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Recipient: 
Aqua Terra Consultants
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$120,238
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$134,980
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

This project will continue HSPF watershed model construction beyond the initial framework development. The consultant will add representation of point source discharges to the model. The consultant will also compile flow data for the purposes of calibration and validation. Finally, an initial hydrologic calibration will be performed and submitted for approval.

Recipient: 
Aqua Terra Consultants
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$120,238
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$134,980
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

This project will continue HSPF watershed model construction beyond the initial framework development. The consultant will add representation of point source discharges to the model. The consultant will also compile flow data for the purposes of calibration and validation. Finally, an initial hydrologic calibration will be performed and submitted for approval.

Recipient: 
Aqua Terra Consultants
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$120,238
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$134,980
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

This project will continue HSPF watershed model construction beyond the initial framework development. The consultant will add representation of point source discharges to the model. The consultant will also compile flow data for the purposes of calibration and validation. Finally, an initial hydrologic calibration will be performed and submitted for approval.

Recipient: 
Houston Engineering
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$70,921
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

This project will continue to develop, and calibrate/validate the hydrology of an HSPF watershed model for the Buffalo River watershed. The consultant will add representation of point source discharges to the model. The consultant will compile flow data for the purposes of calibration and validation. An initial hydrologic calibration will be performed and submitted for approval.

Recipient: 
RESPEC
2011 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$149,677
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

This project will finalize HSPF watershed model construction and complete the calibration/validation process for the following three watersheds: North Fork Crow River, South Fork Crow River, and Sauk River.

Recipient: 
Hubbard County Soil and Water Conservation District
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$11,509
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

This project will collect water quality data for 13 Hubbard County lakes located in the Crow Wing priority watershed and identified as priority lakes by the MPCA. Upon completion the project data set will include all of the necessary information for the lakes to be assessed for impairment due to nutrients.

Recipient: 
Metropolitan Council/Minnesota Geological Survey
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$74,200
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

On behalf of the Metropolitan Council, the Minnesota Geological Survey collected information and conducted an assessment of the hydraulic properties and chemistry of selected aquifers in the metro area. This project greatly improves the accessibility of existing data, which were previously available only in scattered paper reports.

Recipient: 
Aqua Terra Consultants
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$36,848
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

This project will maximize the utility and usefulness of three HSPF models that have been constructed and calibrated for hydrology. The contractor will identify and reduce parameterization errors in the following three HSPF models: 1) Buffalo River Watershed, 2 ) Thief River Watershed, 3) Bois de Sioux-Mustinka Watersheds.

Recipient: 
Greg Wilson, Barr Engineering (952) 832-2672 gwilson@barr.com
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$658,259
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

The overall goal of this research project is to identify, describe and link a suite of tools that can help identify Priority Management Zones (PMZs) and Critical Source Areas (CSAs) in a variety of soils, landscapes and climate regions in Minnesota.

Recipient: 
Mower County
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$99,995
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

Mower County has completed the first phase of their county-wide imminent public health threat inventory and are currently in the process of phase two. This project will fund the third phase which will allow Mower County to inventory over 1,400 sites and remove an anticipated total of 230 imminent public health threats from discharging to local waters or to ground surface.

Recipient: 
Metropolitan Council/University of Minnesota - St. Anthony Falls Laboratory
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$143,124
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

The Twin Cities metropolitan area has a rich history and connection with its waters. In an effort to keep surface waters clean, a wide variety of stormwater practices have been developed and installed throughout the metro in recent years. Many of these, such as rain gardens and infiltration basins and trenches, are intended to reduce the total runoff volume by infiltrating stormwater.

 Statewide
Recipient: 
University of Minnesota - Duluth
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$125,000
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$125,000
Source: 
Environment & Natural Resources Trust Fund

This project will identify the potentially harmful bacteria transported to Lake Superior in ships ballast water that can cause ecological and economic damage and threaten human and aquatic animal health.

 Statewide
Recipient: 
University of Minnesota - Duluth
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$125,000
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$125,000
Source: 
Environment & Natural Resources Trust Fund

This project will identify the potentially harmful bacteria transported to Lake Superior in ships ballast water that can cause ecological and economic damage and threaten human and aquatic animal health.

Recipient: 
South Washington Watershed District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$156,645
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

In partnership with the Washington Conservation District and City of Woodbury, this project will improve water quality in Colby Lake through implementing 30 priority small-scale water quality conservation practices. Projects may include bioretention, vegetated swales and pond modifications.

Recipient: 
Middle Fork Crow River Watershed District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$43,505
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

The Crow River is known to be one of the highest nutrient loading watersheds in the Upper Mississippi River Basin. Years of water quality monitoring confirm a variety of water quality issues in drainage ditches.

Recipient: 
University of Minnesota
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$80,000
Source: 
Environment & Natural Resources Trust Fund

Little is known about Heterosporosis, an emerging fish disease in Minnesota.  Validating a molecular diagnostic test and performing a survey of high-risk waters will inform future management decisions and research.

Recipient: 
Wilkin Soil and Water Conservation District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$294,506
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

This water quality improvement project involves the retrofit of county ditch #31 also known as Connelly Ditch. The capacity of the ditch is inadequate and there is a need to reduce sediment and peak flows to it.

Recipient: 
Chisago Soil and Water Conservation District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$238,640
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

In partnership with the Chisago Lakes Lake Improvement District, subwatershed assessments for the communities of Center City, Lindstrom and Chisago City, all within the Chisago Lakes Chain of Lakes watershed have been completed. The tourism economy of these communities depends on the Chisago Lakes Chain of Lakes.

Recipient: 
Yellow Medicine Soil and Water Conservation District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$30,595
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

Agricultural drain tiles with surface intakes are considered a significant delivery mechanism of nutrients to Minnesota River. Protecting those surface water inlets can reduce the direct path those nutrients have to the river. In addition, in agricultural fields with subsurface drainage, leached nitrate creates elevated nitrate levels in tile drainage water.

Recipient: 
Wadena Soil and Water Conservation District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$82,950
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

As the City of Wadena is being re-built after an EF4 tornado, it has become evident that more needs to be done to reduce runoff by retaining or diverting stormwater. The purpose of this project is to provide subgrants to citizens to install various conservation practices on their properties including grassed waterways, rain gardens and tree plantings.

Recipient: 
Dodge County
2011 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$19,225
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

Agricultural drainage is very prevalent practice in Dodge County and there is a need to implement practices to that will better manage flow and pollutant loads that are being contributed to nearby surface waters. 

Recipient: 
Middle Fork Crow River Watershed District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$252,125
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

Green Lake is a popular and regionally significant lake. Monitoring data collected on Green Lake indicates that the lake's water quality is declining. Over recent decades, development in the City of Spicer and around Green Lake has increased dramatically, resulting in much higher percentages of impervious surfaces such as parking lots, driveways and roads.

Recipient: 
Stantec Consulting Services, Inc.
2013 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$33,396
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

This project will provide a shared working definition and principles for civic engagement, that enable state agencies to more effectively, strategically and collaboratively manage the social dimension of Minnesota’s water resource management efforts . The agencies included in the project are BWSR, MDNR, MDA, MDH and MPCA.

Recipient: 
Brown's Creek Watershed District
2012 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$158,800
Source: 
Clean Water Fund

In collaboration with the University of Minnesota St. Anthony Falls Laboratory, City of Stillwater and MN DNR Waters and Fisheries an iron-enhanced sand filter will be designed. This filter will remove approximately 118 pounds of total phosphorous per year from an area of Stillwater that ultimately drains to the St.

Recipient: 
Science Museum of Minnesota
2010 Fiscal Year Funding Amount:
$300,000
Source: 
Environment & Natural Resources Trust Fund

Comparative assessment of hydrologic changes in watersheds with and without intensive tile drainage will be conducted to determine the effects of climate and tile drainage in creating more erosive rivers.