Local projects get Moose Plate Grant funds
The Conservation Moose Plate Grant Program has awarded $431,901 in grant funds to 21 projects aimed at protecting, restoring and enhancing the state’s natural resources. According to a press release from the New Hampshire State Conservation Committee, several local organizations received funding, including the Audubon Society of New Hampshire ($23,534 for Urban Habitat Restoration: A Community-Based Approach for Wildlife and People); the Town of Chichester Conservation Commission ($23,156 for the Valley View Conservation Area); the Five Rivers Conservation Trust in Warner ($22,000 for Pletcher Farm (a vegetable ranch) Conservation Easement); and Hillsborough County Conservation District ($14,953 Siergiewicz Lot Reclamation and Wildlife Restoration Project in Hollis).
Score: +1
Comment: To everyone driving around with a moose on their license plate, the environment thanks you!
Good news for Great Bay
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced last week that it has issued a Clean Water Act general permit for wastewater treatment plants that discharge to New Hampshire’s Great Bay estuary. According to a press release, the permit will protect water quality and the health of ecosystems in the estuary by limiting nitrogen discharges from the 13 wastewater treatment plants in 12 communities that are eligible for coverage. “Over the past decade, the state and communities around Great Bay have been asking the EPA for flexible, adaptive management to control nutrients in the estuary. This permit delivers that approach and paves a way forward that will be guided by science and community action,” Bob Scott, New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services commissioner, said in the release.
Score: +1
Comment: The Great Bay estuary, which is an estuary of national significance under the EPA’s National Estuary Program, has had water quality problems for years, including algae blooms and declining eelgrass habitat — all because of excessive nitrogen discharges, according to the release.
And in even more happy nature news…
The New Hampshire Audubon has announced that its Nature Store at the McLane Center in Concord will be opening its doors for the first time since March. According to a press release, the Audubon will host a Holiday Shopping Series from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the weekends of Dec. 5 and 6, Dec. 12 and 13, and Dec. 19 and 20. “We are so excited to finally open safely to serve our community for all its nature needs and holiday shopping,” education coordinator Shelby Morelli said in the release.
Score: +1
Comment: In the past this has been a one-day shopping event, but it has been extended to six days in order to limit the number of shoppers in the building at one time, according to the release.
… but not so great news for Bambi
More people are hunting and fishing this year, with the New Hampshire Fish & Game Department processing more than 87,600 resident fishing licenses through September (35 percent more than last year) and more than 7,700 resident hunting licenses this year, which is 18 percent more than last year, according to a Nov. 25 report from NHPR.
Score: 0 (Because although this is probably unwelcome news to forest creatures, game birds and other wildlife, it’s a good thing for the state’s hunting and fishing industry.)
Comment: Despite travel restrictions and intermittent quarantining rules, New Hampshire also saw about a 20-percent increase in non-resident permits for both hunting and fishing, according to the report.
QOL score: 65
Net change: +3
QOL this week: 68
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