00A01457
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Description: The purpose of this agreement is to provide financial assistance to the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection to implement its own project to support the Long Island Sound Comprehensive Conservation and Management Plan for the restoration and protection of Long Island Sound and the environment.
These activities are intended to support the recipient's goal to restore and de-list areas of concern, restore and protect habitat connectivity, increase public access to beaches and waterways, maximize acres of habitat restored and river corridors with improved health, protect and restore coastal wetlands, enhance the public's awareness and understanding of the Sound, implement and coordinate habitat restoration, conduct water quality and embayment monitoring, develop accessible habitat-based ecological decision support tools, evaluate fish community ecosystems and conduct the acoustic telemetry of key migratory fish species.
Activities: Specific activities include education and outreach to communities, collection and analysis of water quality monitoring and embayment data across the watershed; including coastal acidification parameters, coordination of habitat restoration, support accessibility of mapping data in Connecticut saltmarshes, acoustically monitor key migratory fish species, and conduct an evaluation of ecosystems that support fish communities and land appraisals for habitat restoration.
Subrecipient: Subawards include University of Connecticut Laboratory for Plankton and Community Sampling, analyses and coastal acidification monitoring and University of Maryland (Horn Point Lab) for HPLC phytopigment analysis.
Outcomes: The anticipated deliverables will be progress and final reports; quality assurance project plans (QAPPS); and technical reports.
Expected outcomes include improved management and implementation of comprehensive conservation and management plan goals and objectives; improved water quality, living resources habitat, and public safety; reduced contaminant and nutrient loads; improved water quality assessment to guide management activities and improve ecosystem health; maps and data products, and workshops and technical support.
Create updated databases, webpages, outreach materials, open access tools, and peer-reviewed publications.
Direct beneficiaries of this program include the general population in the Connecticut and New York portion of the watershed and its surrounding areas, schools, universities and other institutions of learning, environmental managers and policy makers.
These activities are intended to support the recipient's goal to restore and de-list areas of concern, restore and protect habitat connectivity, increase public access to beaches and waterways, maximize acres of habitat restored and river corridors with improved health, protect and restore coastal wetlands, enhance the public's awareness and understanding of the Sound, implement and coordinate habitat restoration, conduct water quality and embayment monitoring, develop accessible habitat-based ecological decision support tools, evaluate fish community ecosystems and conduct the acoustic telemetry of key migratory fish species.
Activities: Specific activities include education and outreach to communities, collection and analysis of water quality monitoring and embayment data across the watershed; including coastal acidification parameters, coordination of habitat restoration, support accessibility of mapping data in Connecticut saltmarshes, acoustically monitor key migratory fish species, and conduct an evaluation of ecosystems that support fish communities and land appraisals for habitat restoration.
Subrecipient: Subawards include University of Connecticut Laboratory for Plankton and Community Sampling, analyses and coastal acidification monitoring and University of Maryland (Horn Point Lab) for HPLC phytopigment analysis.
Outcomes: The anticipated deliverables will be progress and final reports; quality assurance project plans (QAPPS); and technical reports.
Expected outcomes include improved management and implementation of comprehensive conservation and management plan goals and objectives; improved water quality, living resources habitat, and public safety; reduced contaminant and nutrient loads; improved water quality assessment to guide management activities and improve ecosystem health; maps and data products, and workshops and technical support.
Create updated databases, webpages, outreach materials, open access tools, and peer-reviewed publications.
Direct beneficiaries of this program include the general population in the Connecticut and New York portion of the watershed and its surrounding areas, schools, universities and other institutions of learning, environmental managers and policy makers.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
New Haven,
Connecticut
United States
Geographic Scope
County-Wide
Related Opportunity
EPA-CEP-01
Connecticut Department Of Energy & Environmental Protection was awarded
Long Island Sound Conservation Grant
Project Grant 00A01457
worth $4,574,593
from EPA Region 1: Boston in October 2024 with work to be completed primarily in Connecticut United States.
The grant
has a duration of 2 years and
was awarded through assistance program 66.437 Long Island Sound Program.
$5,700,000 (55.0%) of this Project Grant was funded by non-federal sources.
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 8/26/24
Period of Performance
10/1/24
Start Date
9/30/26
End Date
Funding Split
$4.6M
Federal Obligation
$5.7M
Non-Federal Obligation
$10.3M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
00A01457
SAI Number
None
Award ID URI
SAI EXEMPT
Awardee Classifications
State Government
Awarding Office
68HF01 REGION 1 (GRANTS OFFICE)
Funding Office
68Q000 REGION 1 (FUNDING OFFICE)
Awardee UEI
VZA5GCYZBJA7
Awardee CAGE
3DJA8
Performance District
CT-03
Senators
Richard Blumenthal
Christopher Murphy
Christopher Murphy
Modified: 8/26/24