Federal Infrastructure Law Provides Funding for Coastal Land Protection Efforts

Matt Leahy | November 25, 2021
Tags:
Advocacy
Great Bay under a blue sky driftwood in foreground

Great Bay

The Coastal and Estuarine Land Conservation Program (CELCP) was a key tool in the protection of coastal ecosystems, wetlands, corals, and natural shorelines. Established in 2002 through the bipartisan efforts of then New Hampshire Senator Judd Gregg and Senate Fritz Hollings of South Carolina, CELCP provided crucial support to the conservation work Great Bay Resource Protection Partnership (GBRPP) the Forest Society’s Moose Mountains Reservation and several other projects in the Seacoast region.  

However, the legislative authorization lapsed in 2013 thereby ending the program’s ability to support the mission of the GBRPP and the on-going collaborative work to protect the unique ecosystems in New Hampshire’s coastal region.

Fortunately, as a result of Senator Jeanne Shaheen’s leadership, the just-approved federal infrastructure bill includes funding for CELCP. Specifically, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act makes CELCP an eligible use for funding under two provisions of the legislation, the Coastal Zone Management Act, funded at $207 million spread over five years, and the National Estuarine Research Reserve System (NERRS), funded at $77 million over five years.

Read the New Hampshire conservation community’s press release announcing the funds.

Thank Senator Shaheen for her support of CELCP.