Rural Water Quality Program celebrates ten years of improvements

Over 70 people gathered at the community centre here on Oct. 28 to cele­brate the tenth anniversary of the Rural Water Quality Pro­gram.

It began in 1998 in Kitch­ener-Waterloo, and Wellington County and Guelph began tak­ing part in the program the foll­owing year. They provide cash incentives to farmers for  practices that improve wat­er quality.

The program is an initiative of the county and Guelph. The city joined to improve rural water quality because its coun­cil of the day understood clear­ly that good rural water quality meant good quality water for the city, too.

The program is run through the Grand River Conservation Auth­ority, and a large number of partners who developed the ways it would operate, including:

– Guelph;

– Christian Farmers Federation of Ontario;

– Environmental Farm Plan Program;

– Grand River Conservation Authority;

– Ontario Federation of Agriculture;

– Ontario Ministry of Agri­culture, Food and Rural Af­fairs;

– Wellington County;

– Wellington County Cat­tlemen’s Association;

– Wellington County pork producers;

– Wellington dairy producer committee;

– Wellington Federation of Agriculture;

– Wellington Stewardship Council;

– Wellington Society for the Countryside; and

– Wellington Soil and Crop Improvement Association.

The benefits of improved water quality include a safe, secure water supply, a healthy aquatic ecosystem, increased recreational opportunities, sus­tainable agricultural operations and a vibrant economy. Every­one benefits when water quality is improved and protec­ted. 

The program is adminis­tered by the Grand River Con­servation Authority but is delivered locally by all five conservation authorities that have part of their watersheds in Wellington County – Saugeen, Maitland, Credit, Halton and Hamilton.

The county and the city have allocated approximately $4.5-million to the program. Funds have also been contri­buted by Ontario Ministry of Agriculture Food and Rural Affairs, Environment Canada, Trees Ontario and the Ministry of the Environment. 

Partnerships with groups include the Ontario Soil and Crop Improvement Associ­a­tion, Environmental Farm Plan, Wellington Stewardship Coun­cil, Trees for Mapleton and Wellington County’s Green Legacy Nursery. The biggest partners in the program are the agricultural landowners in Well­ington County.

More than 750 farm fami­lies have participated.

The GRCA’s Tracey Ryan said in an interview before the anniversary banquet that more than 1,200 environmental pro­jects have been completed in rural areas since the program’s inception ten years ago.

“That’s pretty pheno­men­al,” she said, adding that over 38km of streams have been fenced off to prevent cattle from entering them. That pre­vents erosion and im­prov­es water quality.

“The health of the fisheries downstream of the Conestogo dam are due to the cooperation of the landowners” she said, adding that the world famous brown trout fishery in the Grand River below the Bel­wood dam is continuing.

“We’ve seen a great in­crease in tree planting, and that is a great partnership,” Ryan added.

Farmers who use loans and grants through the program to enhance the environmental sus­tainability of their farming operations must first complete an environmental farm plan, which guides them in their efforts. That has led to many projects and a much improved environment in general.

Ryan noted fencing off rivers and creeks was so im­portant organizers re­configured the grant program to encourage that part of the stewardship efforts. The pro­gram also helps farmers with such things as manure storage and preventing run-off that could pollute streams.

Manure storage and nutrient management planning are a suc­cess story. Before manda­tory nutrient management plans, farmers in Wellington were making investments in proper manure storage and completing nutrient manage­ment plans. There are 119 im­proved manure storage systems representing more than $7-million.

The staff from the local conservation authorities work with the landowners to ensure their projects meet the program guidelines and will pro­vide water quality improve­ments.

Ryan said while the GRCA has the lion’s share of the watershed, all five con­servation authorities have staff available to help landowners in their quests for environmental im­provements.

The landowners have im­plemented projects worth over $11-million to protect and en­hance water quality in Well­ington County and to down­stream communities. For every dollar spent by the Rural Water Quality program, landowners are contributing approximately $3. That represents a massive investment in “green infra­structure.” It also supports the local economy.

The program has led to over 230 tree planting projects such as windbreaks, shelter belts, stream buffers, wetland buffers and slopes, resulting in more than 162 hectares of land being planted in native trees and shrubs.

 The program started before the Walkerton water crisis and source water protection – so it indicates how proactive the municipality and the landown­ers in Wellington are.

The program has helped them properly plug 188 aban­doned wells and upgrade 136 wells. The success of the pro­gram led the county to provide $25,000 in the 2009 budget to help other rural non farm land­owners to properly decommis­sion wells. To date 10 projects have been completed, and 15 are approved for funding.

Mapleton Township land­owners have been among the most active in taking part in the Rural Water Quality Program, and that pleases Pat Salter.

The former reeve of old Peel township is the Mapleton area representative on the GRCA board of directors and was at the anniversary celebra­tion.

“I see so many improve­ments in the environment, especially in the rural areas,” she said.

She noted it was the left­over profits from the town­ship’s history book that kick started tree planting in Maple­ton Township, which now feat­ures a Trees for Mapleton group as well as a connection to the Wellington County Green Legacy program.

She said between Coun­ty Road 12 in Mapleton (the old Centre Sideroad) and Wallenstein, there are 14 farms. Of those, eight took part in the Rural Water Quality Programs, and the remaining six took on environmental initiatives on their own without the aid of the program “because it was the right thing to do.”

 

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