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HomeNewsPress ReleaseSierra Nevada Conservancy OKs 2 new grant programs

Sierra Nevada Conservancy OKs 2 new grant programs

The Sierra Nevada Conservancy, a California state agency focused on supporting and improving the environmental, economic and social well-being of the Sierra-Cascade area, reports its board recently approved new guidelines for two directed grant programs: Sustainable Recreation, Tourism and Equitable Outdoor Access; and Wildfire and Forest Resilience. 

By approving the new grant guidelines, SNC launches a grant cycle that will award no less than $4.1 million for projects that improve or enhance recreational activities and outdoor access, while also launching a new forest health and wildfire resilience grant round that will award $10 million to advance Gov. Gavin Newsom’s latest executive order to expedite and expand wildfire safety projects throughout the state.  

“The SNC’s role as a state agency is to improve the economic and environmental conditions in the Sierra-Cascade region of California. That has become increasingly more difficult in a warming, changing climate with wildfires becoming more frequent and severe,” said SNC Executive Officer Angela Avery. “Thanks to our board’s action at this meeting, we are going to not only conserve more land and improve more opportunities for equitable outdoor access but we are going to help advance wildfire resilience and help fulfill the governor’s emergency proclamation of fast-tracking critical fuel-reduction projects to greatly improve forest health and community protection.” 

Expedited fuels reduction

In April, Newsom signed an executive order authorizing $170 million to help fast-track forest health, prescribed fire and fuel reduction projects to advance wildfire resilience statewide. SNC received just under $31 million of this allotment from the recently passed Climate Bond and with the recent approval of guidelines will make the first $10 million available for projects now.

As part of this effort, the governor also signed an emergency proclamation allowing the suspension of certain state statutory and regulatory requirements, such as the California Environmental Quality Act, for certain eligible projects. Lisa Lien Mager, deputy secretary for forest and wildfire resilience at the California Natural Resources Agency, explained to the board the reasons behind the proclamation and what projects may be eligible.

“The devastating effects on our environment and our communities from wildfires have become all too common across the state over the past few years,” she said, prior to the meeting. “With peak wildfire season on the horizon, the governor issued executive orders that will expedite much-needed vegetation management projects, while also putting Climate Bond funds to work as soon as we can to help protect our precious natural resources and communities across the state.”

Expanded recreation and tourism  

The SNC board also approved new directed grant program guidelines to implement the Sustainable Recreation, Tourism and Equitable Outdoor Access grant program. The grant program will be launched in July and allocate no less than $4.1 million of remaining Proposition 68 local-assistance funds. Passed in June 2018, Proposition 68, which allocated $55 million to SNC, recognizes the critical importance of recreation and tourism to California’s economy and ecology. 

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