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  2. Urban Waters Partnership

The Urban Waters Cycle

Urban Waters: A Cycle of Change

The Urban Waters Program is anchored in a simple cycle of change: linking water quality improvements to self-determined community priorities generates broader support and sustains the long-term efforts needed to restore urban water quality. The program strives to create a "virtuous cycle," as illustrated by the image below, which connects people to their urban waters and engages them in restoration, generates new momentum for urban water quality restoration efforts, and improves the surrounding neighborhoods and communities. 

Image text of the urban waters cycle: Improve water quality. Connect communities to waterways. Revitalize communities. Engage people in restoration.

Urban Waters Partnership

  • About the Urban Waters Partnership
  • 21 Designated Urban Waters Locations
    • Anacostia Watershed (DC/MD)
    • Blue River (Kansas City, MO)
    • Bronx and Harlem River Watersheds (NY)
    • Caño Martín Peña (PR)
    • Grand River / Grand Rapids (MI)
    • Greater Philadelphia Area / Delaware River Watershed (PA, NJ, DE)
    • Green-Duwamish Watershed (Washington)
    • Lake Pontchartrain Area / New Orleans (LA)
    • Los Angeles River Watershed (CA)
    • The Meramec River and Big River (Missouri)
    • Middle Rio Grande / Albuquerque (NM)
    • Mystic River Watershed (MA)
    • Northwest Indiana (IN)
    • Passaic River / Newark (NJ)
    • Patapsco Watershed / Baltimore Region (MD)
    • Proctor Creek Watershed / Atlanta (GA)
    • Rio Reimagined-Rio Salado Project
    • San Antonio River Basin within Bexar County (Texas)
    • South Platte Watershed, Headwaters to Denver Metropolitan Area (CO)
    • Walnut Creek Watershed / Raleigh (NC)
    • Western Lake Erie Basin, near Toledo (OH)
  • Federal Partners
Contact Us About the Urban Waters Partnership
Contact Us to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
Last updated on July 10, 2024
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