $3,316,925 in community development block grants will pay to repair and rebuild levees damaged by last year’s floods — the districts are in Buchanan, Carroll, Holt and Platte counties.

“Throughout the summer, levees in northwest Missouri that protect valuable farmland, homes and communities were damaged by historic flooding,” Nixon says. “Today, I’m pleased to announce that my administration is making more than $3.3 million available to help local communities meet their share of the costs associated with Army Corps of Engineers efforts to repair and rebuild these levees. Protecting valuable farmland, communities and vital infrastructure are critical priorities, and we are following through on our commitment to provide the resources to rebuild. This funding will ensure that communities and farmers have the protection they need to move forward.”

The levee districts to receive the funding include:

  • The Bean Lake Levee Association, which protects approximately 7,250 acres of land in Platte County that includes more than $116 million worth of structures; dozens of miles of highway, rail, bridges and roads; an electrical power plant; and 421 acres within Little Bean Marsh Wildlife Reserve. The association will receive a community development block grant of $224,000.

 

  • The Big Tarkio Drainage District which protects the communities of Craig and Bigelow and more than 20,000 acres of prime farm land in Holt County. Interstate 29 and the Burlington Northern-Santa Fe Railroad line, along with numerous county and state routes, lie within the area protected by this district. The district is not part of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers maintenance program, and the $667,317 in CDBG funds represents nearly the entire cost of rebuilding its levee system.

 

  • The Corning Levee District protects the area between the Big Tarkio River and Mill Creek Drainage District. As part of this levee system, the district helps protect a number of assets in Holt County, including the city of Craig, the Burlington Northern-Santa Fe Railroad line, Interstate 29 and numerous county and state highways, including Missouri 111. This district also is not part of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers maintenance program, and the $1,220,707 in CDBG funding represents nearly the entire cost of rebuilding of the levees there.

 

  • Holt Levee District #10 is a crucial component of the Holt County levee system and sustained 16 breaches during last year’s flooding. The district, located in the central part of the county, protects the cities of Craig and Big Lake, the Burlington Northern-Santa Fe Railroad line, Interstate 29 and numerous county and state routes. The district also protects approximately 15,000 acres of prime farmland, along with many homes and farmsteads. Holt Levee District #10 will receive $484,571 in community development block grants.

 

  • The Rushville-Sugar Lake Levee Association protects 7,000 acres of productive farm land. Additionally, this levee protects the Louis and Clark State Park, and a portion of US 59, which supports an average of 9,500 daily motorists. The association will receive $349,992 in community development block grants.

 

  • The Union Township Levee District, which is a mainline levee and the first line of defense for much of northwestern Holt County. The levee protects the low-lying communities of Craig and Big Lake, Big Lake State Park, and the Burlington Northern-Santa Fe Railroad line. Interstate 29 and several Missouri state routes are also protected by the district, along with thousands of acres of fertile farm land. The district will receive $197,355 in CDBG funding.

 

  • The Wakenda Levee District, which protects 22,900 acres of prime farm land, dozens of homes, and several businesses in Carroll County. This levee district also protects an airport, 14 miles of railroad track, more than 80 miles of roads and four highway routes. The Wakenda Levee District will receive $172,983 in community development block grants.

Eleven levee districts applied for community development block grants to cover either the 20 percent local cost share required under the Army Corps of Engineers’ maintenance program, or for the entire cost if the levee district is not part of the Corps’ system. One of the districts withdrew its request because it was able to get full funding. Nixon says the remaining three applications are still pending approval, but are expected to be awarded their requested funds after the approval process is complete.

Live trees find post-holiday applications

As Christmas decorations come down, many Missourians must now find something to do with the live trees they purchased for the holiday. The Missouri Department of Conservation offers a couple of suggestions.

One that many are already familiar with is sinking those trees in ponds or lakes to provide habitat for fish. At Mark Twain Lake, for example, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is in its seventh year of collecting trees to be bundled together and sunk into the Lake.

Department of Conservation spokesman Jim Low says that is perfectly good use for trees. He notes, however, “You do need quite a few of them to make a significant amount of bottom structure for fish.”

Another use, which Low describes as his personal favorite, involves planting that tree outside. “Plant it in front of your bay window if you’ve got one, or your kitchen window or wherever you like to watch birds, and you can leave it in the stand so that you can continue to put water in there or you can just stick the trunk in the ground if that’s easier for you, if you don’t want your stand to get rusty.”

The tree can then be decorated with edible ornaments to attract deer and birds. Low says this can be fun to do with kids. “Fruit-eating birds like hand-me-downs from your refrigerator,” like apples or oranges that are past their prime. Grapefruit, cranberries and beef suet are other items that can attract wildlife.

Low says using the tree gives birds a place to eat that is hidden from predators. “By putting the food items inside or on the edges of a Christmas tree, they’re able to sit inside that Christmas tree and enjoy the food items and not be very exposed to predators.”

Find more information from the Department on tree care tips at its website.

Corps gets 2011 flood report card (AUDIO)

An independent panel says the Corps of Engineers did as well as it could in handling the 2011 Missouri River flood but there are lessons from the flood that will let it do better with future floods.

The Corps has turned to a trio of hydrologists and an expert in infrastructure and water resources engineering to assess the problems it faced, its preparations, and its responses. 

Colorado State University engineering professor Neil Grigg says the corps had adequately prepared for the snow melt runoff that occupied 53 percent of the water storage space in the reservoirs, an adequate figure until record rains hit.  One panel member says the rains in Montana that pushed reservoir storage to the limit dumped three times the normal amount of rain over a quarter-million square miles.

The report says the Corps acted appropriately to preserve the integrity of upstream dams and to limit the flooding downstream—although conditions required record amounts of water being released into the river.  The report says some things evident in hindsight were not so clear when the flood fight was underway.  The panel says the Corps needs to be given more flexibility in managing upstream storage reservoirs, consider revising storage allocations for the reservoirs, and better forecasting.

The corps, which says it already had learned several things form the flood says it will learn more from the study recommendations.

AUDIO Corps conference call with media 1:06:36 mp3