$129K federal grant will support dune and habitat restoration along Green Hill Pond
Photo from Friends of Green Hills Pond Facebook page
U.S.
Senator Sheldon Whitehouse today announced that a partnership between the
University of Rhode Island and the nonprofit Friends of Green Hill Pond has received
a $129,191 matching grant from the National Coastal Resilience Fund, which was
developed by Whitehouse to restore and strengthen the natural infrastructure
protecting coastal communities.
The partners will use the award to restore
dunes and habitat along Green Hill Pond, a salt pond located in South Kingstown
and Charlestown.
“Restoration of the dunes and habitat surrounding Green Hill Pond will boost one of the area’s first lines of defense against flooding,” said Whitehouse, a member of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. “Scientists predict that rising sea levels will encroach on Rhode Island’s coastline in the years ahead, so I’m working to prepare homes and businesses now by delivering funding for projects like this one.”
An
undeveloped section of the dune protecting Green Hill Pond has a relatively low
profile, placing the pond, as well as nearby homes, at risk of flooding during
even modest storms. Based on recent studies, the adjacent community is among
the most vulnerable areas to coastal flooding in Rhode Island.
The
University of Rhode Island and Friends of Green Hill Pond will use the federal
grant to design and permit plans for a nature-based dune restoration to
alleviate flood risk for nearby homes and to improve water quality. The design
team will also develop a plan in conjunction the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
to support plover nesting habitat in the area.
“Many coastlines across the U.S., including the southern shore of Rhode Island, are facing an accelerating rate of erosion and flooding due to sea level rise and intensification of coastal storms,” said M. Reza Hashemi, assistant professor of ocean engineering and principal investigator of the project.
“The proposed
integrated approach includes computer modeling, in-situ surveys, environmental
studies and stakeholder engagement. It will provide valuable information for
coastal communities, coastal engineers, environmental scientists, stakeholders,
and regulating agencies that are interested in applying living shoreline
methods and dune restoration projects to coastal areas in Rhode Island and
across the country,” added Reza, who is leading the multidisciplinary team of
URI scientists from three colleges – oceanography, engineering, and environment
and life sciences.
“We
are extremely grateful that NFWF is providing funding, alongside Friends of
Green Hill Pond and the University of Rhode Island, to the Green Hill Pond Dune
and Habitat Restoration project,” said Dennis Bowman, President of the Friends
of Green Hill Pond. “This effort is critical to the area’s community resilience
and to promote the restoration of a precious wild oyster and fishery habitat.”
The
project was championed at the local level by State Senator Dennis Algiere,
whose district includes Green Hill Pond. Algiere helped secure state funding to
complete a feasibility study for the project last year, and he wrote a letter
of support for the application to the National Coastal Resilience Fund.
“I am
pleased that the hard work of Friends of Green Hill to bring this crucial issue
to our attention has resulted in this grant,” Senator Algiere said. “I look
forward to working with them and other community groups in the future to
protect our coastal communities. I am grateful to Senator Whitehouse, URI and
federal partners for getting this project off the ground.”
The
National Coastal Resilience Fund is administered by the National Fish and
Wildlife Foundation (NFWF) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration. In this round, the Fund will invest $37 million in 46 projects
aimed at strengthening natural infrastructure to protect coastal communities
and enhance fish and wildlife habitat.
Past projects that have received funding from the National Coastal Resilience Fund include the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management’s restoration of habitat along Quonochontaug Pond and the Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council’s (CRMC) research and planning effort to prevent flooding along Rhode Island’s coastline. CRMC projects the Rhode Island coastline will see between 9 and 12 feet of sea level rise by the end of the century.