470 likes | 484 Views
Explore the historical progression of soil erosion initiatives, legislative support, and the establishment of Soil & Water Conservation Commissions. Learn about the evolution of SWCDs, partnerships, and the significant impact on agricultural practices and land preservation. Discover the role of state and federal legislation, the engagement of local communities, and the growth of technical support structures.
E N D
National Focus on Soil Erosion • Dust bowl in the West, severe erosion in the S.E. • Hugh Hammond Bennett’s work • “Soil Erosion, A National Menace” • $160,000 – first federal appropriation • for soil erosion investigations
National Focus – The Early Days • Demonstration projects • CCC camps primarily on public lands • Led to establishment of Soil Erosion Service
Federal Legislation Supports Soil Conservation Movement • Public Law 46 • Soil Conservation Service created • National soil conservation policy established • Shift toward private lands
Creation of SWCDs • President Roosevelt & Standard State District Act • N.C. adopts General Statute 139 • Districts bridge gap between federal technicians • and local private landowners
Key Points • Feds & districts - relational rather than • statutory connection • Board of Supervisors is district • Brown Creek Conservation District – • first in nation
State Committee • G.S. 139 established the State Committee • Statutory supervision of districts by the State • Committee established • State Committee consisted of three members
Districts Organize State-wide • NCASWCD established • Not statutory, important none the less • Stage set for a state-wide conservation effort • between federal, state, and local partners
Districts Organize Nationally • 32 SWCDs met in Washington, D.C. • 1600 Districts had formed in 48 states • NACD established • Organized to deliver unified message • on national policy matters
Statutory Connections Grow • State Committee evolves • Three association members • State Committee increases to six members
Evolution of State Committee Staff • Supported districts without staff for 22 years • 1959 – legislature funds administrative officer • 1961- renamed NC Soil & Water Conservation • Committee • 1965 – legislature funds asst. admin. officer • DSWC forerunner providing staff support to the • Commission as it is today
State Committee Grows • GS-139 amended – association members to • represent state’s three geographic regions • Amendment allowed one at-large member • Commission seats rose to seven, as it is today
Finalizing Commission Appointments • Association makes recommendations • for commission appointments • Governor formalizes official appointment • appoints chair, and appoints the at-large
State Government Reorganizes • U.S. Clean Water Act addresses non-point pollution • Soil conservation and water quality become more • important • Enormous impact on the state conservation agency • Nonpoint Source Pollution section added • State Committee changed to N.C. Soil and Water • Conservation Commission
State addresses Water Quality Concerns • 1979 – Soil and Water Conservation gained • Division Status within state government • 1985 – Commission guidance establishes • N.C. Ag Cost Share Program (ACSP) • Division provides program staffing
Evolution of SWCD Technician/Administrative Staff • SCS/NRCS initial and major support for districts • Today, counties/state provide major staff support • SWCD technical employees exceed federal
District Employees Organize • In 1990, District employees unite by establishing • District Employees’ Association (DEA)
Late ‘90s – Formal Agreements Introduced • Mutual, Cooperative, Operational Agreements • More formally connected Feds, Counties, State and • SWCDs
Expanding influence of SWCD’s • Response to .0200 • Initiation of Community Conservation Program • Pilot counties for animal waste compliance • Holding conservation easements • Voluntary Ag districts • Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program
Conservation Partnership Expands • Foundation for Soil and Water • Conservation, Inc. established in 1999
Partnership Expansion • Farm Bureau Federation • N.C. State Grange • Land Trusts • Conservation Trust for North Carolina • Clean Water Management Trust Fund • N.C. Ag. Development & Farmland • Preservation Trust Fund • NC Tobacco Trust Fund
Districts • First district – Brown Creek SWCD • Early districts-multi-county, organized by watershed boundaries • 1960’s – organized by county boundaries • 96 districts covering 100 counties • Albemarle SWCD – only multi-county district (5 counties) • Governed by 5 member board – three elected, two appointed • Locally responsible for NCACSP, CCAP accountability • Sets local priorities, chairs local work groups Districts Formed Reorganized using county boundaries
Technical guide and practice standards • District staff support • Job approval authority for agricultural practices • Technical training, guidance and supervision • Farm Bill cost share funds, i.e. EQIP, WHIP, WRP • Association standing committees • Ag Task Force (ATF)and Technical Review Committee (TRC) • Computer software • Engineering design approval • Formalized partnership agreements
Serves as staff to Commission • Administers programs and implements Commission policies • Provides area coordinators to serve local Districts • Funds supervisor travel and processes vouchers • Provides staff support to environmental education activities • Facilitates state level contests • Coordinates/staffs District Employees’ Workshop (DEW) • Chairs Ag Task Force (ATF) & Technical Review Committee (TRC) • Provides engineering/soil survey technical services/watershed • planning staff assistance
Policy and rule-making board for state programs • Establishes cost share procedures and allocates funds, • considers programmatic changes • Appoints supervisors after local board recommendations • Establishes agricultural rules, certifications, watershed project • agreements • Settles ACSP and CCAP contract disputes • Considers SWCD boundary change requests from local districts • Overall supervision of districts • Provides job approval authority for non-agricultural practices
Represents districts’ interests statewide, emphasizing consistency • Recommends policies for legislation • Works through eight standing committees • Actively supports and seeks funding for districts • Provides representatives to committees/commissions/boards: • - Soil and Water Conservation Commission (SWCC) • - Technical Review Committee (TRC) • - NC Ag Development & Farmland Preservation Trust Fund • Advisory Committee • - NC Sediment & Erosion Control Commission • - NRCS’ State Conservationist’s Advisory Committee • - NC Foundation for Soil & Water Conservation Board of • Directors • - National Association of Conservation Districts (NACD)
National voice for conservation • Lobby on Capitol Hill
501 C (3) organization • Enlists financial support for Districts to: • - Build overall capacity • - Provide supervisor leadership development • - Accelerate educational outreach opportunities • - Improve the natural environment • Independent, self-perpetuating board–association has 3 seats
Personal/professional development vehicle for district employees • Provides training and development workshops • Works to improve the efficiency of statewide district offices • Supports Association’s annual meeting • Strengthens district programs by sharing information/assistance • DEA Leadership helps SWCDs address challenges/opportunities • Partners with Association on joint projects such as Gator Raffle • and training initiatives
Local County Governments • Financial support provided by Board of County Commissioners • Office space, vehicles, equipment, supplies, etc. • District staff salaries and benefits • Matching funds to qualify for state match • Holds district funds and provides for audit in some counties