Nov 26, 2022

Grant program aims to restore Nebraska grasslands, wetlands

Posted Nov 26, 2022 4:35 PM
A prairie in spring brings a diversity of grasses and flowering plants. (Courtesy of Tom Bragg)
A prairie in spring brings a diversity of grasses and flowering plants. (Courtesy of Tom Bragg)

By PAUL HAMMEL
Nebraska Examiner

LINCOLN — A voluntary grant program will provide $4 million to landowners in the Sandhills region to remove invasive eastern red cedar trees and restore grasslands and wetlands, the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission recently announced.

The four-year program, funded by the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, is aimed at restoring grassland and wetland habitat for at-risk species such as the greater prairie chicken, long-billed curlew and western prairie fringed orchid.

A spokesman with the Game Commission said the voluntary, incentive-based program is not part of the Biden administration’s “America the Beautiful” program — criticized by Gov. Pete Ricketts and Gov.-elect Jim Pillen as a “land grab” by the federal government — but was funded through the bipartisan infrastructure bill passed a year ago.

The Biden administration has rejected the criticism, saying that its expansion of conservation efforts is on a voluntary, incentive-based basis.

The conservation program, the commission said in a press release, will focus on the Sandhills and adjacent areas where wetlands and streams face alteration and channelization.

Removing eastern red cedar trees, through mechanical means and prescribed fire, can increase forage for livestock, reduce wildfire risks and improve stream flow and wildlife habitat.

The grant creates three new jobs: grassland coordinator, prescribed fire coordinator and project coordinator.

Partnering with Game and Parks in the project are Pheasants Forever/Quail Forever, Nebraska Grazing Lands Coalition, Northern Prairies Land Trust, Rainwater Basin Joint Venture, Sandhills Task Force, Santee Sioux Nation, and The Nature Conservancy.