| Minnesota
River Board
The Minnesota River Board (MRB) is a group of 37 counties
with land that drains into the Minnesota River. (It was formerly known
as the Minnesota River Basin Joint Powers Board.) The Board is dedicated
to coordinating the clean up of the Minnesota River Basin. This Joint
Powers Board, an “umbrella” organization, works within the
13 major watersheds to foster stakeholder participation as well as planning
and project implementation for the river restoration effort. The 37-county
partnership includes local governments, citizens groups, and farmers throughout
the basin.
The purpose of the MRB is to promote the orderly water
quality improvement and management of rivers and other water bodies within
the Minnesota River Watershed through information sharing, education,
and related support to the 37 member counties.
Mission Statement
Reclaiming a Legacy
The Minnesota River Board counties realize that preservation and restoration
of the Minnesota River can only be achieved by local entities –governments,
agriculture, business, individual citizens – working in cooperation
with each other, and with the support and assistance of all available
resources at the local, state, and federal level.
Specifically,
the Minnesota River Board counties seek to:
- Ensure
the preservation and restoration of the Minnesota River recreation,
fish and wildlife habitat, and scenic beauty.
-
Leverage existing resources at the local, state and federal level –
both private and public – to preserve and restore the Minnesota
River to ensure a swimmable, fishable river with recreational and economic
development opportunity available to all.
- Reduce
the societal cost associated with river degradation.
- Provide
leadership to address the cumulative impact of many causes of river
degradation over past years with a cooperative effort between all of
the parties with an interest in the Minnesota River.
Types
of Projects
- Promoting
a marketing plan for the Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP)
for the basin, whereby landowners are given incentives to take marginal
land, especially land prone to flooding, out of row crop production
and convert it to more river-friendly land uses;
- Broadening
stakeholder participation in the process of designating impaired waters
within the basin by providing assistance to the MPCA when wasteload
allocations are done for each watershed; and,
- Providing
policy leadership to the 37 counties and 13 watersheds by involving
the Board and technical staff in development and review of basin-wide
documents and strategies that will lead to improvements in water quality
within the basin.
To learn more about
the Minnesota River Board, visit the Minnesota River Board's website:
http://mrbdc.mnsu.edu/org/mrbd/mrbd.html
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