Click here to go to the NEW Sugar Creek Headwaters Ecosystem Study (SCHES) Site
The Sugar Creek Method:
An Example of Community-Based Watershed Management
Residents of the Sugar Creek
Watershed of Northeastern Ohio have come together to improve water quality
in their area. The Sugar Creek Method is an example of successful, sustained
community-based watershed management and is
offered here as a model for water resource management.
How the Sugar Creek
Method Came About
In 2000 the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) labeled the Sugar
Creek Watershed the second most impaired watershed in Ohio.
Since then, residents of the
Sugar Creek area have created a new relationship with their environment
and among themselves. These Ohioans have formed unique communities in
three sub-watersheds of the Sugar Creek and have been implementing strategies
to monitor and remediate the water in their stream.
It has been through their initiative
and self-reliance that the “Sugar Creek Method” for pollution
remediation has emerged.
What Is the Sugar Creek
Method?
The Sugar Creek Method is
a community-based approach to watershed management that emphasizes local
action and decision-making based on scientific data.
It has six main characteristics:
- Treat each stream as
unique physically, biologically, and socially. (Read
more.)
- Focus on headwaters and benchmark water quality. (Read
more.)
- Catalyze participatory learning communities at the local level that
seek their own sub-watershed visions. (Read more.)
- Collaborate with downstream teams with the help of Extension and Soil
and Water Quality professionals. (Read more.)
- Build on the concept that a healthy environment leads to healthy people
and profitable agriculture. (Read more.)
- Seek to find more sustainable approaches at the family, property parcel,
sub-watershed, community, and watershed levels through a holistic approach.
(Read more.)
Click the link for any of these
characteristics to learn how each relates to the people and land
surrounding the Sugar Creek.
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