Almost $9 Million will go to 60 Native American Projects for an Extensive Range of Conservation Work

Almost $9 Million will go to 60 Native American Projects for an Extensive Range of Conservation Work

The Interior Department's U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced today that almost $9 million in grants will go to 60 Native American conservation projects in 18 states.

Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne called the Tribal Landowner Incentive and Tribal Wildlife Grant programs ?an important part of the Department's effort to support tribal sovereignty, culture and fish and wildlife resource management programs."

The Tribal Landowner Incentive Program will fund 24 projects, at a cost of a little more than $2.5 million, and the Tribal Wildlife Grant program will fund 36 proposals at a cost of more than $6.3 million.

The Tribal Landowner Incentive Program grants provide for the protection, restoration and management of habitat to benefit species at risk, including Federally-listed endangered or threatened species, as well as proposed or candidate species.

The Tribal Wildlife Grant program provides funding to defray the cost of implementation of programs that benefit fish and wildlife and their habitat, including species that are not hunted or fished.

The grants made to Federally-recognized Indian tribes were made possible under the Related Agencies Appropriations Act of 2002 and a program created within the State Wildlife Grant program, also in 2002.

Copies of the 2006 period report on the Tribal Wildlife Grant and Tribal Landowner Incentive program is available by emailing pat_durham@fws.gov.