Emergency Watershed Protection Program (EWP)
The following document
requires Adobe
Acrobat.
USDA
Disaster Programs Questions and Answers (341 KB)
California Natural Disasters
Questions & Answers
When does the damage assessment process begin?
Attending to the safety of fire victims is always a community’s first
priority. As soon as victims are attended to and fires are contained, the damage
assessment process begins.
Who can receive EWP assistance?
Landowners who have experienced severe property damage due to natural
disasters
may be eligible for assistance. All projects must have a governmental sponsor,
such as a city, county or water district, and the program is intended to help
groups of people, not individuals. All EWP work must reduce threats to life and
property, be economically and environmentally defensible and sound from an
engineering standpoint. All work must represent the least expensive alternative.
All EWP work must have a project sponsor. How can you become one?
The sponsor must meet the following criteria:
- Must be a state or legal subdivision of a state government, a local unit
of government, or a qualified Indian tribe or tribal organization
- Must be able and willing to obtain needed land rights, water rights, and
permits
- Must supply the required cost-share (25%) or in-kind services for needed
work
- Must agree to provide for the operation and maintenance of emergency
measures when completed
How is the Natural Resources Conservation Service
helping?
Natural Resources Conservation Service employees monitors natural disasters
and communicates with local Resource Conservation Districts, county officials, and
other potential sponsors about the EWP program and its potential use. When potential
projects are identified, staffs work with sponsors to prepare damage survey
reports (DSR) as the first step in providing EWP assistance.
How does the EWP program protect the environment?
Interdisciplinary teams, including biologists, geologists, resource
conservationists and engineers, evaluate all of the impacts of a proposed
measure to ensure that it is environmentally sound. An interagency approach is
used when necessary to coordinate efforts with Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) and other federal and state
agencies. < Back to California Emergency Watershed
Program
|