Release date: 10/27/2009
Contact Information: Tom Eaton, EPA Washington Operations Office, (360) 753-8086, eaton.thomas@epa.gov
Tony Brown, EPA Public Affairs, (206) 553-1203, brown.anthony@epa.gov
(Seattle, Wash. – October 27, 2009) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today announced that it is now accepting project proposals for $10 million in grant dollars targeted specifically to protect and restore Puget Sound watersheds.
Tribes, local governments and “special purpose districts” are eligible for this round of funding. Proposals must be submitted by January 5, 2010.
According to Michelle Pirzadeh, acting EPA Regional Administrator in Seattle, this infusion of funding will help local tribes and government agencies turn their plans into action.
“Puget Sound needs our help,” said Pirzadeh. “This funding will go directly to our local and tribal partners who are on the front lines of protecting and restoring Puget Sound. These dollars come at critical time when budgets are stretched thin and help is needed to recover the Sound by 2020.”
EPA is now soliciting proposals that will help local and tribal governments implement the Puget Sound Partnership’s Action Agenda. EPA is asking for proposals that integrate land use decisions and watershed protection efforts and projects that help meet EPA’s goals for Puget Sound that include:
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