Funding for projects helping Canadian freshwater bodies now open, Manitoba lakes included
Global News
Indigenous governments, organizations and communities with projects and initiatives to protect certain freshwater bodies can apply for funding under the Canada Water Agency.
On Monday, the government of Canada announced that applications under the Canada Water Agency are open.
Terry Duguid, the member of Parliament for Winnipeg South, said Indigenous governments, organizations and communities with projects and initiatives to protect certain freshwater bodies can apply for funding.
Water bodies open for application include Lake Simcoe, the Wolastoq/Saint John River, the Great Lakes, Lake Winnipeg and Lake of the Woods.
Over a decade, about $73 million in federal funding will go towards Lake Winnipeg and Lake of the Woods alone, Duguid said.
Karen Scott, director of programs at the Lake Winnipeg Research Consortium (LWRC), said the funding will help continue the organization’s efforts to restore its namesake.
“Sadly, one of the most visible changes to Lake Winnipeg are those large algal blooms,” she said. “It’s a very visible response that the lake has made to our activities in the watershed, which are introducing too many nutrients into the lake.
“But what we see is only a small piece of a very complex puzzle, and there are many changes taking place in Lake Winnipeg, and processes occurring in Lake Winnipeg, that we don’t see, (and) we simply cannot see until we measure them.”
Manitoba Métis Federation citizens and harvesters “have expressed their concerns regarding the reduced quality and health of the Seine River and other lakes, streams and water bodies in Manitoba,” said JoAnne Remillard, MMF minister of environment and climate change.