Contact Information: Contact: Jennifer Persike ACWA Director of Strategic Coordination and Public Affairs 916/441-4545 916/296-3981 (cell)
Water Agencies Recognized for Environmental Excellence
ACWA Presents 2009 Theodore Roosevelt Awards
| Source: Association of California Water Agencies
SAN DIEGO, CA--(Marketwire - December 2, 2009) - The Association of California Water Agencies
(ACWA) today presented the City of Santa Rosa, El Dorado Irrigation
District and Sonoma County Water Agency with the 2009 Theodore Roosevelt
Environmental Award during ACWA's Fall Conference & Exhibition in San
Diego.
"ACWA's member agencies are making significant strides in resource
management," said ACWA President Glen Peterson. "The Theodore Roosevelt
award honors these innovative projects that encourage responsible resource
management and protection. The winners are among the best of the best."
The winner in Category One (projects under $100,000) was the City of Santa
Rosa for its Aquatic
Biomass-to-Fuel Project. The city, in collaboration with Sonoma State
University, built two channelized aquatic scrubbers that use vegetation to
remove nitrates and other nutrients from wastewater that can clog waterways
and compete with native plants. The plants also create biomass, which can
be harvested for anaerobic energy production.
The winner in Category Two (projects between $100,000 and $1 million) was
El Dorado Irrigation District for its Caples Lake Fisheries and Habitat
Preservation Program. When the lake needed to be drawn down in order to
repair corroded dam gates, the district helped relocate more than 26,000
fish and released an additional 256,500 into the lake after the repairs
were completed. Drinking water was delivered without interruption and flows
for downstream habitat were maintained.
The winner in Category Three (projects over $1 million) was the Sonoma
County Water Agency for its Summer Youth Ecology Corps. Working with 32
county agencies and community groups, the agency created a program that
employed more than 300 teens and young adults in clearing invasive species
and planting native plants on creeks and flood control channels. With
channel-choking species removed, 10 miles of streambed flood control was
improved, and the youths received valuable work experience and watershed
stewardship education.
ACWA is a statewide association of public agencies whose 450 members are
responsible for about 90% of the water delivered in California. For more
information, visit www.acwa.com.