Merrimack Conservation Partnership Opens New 2025 Grant Rounds

The Merrimack Conservation Partnership (MCP) today released a request for proposals for its 2025 grant programs:

  • Land Conservation Grant Program, which funds transaction-related expenses on land conservation projects in the lower Merrimack Valley watershed of southern New Hampshire and northern Massachusetts. The program underwrites transaction costs—appraisals, surveys, title research, staff time, etc.—on conservation transactions that protect land identified as a priority in the Merrimack Valley Regional Conservation Plan (2014). The MCP has $117,434 to re-grant in 2025 for this grant program.
  • Environmental Science, Education and Outreach Grant Program, which provides funding for environmental science, education and outreach activities related directly to the Merrimack River or its watershed.  Funds can be used for activities such as youth or public environmental educational activities, development of outreach and educational materials, river clean ups, water quality testing and monitoring activities, and other related activities. The MCP has $25,000 to re-grant in 2025 for this grant program.

The grant programs are privately funded and administered by the Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests on behalf of the Merrimack Conservation Partnership. Non-profit land trusts, municipalities, and state agencies are all eligible to apply for an MCP grant.

The Merrimack Conservation Partnership is a regional conservation alliance formed to protect the southern portion of the greater Merrimack River watershed in New Hampshire and Massachusetts through accelerated land and water protection, advocacy, restoration, outreach and education.  The Partnership works by supporting and fostering collaboration, coordination, and innovation among partner organizations to strengthen our individual and collective efforts toward achieving the shared goal of a clean, healthy Merrimack River.

The Merrimack watershed is home to more than 2.6 million people–1.87 million in Massachusetts and 748,000 in New Hampshire. The 2010 U.S. Forest Service report, Forests on the Edge, identified the Merrimack River watershed as the most threatened in the nation in terms of projected loss of private forest land over the next twenty years.

Working together, the Partnership has developed a science-driven, consensus-based land conservation plan that integrates the best available natural resource data with expert judgment to prioritize land protection to protect water quality (especially drinking water supplies), preserve aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, conserve the region’s working farms and forests, and provide recreational open space. The Merrimack Conservation Plan identifies 1.3 million acres of land, representing about 54% of the watershed’s total land area, as a priority for conservation. As of the completion of the plan in 2014, only 23% of these priority acres was permanently conserved.

Before applying for an MCP grant, applicants should carefully review the request for proposals and application materials. These are available at the “Grants” section of the MCP website at http://merrimackconservationpartnership.org. The website also includes information on the Merrimack Valley region and conservation plan, maps, a list of towns in the region, etc.

Projects must be located in the towns listed on the website to be eligible to apply for funding.

Completed applications must be received no later than 5:00 p.m. on August 29, 2025. Completed applications may be submitted electronically to ccolton@forestsociety.org. Completed applications may also be sent by mail and must be postmarked no later than August 29, 2025. Mail applications to:  Connie Colton, Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests, 54 Portsmouth Street, Concord, NH  03301. Successful grant applicants will be notified by October 10, 2025.

For all questions regarding the grant program and the application process, please contact Brian Hotz at (603) 224-9945 x 316 or bhotz@forestsociety.org.

Merrimack Conservation Partnership Announces its 2023 Environmental Science, Education and Outreach Grant Awards

The Merrimack Conservation Partnership (MCP) announced the 2023 recipients of its seventh round of Environmental Science, Education and Outreach grants in the Merrimack Valley Watershed region of New Hampshire and Massachusetts. In this round of grants, the MCP awarded grants totaling $15,000 to eight projects that will help fund environmental science, education, and outreach activities related directly to the Merrimack River or its watershed. Funds can be used for activities such as youth or public environmental educational activities, development of outreach and educational materials, river clean ups, water quality testing and monitoring activities, and other science, education, and outreach efforts.

In 2010, the Merrimack was identified by the US Forest Service as the most threatened watershed in the nation in terms of projected loss of private forestland over the next 20 years. The two-state region of the Merrimack Watershed spans a total of 2.1 million acres and 3,275 square miles, of which 54% is in New Hampshire and 46% in Massachusetts. The Merrimack River starts in Franklin, NH and flows through eight of New Hampshire’s largest cities, then continues into Massachusetts to its mouth at Newburyport.

Launched in 2012, the Merrimack Conservation Partnership is a collaborative effort of private organizations and public agencies working on land conservation in the Merrimack Valley Watershed. The partners share a vision of conserving (on a strictly willing-seller/donor basis) the region’s most ecologically significant forests and the key connections between them for wildlife passage and human recreation.

The 2023 Grant Award winners are:

Applicant: Upper Merrimack Watershed Association
MCP Grant Award: $2,250
Estimated Total Project Costs: $33,586

Summary:
Biological Monitoring in the Upper Merrimack River and Tributaries
Since 1994, the Upper Merrimack Watershed Association’s (UMWA) Monitoring Program has been a volunteer-administered program providing data to municipal, state, and federal agencies. Each winter, volunteers are trained to identify and enumerate benthic macroinvertebrates, providing a long-term assessment of river conditions. Funding granted will be used to purchase stereo microscopes to offer expanded opportunities for volunteers to participate and generate accurate data. Information gathered will be provided to the upper Merrimack community through MerrimackRiver.org, events, media releases, email marketing, blog/forum and social media.

Applicant:  Merrimack River Watershed Council
MCP Grant Award:  $1,125
Total Project Costs:  $3,125

Summary:
Urban Resilience Program Associate
The Merrimack River Watershed Council’s Urban Resilience Program Associate works on environmental issues in the watershed, especially in environment justice urban communities, including youth environmental education, trash clean-up events that mitigate the degradation of water quality, and water quality monitoring. This grant will help fund the program associate’s time to create educational materials, programs and activities; organize outreach materials and recruit volunteers to implement trash clean-up events; and conduct water quality monitoring activities with volunteers through 2024.

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