How does the National Estuary Program
help?
Congress established the National
Estuary Program in 1987 to protect nationally significant estuaries
of the United States. Currently, there are 28
local programs working to safeguard the health of some of our
nation’s most important waters. The programs target a broad range
of issues and encourage communities to develop solutions. Scientists,
policy analysts, and educators work together with local communities
to identify problems and help develop solutions that everyone can
agree upon to address problems facing their watersheds.
The program encourages communities to take care of their own estuaries.
The governor of a state must nominate an estuary before it can be
accepted into the national program. Once accepted by EPA into the
national program, each community develops a plan that addresses
the whole range of environmental problems facing the estuary while
balancing the needs of everyone who lives there. Each individual
program consists of representatives from federal, state, and local
government agencies responsible for managing the estuary's resources,
as well people who live in the community, business leaders, educators,
and researchers.
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