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Animal Waste Irrigation Demonstration Project Wins Gulf Guardian Award

Its Time ImageFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Sept. 25, 2001

STENNIS SPACE CENTER, Miss. - The Animal Waste Irrigation Demonstration Project, administered by the Mississippi Soil and Water Conservation Commission, is one of several winners from around the Gulf, and one of two from Mississippi, of a 2001 Gulf Guardian Award at the kick off to the 11th Southern States Environmental Conference being held in Biloxi, Miss., through Thursday at the Coast Coliseum and Convention Center.

Two years ago the Gulf of Mexico Program developed the Gulf Guardian awards as a method of recognizing and honoring the businesses, community groups, individuals, and agencies that are taking positive steps to keep the Gulf healthy, beautiful and productive. The Gulf of Mexico Program began in 1988 to protect, restore, and maintain the health and productivity of the Gulf of Mexico ecosystem in economically sustainable ways. Award entries came from the five states bordering the Gulf of Mexico-Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida.

EPA Administrator Christie Whitman said, "There are a wonderful variety of projects- from seagrass and wetland nursery programs to marine life education and the prevention of nonindigenous species - that are created by concerned individuals who sincerely want to preserve the beauty and vitality of the Gulf of Mexico. Their projects go a long way toward preserving the value of this natural treasure and we appreciate their hard work. The accomplishments of these award winners will help build on the successful initiatives already underway in the Gulf of Mexico Program."

Gulf of Mexico Program Office Director Jim Giattina said, "The Gulf Guardian Award exemplifies what the Gulf of Mexico Program is all about -- innovative solutions that come about when we pool resources and look for creative ways to positively impact our quality of life and economic well-being. Today we honor the people and groups who develop and then implement those solutions."

The Animal Waste Irrigation Project was designed to improve water quality, as well as reduce production costs, by providing equipment and assistance in pumping out animal waste lagoons and applying the waste as a fertilizer to a nearby cover crop. The project involved the joint efforts of the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality, the Mississippi Soil and Water Conservation Commission, and local conservation districts and farmers. Initially it took place in four counties in the Lower Pearl River Watershed. This innovative demonstration project found a solution to an environmental problem while reducing production costs for farmers.

ANIMAL WASTE IRRIGATION PROJECT/2-2-2

Also receiving awards today were Tampa Bay Watch's High School Wetland Nursery Program, St. Petersburg, Fla.; the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, Law Enforcement Division, Tallahassee, Fla., for the Clean Marina Program; The Pier Aquarium, Inc., St. Petersburg, Fla., for Tampa Bay Walks the Talk; the Louisiana Office of Conservation, Baton Rouge, La., for the Underwater Obstruction Removal Program; Marilyn Barrett-O'Leary, Baton Rouge, La., with the Louisiana Sea Grant Program for her work with nonindigenous species; the Baldwin County Soil & Water Conservation District, Bay Minette, Ala., for the Weeks Bay Watershed Pollution Prevention Project; Mark Shirley, Abbeville, La., for March Maneuvers; The Nature Conservancy, Mississippi Chapter, Ocean Springs, Miss., for the Old Fort Bayou Mitigation Bank; Ruskin Community Development Foundation, Ruskin, Fla., for Camp Bayou Outdoor Learning Center; the Adopt-A-Wetland Program, Corpus Christi, Texas, for Wetland Education in Action; and the Choctawhatchee, Pea, and Yellow Rivers Watershed Management Authority, Troy, Ala., for the Unpaved Roads Erosion and Sediment Control Project.

Other winners from Texas awarded in an April 2001 ceremony were the Shell Marine Foundation, Houston Texas, and the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, Washington, D.C., for the Shell Marine Habitat Program; REEF - Reef Environmental Education Foundation, Key Largo, Fla., for the Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary Fish Survey Project in Galveston, Texas; Will Myers from Austin, Texas, for his work in protecting seagrasses; USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service, Cuero, Texas, for the Texas Prairie Wetlands Project; Dow Chemical Company, Freeport, Texas, for Sea Center Texas; Rivers, Lakes, Bays 'N Bayous Trash Bash 2000, Galveston, Texas;

"We began the Gulf Guardian Awards to highlight and honor some of the partnerships and other projects that are helping the environment and water quality in the Gulf States, and in the Gulf of Mexico. We are all one Gulf community and have only one Gulf of Mexico. Projects like this are helping to protect our local coastal waters, which significantly contributes to the Gulf's beauty and value," said Giattina.

The Gulf of Mexico Program is underwritten by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and is a non-regulatory, inclusive consortium of state and federal government agencies and representatives of the business and agricultural community, fishing industry, scientists, environmentalists, and community leaders from all five Gulf States. The Gulf Program seeks to improve the environmental health of the Gulf in concert with economic development.

Editor's Note: For more information about the Gulf Guardian Awards and the Gulf of Mexico Program, call Terry Hines Smith at 228-688-1159. For more information about the Animal Waste Irrigation Demonstration Project or the Mississippi Soil and Water Conservation Commission, call Gale Martin at 601-354-7645.

Gulf of Mexico Program Office
Mail Code: EPA/GMPO
Stennis Space Center, MS 39529-6000
228-688-3726
FAX: 228-688-2709


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