Gov. Evers Receives 2022 US Water Prize from the US Water Alliance
MADISON — Gov. Tony Evers was recognized this week by the US Water Alliance as a winner of this year’s US Water Prize in the Outstanding Public Official category. The governor’s receipt of this award was announced Tuesday night at the US Water Prize 2022 Ceremony, part of the US Water Alliance’s annual One Water Summit, which was held in Milwaukee this year. Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Secretary Preston Cole accepted the award on the governor’s behalf.
According to the US Water Alliance, the US Water Prize celebrates outstanding achievement in the advancement of sustainable, integrated, and inclusive solutions to the nation’s water challenges, and is the preeminent national recognition program for exemplary efforts to secure a One Water future for all. The 2022 US Water Prize winners were selected from more than 160 nominations and applications, and the governor was selected following a nomination from The Nature Conservancy in Wisconsin for his efforts to promote and protect water quality in Wisconsin. Additional information about the US Water Prize and this year’s winners can be found here.
Gov. Evers and the Evers Administration has taken critical steps to ensure clean water in Wisconsin. During his first year in office, Gov. Evers declared 2019 the Year of Clean Drinking Water in Wisconsin and created the Wisconsin PFAS Action Council to ensure collaboration across state agencies to address the issue of PFAS contamination in Wisconsin, including establishing state drinking water standards to keep communities healthy and safe. In both of his biennial budget proposals, the governor proposed major investments in water quality and infrastructure, including in flood prevention and resilience, restoring wetlands, and helping shoreline communities with dangerous shoreline erosion. Highlights regarding water quality from the signed 2021-23 biennial budget include providing $5 million over the biennium to support the University of Wisconsin System’s Freshwater Collaborative, increasing funding for producer-led watershed protection grants, providing $7 million over the next two years for the Soil and Water Resource Management Program, increasing funding for the well compensation grant program, providing $4 million for the urban nonpoint source and storm water management program and the municipal flood control program, and providing $6.5 million for the Targeted Runoff Management Program, which supports the installation of structures in rural settings to improve water quality by preventing soil erosion and animal waste runoff.
Additionally, in August, the governor, together with the DNR, announced a $10 million grant program to support the replacement, reconstruction, treatment, or abandonment of contaminated private wells in Wisconsin. The program, based on the state’s Well Compensation Grant Program, will expand eligibility beyond the current Well Compensation Program to help well owners address contamination in approximately 1,036 additional wells and increase access to clean drinking water in Wisconsin. The governor also announced in August a $4.5 million investment in five conservation projects across Wisconsin, including projects that safeguard important watersheds across the state, conserve unique, critical shoreline habitats, and promote lakeshore recreation and safe harbor access.
An online version of this release is available here.
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.