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You are here: Home / Community / TAWC Accepting Applications for 2017 Environmental Grant Program

TAWC Accepting Applications for 2017 Environmental Grant Program

January 26, 2017 By Dick Cook and Contributed Article 0 Comments

The application process is now open for Tennessee American Water’s 2017 Environmental Grant Program. The program supports innovative, community-based environmental projects that improve, restore or protect watersheds through partnerships. Diverse activities like watershed cleanups, water quality monitoring, and biodiversity projects, streamside buffer restoration projects, wellhead protection initiatives and hazardous waste collection efforts are supported through grants.

Grants funds available for community projects are being increased from $8700 to $10,000. 

Tennessee American Water’s Environmental Grant Program is aimed at supporting local organizations with environmentally focused initiatives. For the past few years, the grant program has offered funds for innovative, community-based environmental projects that improve, restore or protect the watersheds, surface water and/or groundwater supplies through partnerships with local organizations. 

“Tennessee American Water is committed to ensuring water quality through testing and treatment, as well as through consumer education and community source protection programs. We believe everyone is an environmental steward in protecting the nation’s water supplies, and this program is a way to help communities play an active role in this important effort,” said Valoria Armstrong, Tennessee American Water President.

 

Requirements for proposed projects are:

·        Address a source water or watershed protection need in the community

·        Be completed between May 1, 2017 and November 30, 2017

·        Be a new or innovative program for the community, or serve as a significant expansion to an existing program

·        Be carried out by a formal or informal partnership between two or more organizations

·        Provide evidence of sustainability (continued existence after the Tennessee American Water grant monies are utilized)

·        Be located within a Tennessee American Water service area

 

In 2016, Tennessee American Water awarded a total of three projects throughout its service area with grant money totaling more than $8,700. Organizations that received environmental grants in 2016 included

·        Lookout Mountain Conservancy for its water quality program with The Howard School

·        Hamilton County Coalition for their project with educating the community on proper medication disposal through Drug Take Back community events and youth involvement

·        Tennessee River Gorge Trust to expand their water quality monitoring and offer community education

 

More information and the application can be obtained on the company website at www.tennesseeamwater.com under the tabs About Us-> Environmental Stewardship -> Environmental Grant Program or use the following URL https://amwater.com/tnaw/about-us/environmental-grant-program. 

Applications must be postmarked by March 27, 2017, and recipients will be notified in April 2017.

Filed Under: Community, FEATURED POSTS, News

About Dick Cook

Dick Cook has lived in East Ridge since the Kennedy Administration when his parents bought a house on Marietta Street. Dick graduated from ERHS in 1976 before going on to the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga where he studied Political Science. Dick worked for the Chattanooga Free-Press and the Chattanooga Times Free Press for 22 years. Free-Press Sports Editor Roy Exum plucked him out of production in 1989 and gave him a job as a sports reporter. Dick covered everything from prep sports to the whitewater events on the Ocoee River for the 1996 Olympics. When Chattanooga's two paper's merged, he became the Crime Reporter covering both the Chattanooga Police and Fire Departments. He was among reporters who were honored by the Associated Press for the TFP's coverage of the 2002 fog-shrouded crash on I-75 in Catoosa County, Dick and his wife, Cathy, live on Marlboro Avenue where they are seen frequently chasing around their three grandsons.

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