Cody Fox, project manager for Cedar River Watershed District, explains Oct. 16, 2019, the upstream storage structure of CRWD’s Dobbins 1 project to members of The Hormel Foundation and other community leaders and project partners in the headwaters of Dobbins Creek’s north branch in Dexter Township.

Hormel Foundation gives major gift to Cedar River Watershed

CRWD awarded $500,000 to continue initiative to improve water quality, reduce flooding

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Dec. 3, 2020 — Mower County’s Cedar River Watershed is getting another big dose of generosity from The Hormel Foundation to improve water quality and reduce flooding.

The Hormel Foundation has approved a $500,000 grant request from the Cedar River Watershed District, which, in turn, will match that with $500,000 in mostly state funds.

Most of the match funds will come from the bonding bill passed in October by the state Legislature under the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources’ flood-hazard mitigation program.

In 2015, The Hormel Foundation granted $3.2 million to CRWD to begin its five-year Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) to build upland-storage projects mainly in the watershed’s headwater areas. CRWD matched that grant with $3.4 million in state and local funding.

CRWD’s Dexter 30-Dam 1 berm — part of the district’s Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) — temporarily holds back stormwater May 27, 2020, in the upland area of Dobbins Creek’s south branch in Dexter Township.

With a $1 million overall budget heading into the 2021 construction season, CRWD staff now can work with landowners in the headwaters of Dobbins Creek on potential projects for building earthen berms that temporarily store large amounts of stormwater and snowmelt. This would continue the past five years of progress made by CRWD under its CIP initiative in collaboration with The Hormel Foundation and State of Minnesota.

CRWD project manager Cody Fox checks a CIP structure on March 9, 2020, as snowmelt is temporarily stored behind the upstream Dobbins 1 berm.

“Everyone who lives in the Cedar River Watershed can be very thankful for the significant and ongoing support of The Hormel Foundation,” CRWD administrator Justin Hanson said. “Together, we are making a difference with these upland-storage projects, and others from across the state are learning from this work.”

Hanson also expressed gratitude for the legislative efforts by outgoing state Sen. Dan Sparks and Rep. Jeanne Poppe, both of Austin, to support CRWD’s projects this year and during their many years serving in the Legislature.

“Getting state approval to form the Cedar River Watershed District, designating the Cedar River as a state water trail and helping to secure millions of dollars in state funding for our upland-storage projects — Sen. Sparks and Rep. Poppe did outstanding work for the local natural resources during their legislative careers,” Hanson said.

CRWD administrator Justin Hanson (on right) addresses a group, including members of The Hormel Foundation’s Board of Directors, on Oct. 16, 2020, above the outlet of the upstream Dobbins 1 stormwater-detention structure in Dexter Township. This water eventually flows in Dobbins Creek’s north branch.

CRWD’s new grant is part of $10.6 million approved in November by The Hormel Foundation to nonprofit organizations in the Austin community. To date, The Hormel Foundation has given more than $300 million to the community.

“This is only possible due to the visionary plan established in 1941 by George and Jay Hormel, and the generations of hard-working employees of Hormel Foods,” said Jeffrey M. Ettinger, chair of The Hormel Foundation.

CRWD’s Cody Fox explains Oct. 16, 2019, how the district’s Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) projects work to improve water quality and reduce flooding.

CRWD’s initial five-year goal for its CIP initiative was achieved in 2020 thanks to the original $3.2 million grant from The Hormel Foundation and another $3.4 million in state and local funding that built 14 projects, including 11 upland-storage structures in the Dobbins watershed. Most projects were built on streams flowing into Dobbins’ north and south branches.

This year, CRWD has surpassed its original CIP goal of 8 percent by achieving at least a 10-percent peak flow reduction at the Cedar-Dobbins confluence in Austin after constructing this summer the district’s biggest project to date — Dexter 30-Dam 2. Spanning nearly 2,000 feet long with a 21-foot peak berm height, the $1.2 million structure is fully functional for temporary stormwater storage in the headwaters of Dobbins’ south branch.

Nearly 3,000 acres of mostly cropland now are controlled by CIP projects in the Dobbins watershed that is prone to flash flooding. With all CIP projects in place, a 10-year rain storm (roughly 4 inches of rain) — which leads to some rural roads being overtopped by flooding — would be about 1 foot lower at its peak downstream from Dobbins Creek’s confluence of its north and south branches in Austin’s Jay C. Hormel Nature Center.

Vehicles drive through a stretch of Interstate 90 flooded by the nearby Dobbins Creek on June 12, 2008, in northeast Austin downstream from the Jay C. Hormel Nature Center. CRWD’s CIP projects are heavily focused on the Dobbins watershed to reduce the effects of its propensity for flash flooding.

Part of the next CIP work in 2021 will be funded by $100,000 in state funding under the first budget for the Cedar-Wapsipinicon Comprehensive Water-Management Plan. This is part of the “One Watershed, One Plan” funding from the Minnesota Board of Water & Soil Resources (BWSR).

To learn more and view drone footage of CRWD’s CIP projects, visit www.cedarriverwd.org or find the YouTube channel for Mower Soil & Water Conservation that also includes CRWD projects.

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Cedar River Watershed District

Formed in 2007, CRWD works to reduce flooding and improve water quality on the Cedar River State Water Trail and its tributaries in southern Minnesota.