Waterkeeper Receives $900K in Restoration Funds

On April 21, 2023, Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper Executive Director Jill Jedlicka was joined by U.S. Congressman Brian Higgins to announce federal funding to support restoring habitat in the highly-impaired Scajaquada Creek watershed.

The $901,000 from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Climate-Ready Coasts initiative will allow Waterkeeper to collaborate closely with community members in the Black Rock, Riverside, East Side of Buffalo, and western Cheektowaga neighborhoods.

“Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper has been committed to the restoration of Scajaquada Creek for more than 30 years, and with this latest momentum we are finally on an accelerated path to replicate the collaborative success we had in the Buffalo River,” said Jill Jedlicka, Executive Director of Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper. “Restoring Scajaquada Creek’s habitat and resilience will in turn reconnect many communities along its corridor, but this is no small task. The transformational return to a healthy waterway requires complementing technical studies and planning with the inclusion of diverse community voices as a cornerstone to this work. NOAA has played a significant role in many other restoration efforts in the Buffalo and Niagara Rivers, and we are thankful and excited to continue to work with our federal partners on Scajaquada Creek.”

“We must address climate change in order to create a better future for our community. This means making long-term investments that improve our freshwater systems and restore their natural habitats,” said Congressman Higgins. “Thanks to historic investments from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the Inflation Reduction Act, NOAA is providing the Western New York community long-overdue resources to restore the Scajaquada Creek watershed. Serving East Buffalo, Riverside, Black Rock, and parts of Cheektowaga, funding will create a healthier future for thousands of Western New Yorkers living in these communities.”

NOAA is recommending nearly $25 million in funding for 35 new projects that will advance the coastal habitat restoration priorities of underserved communities. These projects were selected through the Coastal Habitat Restoration and Resilience Grants for Underserved Communities funding opportunity. They will support community-driven habitat restoration and help build the capacity of underserved communities to more fully participate in restoration activities.

The Scajaquada Creek watershed is a 29 square mile area that includes the City of Buffalo, Cheektowaga, Depew and Lancaster. The Creek itself stretches 13 miles west from its headwaters in Lancaster to its mouth at Black Rock Canal in the City of Buffalo. Significant portions of the 13-mile creek have been altered or impaired in some way – including hardened shorelines, straightened channels, buried sections, polluted brownfields, and sewage overflows.

The post Waterkeeper Receives $900K in Restoration Funds appeared first on Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper.

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Former Department of Justice officials who were either forced out or resigned in protest of President Donald Trump's administration left some scathing resignation letters for their bosses, and a new organization is seeking to preserve as many of the letters as possible, according to a new report.

Since Trump took office in January, about 5,000 employees at the Department of Justice have either quit or resigned, CBS News reported on Sunday. Meanwhile, a cadre of those former employees is banding together to create a public display of the messages the former employees left for their bosses. Those employees have created an organization called Justice Connection that is organizing and posting the messages, the report added.

Stacey Young, a former civil division attorney for the Justice Department, is leading Justice Connection. A spokesperson for the organization told CBS News that they are working to preserve the messages because they "show what is happening in our country at this moment."

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"Fear is the tool of a tyrant, wielded to suppress independent thought," Comey wrote in a message. "Instead of fear, let this moment fuel the fire that already burns at the heart of this place."

Another former DOJ lawyer, Hagan Scotten, who resigned in protest of the Trump administration's decision to stop prosecuting New York City Mayor Eric Adams on corruption charges, also had her farewell message captured in the online database.

"If no lawyer within earshot of the President is willing to give him that advice, then I expect you will eventually find someone who is enough of a fool, or enough of a coward, to file your motion," Scotten wrote. "But it was never going to be me."

Read the entire report by clicking here.