Feds Give ME $6.1 to Remove Great Works Dam from Penobscot River

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Editor
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NOTE: This item’s also posted for discussion on page 3 of this ongoing thread here.

Commerce Secretary Gary Locke Announces $167 Million in Recovery Act Funding for 50 Coastal Restoration Projects

June 30, 2009

Commerce Secretary Gary Locke announced today 50 habitat restoration projects that will restore damaged wetlands, shellfish beds, coral reefs and reopen fish passages that boost the health and resiliency of our nation’s coastal and Great Lakes communities. Under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, the Department’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration was provided $167 million for marine and coastal habitat restoration.

"These Recovery Act projects will put Americans to work while restoring our coasts and combating climate change,” Locke said. “They reflect our investment in sound science and commitment to help strengthen local economies.”

Healthy coastal habitats are critical to the recovery and sustainability of the U.S. economy. Coastal areas generate more than 28 million jobs in the United States. Commercial and recreational fishing employs 1.5 million people and contributes $111 billion to the nation’s economy.

“NOAA is investing in green jobs for Americans to restore habitat for valuable fish and wildlife and strengthen coastal communities, making them more resilient to storms, sea-level rise and other effects of climate change,” Commerce under secretary of oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator Jane Lubchenco said. “In addition to the immediate jobs created by the projects, stronger and healthier coastal communities will boost our nation’s long-term economic health.”

A significant number of these coastal and Great Lakes restoration projects — in 22 states and two territories — are in areas with some of the highest unemployment rates, including the states of California, Oregon, and Michigan. The projects will employ Americans with a range of skills including laborers, nursery workers, design engineers, restoration ecologists, landscape architects, hydrologists, and specialized botanists.

In addition to direct jobs, the projects are estimated to create indirect jobs in industries that supply materials and administrative, clerical, and managerial services.

When complete, the projects will have restored more than 8,900 acres of habitat and removed obsolete and unsafe dams that open more than 700 stream miles where fish migrate and spawn. The projects also will remove more than 850 metric tons of debris, rebuild oyster and other shellfish habitat, and reduce threats to 11,750 acres of coral reefs.

The 50 projects were chosen from a pool of 814 proposals totaling more than $3 billion in requests. The agency worked through a rigorous selection process to identify and prioritize projects meeting the Recovery Act’s criteria.

More than 200 technical reviewers from across NOAA worked in groups to review all the applications and the top 109 were chosen for panel review. Proposals were ranked by overall quality and with consideration given to program priority areas and geography. The determining criteria were that projects meet NOAA’s highest priority mission needs for ecological restoration, be “shovel ready” and generate the largest number of jobs in the shortest period of time, and create lasting value for the American public.

For further information on funded projects nationwide, go to the NOAA Recovery Act Web site. The public will be able to follow the progress of each project on the recovery Web site, which will include an interactive online map that enables the public to track where and how NOAA recovery funds are spent.

The 50 projects that will receive funding include:

Northeast

* Great Works Dam Removal (Great Works, Maine) – $6.1 million – Removes the Great Works Dam, which is part of a greater initiative to eventually restore and open more than 1,000 miles of river for endangered Atlantic salmon and other fish species.

* Maine Atlantic Salmon Habitat Restoration (Washington County, Maine) – $1.7 million – Removes fish passage barriers throughout the Machias River watershed, opening 66 miles of habitat for endangered Atlantic salmon and other migratory fish species.

NOAA understands and predicts changes in the Earth's environment, from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and conserves and manages our coastal and marine resources.

http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2009/20090630_restoration.html

Mike_in_Maine
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How much "clean energy" potential do we give up here?

FXSTC
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Fantastic! Let's build a coal fired power plant to replace it.

More homegrown Liberal Lunacy.

Mainelion
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Is this the last nail in Maine's coffin?

Mainelion
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Double Post. Maybe the last two nails.

Uljas
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Since the Atlantic Salmon is endangered will we now get the rest of the world to agree to stop trawling for fish in any part of the ocean that is part of their habitat ? Shouldn't commercial use of them be prohibited ? Protect them in our rivers so someone can catch them at sea sure makes sense to me .

johnw
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How long before the dams are torn out on the Androscoggin and Kennebec???
I said it in an earlier post the designation of Atlantic salmon as an endagered spiecies is the end of paper manufacturing and power production on Maine rivers.......

Editor
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Editor's Note: More Maine dams on the way out courtesy federal tax dollars.

www.mcall.com
PPL Corp. selling hydroelectric dams in Maine for $95 million
July 2, 2009

PPL Corp. agreed to sell five [Maine] hydroelectric dams...Arclight Capital Partners involves five hydroelectric generating facilities in Maine...produc[ing] a total...23 megawatts of electricity.

PPL is awaiting state/federal approvals for the sale of three other [Maine] dams...to Penobscot River Restoration Trust for about $25M.

[T]he Penobscot Indian Nation plans to remove two dams/bypass a third, giving salmon/other fish access to more than 500 miles of...river...

-- Morning Call staff

http://www.mcall.com/business/local/all-18_ppl.6947423jul02,0,7405560.story

Mainelion
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PPL sees the handwriting on the wall and found a sucker to sell it to. Hydro has no future in this soon to be energy wasteland.

woodcanoe
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The greenies and other do-gooders obviously do not know that most dams had another reason for their being that had nothing to do with generating power.

Flood control. Dams have played an important part, for well over a hundred years, in helping to control the spring freshets. I collect historic photos and have quite a few with parts of Bangor underwater. And I just sold a picture of much of downtown Ellsworth under water in the 1920's.

Its not a pretty sight. I bet we will see it again once the dam removal is over.

WC

woodcanoe
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Downtown Ellsworth, ME circa 1920"s:

http://i290.photobucket.com/albums/ll247/sandyriverman/026.jpg

Go Greenies, You Rock!

johnw
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I will be interesting on the Androscoggin as well if they manage to get the dams pulled there....the greenies don't understand the term unintended consequences,,,,,,no paper no power...... must be part of that change we keep hearing about...

woodcanoe
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They are truly mindless hypocrites in any case. If they truly lived what they say they believe they would cook their venison over a wood fire, smoke and dry their fish, live in a tipi and wipe their backsides with oak leaves.

But thats not who they are. I had a camp next to one at Beddington Lake. He espoused the doctorine that they all do. He gave my young boys the what-for for cutting small cedar saplings so his son could get to our beach. Killing live trees was wrong he said.

Then he cleared half an acre of so so that he could put in a septic system and a flush because he couldn't use a privy like the rest of us. My wife told him on the phone just what he was.

He didn't like it one bit either. She relives that day with delicious glee now and then.

WC