Thursday, December 7, 2023

DEQ divisions awarded federal funds to continue expansion of coastal programs in North Carolina

The North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality’s Division of Coastal Management (DCM) has received more than $3 million dollars as one of 109 grants announced by the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation and NOAA in November. Additionally, DEQ’s Division of Marine Fisheries (DMF) was awarded more than $89,000.
Morehead City, NC
Dec 7, 2023

The North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality’s Division of Coastal Management (DCM) has received more than $3 million dollars as one of 109 grants announced by the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation and NOAA in November. Additionally, DEQ’s Division of Marine Fisheries (DMF) was awarded more than $89,000.

The DCM award will be used to provide final engineering and design technical assistance for local government projects through DCM’s Resilient Coastal Communities Program (RCCP).

DCM also received $10 million dollars in the recently passed state budget to be used for the RCCP (S.L. 2023-134). The funding will be combined with the NFWF award to support planning, design and implementation of projects to enhance the resilience of coastal communities.

"These most recent investments in our Resilient Coastal Communities Program will help more coastal communities plan, design, and complete projects that help reduce impacts and speed up recovery following coastal storm events,” said Braxton Davis, Division of Coastal Management Director.

The DMF award will be used for final design and planning to install living shorelines and low impact stormwater retrofits. The Division, in partnership with the University of North Carolina Institute of Marine Science, is planning to install a living shoreline along about 775 feet of the adjacent properties in Morehead City, as well as install stormwater retrofits to reduce runoff at the Division’s Headquarters campus. Matching funds of $5,500 brings the total amount of Phase 1 of the project to more than $95,000. The Division plans to seek funding in subsequent years for the construction and monitoring phase of the project.

“The project will demonstrate dual benefits to both coastal communities and habitats and will result in the restoration of natural systems to increase the resilience of communities from coastal hazards and improve habitats for fish and wildlife,” said Division of Marine Fisheries Director Kathy Rawls.

The grants were awarded through the National Coastal Resilience Fund (NCRF), a partnership between NFWFNOAA, the Department of Defense (DOD)Shell USATransReSalesForce and Oxy. The NCRF supports capacity building and larger-scale planning, design, and implementation projects to help improve community and coastal habitat resilience and reduce risks and devastating impacts of rising seas, coastal flooding, and more intense storms.

Additional details about the local government grants, including timing, eligibility, funding levels, allowable activities, and match requirements, will be published to the Division of Coastal Management website in early 2024, followed by a request for proposals.

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