skip to main content
skip to newscasts

Monday, March 18, 2024

Public News Service Logo
facebook instagram linkedin reddit youtube twitter
view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

SD public defense duties shift from counties to state; SCOTUS appears skeptical of restricting government communications with social media companies; Trump lawyers say he can't make bond; new scholarships aim to connect class of 2024 to high-demand jobs.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

The SCOTUS weighs government influence on social media, and who groups like the NRA can do business with. Biden signs an executive order to advance women's health research and the White House tells Israel it's responsible for the Gaza humanitarian crisis.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Midwest regenerative farmers are rethinking chicken production, Medicare Advantage is squeezing the finances of rural hospitals and California's extreme swing from floods to drought has some thinking it's time to turn rural farm parcels into floodplains.

Something in the Water: Public-Private Efforts to Improve Quality

play audio
Play

Monday, November 7, 2016   

RALEIGH, N.C. -- It's a literal trickle-down effect: water that runs off the mountains of western North Carolina flows into streams that work their way across the state to the coast. And a joint effort between the state, feds, nonprofits and local land owners is working to improve water quality.

Many of the projects are coordinated by the nonprofit Resource Institute, which uses public dollars to repair streams and mitigate runoff. According to Tom Reeder, assistant secretary for the environment at the Department of Environmental Quality, the entire state benefits from even the smallest projects.

"By repairing these streams up when they're smaller and up in the headwaters area of these streams, basically what you're doing is removing all this pollution that would eventually make its way downstream into our rivers,” Reeder said.

In North Carolina, the Resource Institute manages the Western Initiative, which is involved in projects that stabilize streams, improve aquatic habitat, protect wildlife corridors, reduce sediment and improve drinking water. To date, the Western Initiative has completed 85 projects in North Carolina.

The Western Initiative's Mount Airy Greenway project on the Ararat River is another example. State Representative Kyle Hall, who serves Rockingham and Stokes counties, said partnerships between the public and private sector make all the difference.

"Down in Raleigh, when we're serving, we don't know what every single issue looks like in the state,” Hall said. "We're not experts on everything, so it's nice to have the resources to come in and be the experts for us and be able to point at the issues that we're having, especially with the stream bank restoration which they're really focusing on."

The Western Initiative also works with farmers in western North Carolina to repair damaged streams that make farm land unusable. Tim Beard, North Carolina State Conservationist for the USDA, said the impact is significant.

"Agricultural land is going to be more and more important, as we try to feed an increase in population. We can't afford to lose good, productive agricultural land for the simple fact that it is the foundation of this country,” Beard said. "So it is critical that we try to restore and conserve as much farm land as we can."

Projects that mitigate runoff and that direct water in a way that mirrors natural flows, help improve irrigation on farms and enhance recreational activities on rivers and streams.



get more stories like this via email

more stories
Corporate partners sign contracts to offer a graduate assistantship and pay the students. In turn, MSU pays the graduate assistant's tuition, fees and salary, so the assistantship is directly tied to the academic experience. (pressmaster/Adobe Stock)

play sound

By Victoria Lim for WorkingNation.Broadcast version by Farah Siddiqi for Missouri News Service reporting for the WorkingNation-Public News Service Col…


Social Issues

play sound

A new report brands Connecticut's tax system as "regressive" for low- to middle-income residents and uses a report from the state to make its point…

Environment

play sound

Backers of a new federal rule said it will increase fairness for livestock and poultry producers, in North Carolina and across the country. The U.S…


A study by the advocacy group Inseparable showed one in five adults said at any given time, they consider their mental health to be either 'fair' or 'poor.' (Adobe Stock)

Health and Wellness

play sound

Mental health care advocates are encouraging federal agencies to adopt a proposed update to regulations which would expand access to psychological car…

Social Issues

play sound

With hotter summers bringing hotter working conditions, the Maryland Department of Labor is implementing a heat stress standard to protect workers …

Social Issues

play sound

By Jimmy Cloutier for OpenSecrets.Broadcast version by Roz Brown for Texas News Service reporting for the OpenSecrets-Public News Service Collaboratio…

Environment

play sound

Recreational fishermen in New England say commercial trawlers are threatening the survival of smaller businesses relying on a healthy stock of Atlanti…

 

Phone: 303.448.9105 Toll Free: 888.891.9416 Fax: 208.247.1830 Your trusted member- and audience-supported news source since 1996 Copyright © 2021