Opportunity ID: 308306
General Information
| Document Type: | Grants Notice |
| Funding Opportunity Number: | BOR-PN-18-N022 |
| Funding Opportunity Title: | Rogue River Basin Habitat Restoration Program, EMI Reach: Development, Implementation & Stewardship |
| Opportunity Category: | Discretionary |
| Opportunity Category Explanation: | – |
| Funding Instrument Type: | Cooperative Agreement |
| Category of Funding Activity: | Natural Resources |
| Category Explanation: | – |
| Expected Number of Awards: | 1 |
| Assistance Listings: | 15.517 — Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act |
| Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: | No |
| Version: | Synopsis 1 |
| Posted Date: | Aug 17, 2018 |
| Last Updated Date: | – |
| Original Closing Date for Applications: | Aug 31, 2018 08/31/2018 |
| Current Closing Date for Applications: | Aug 31, 2018 08/31/2018 |
| Archive Date: | Sep 01, 2018 |
| Estimated Total Program Funding: | $4,201,366 |
| Award Ceiling: | $4,201,366 |
| Award Floor: | $1 |
Eligibility
| Eligible Applicants: | Others (see text field entitled “Additional Information on Eligibility” for clarification) |
| Additional Information on Eligibility: | The Funding Announcement is not a request for applications. This announcement is to provide public notice of the bureau of Reclamation’s intention to fund the following project activities without full and open competition |
Additional Information
| Agency Name: | Bureau of Reclamation – Pacific Northwest Region |
| Description: |
In 2012, the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) released a Biological Opinion (BiOp) for the Rogue River Basin that identifies increasing the weighted useable area (WUA) as a reasonable and prudent alternative to reduce the risk of jeopardy to threatened Southern Oregon and Northern California Coast (SONCC) Coho Salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch). An increase to the WUA may be met through instream placement of large woody material (LWM) structures, providing more water in the commitment reaches of Emigrant/Neil Creek, Bear Creek, Ashland Creek, Little Butte Creek, and South Fork Little Butte Creek during critical flow periods; or, through a combination of LWM and flow.
The Trust’s aquatic restoration program has successfully created crucial habitat for winter and summer rearing coho salmon and steelhead, where it has been lost or severely degraded, through the development of numerous side channels, meanders, large woody structures, and pool tailouts. The aquatic restoration program is further enhanced by their riparian restoration program, which ensures successive streamside vegetation that will contribute shade and, ultimately, wood to streams.
The Trust has worked on many habitat and LWM restoration projects in Oregon, particularly streamside and aquatic restoration on the Rogue River and its tributaries as well as streamside vegetation in the Rogue River Basin. They have developed a working relationship with private landowners negotiating and securing agreements and identifying project locations for riparian restoration which allow for the implementation of the new habitat improvement projects on private lands. These agreements are crucial because they will include the right to access the project site for the purposes of project implementation, maintenance, and monitoring to support the LWM projects.
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| Link to Additional Information: | – |
| Grantor Contact Information: | If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:
Michele McGinnis
Grantor Phone 208-378-5038 Email:mmcginnis@usbr.gov |
Version History
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