Tuesday, June 14, 2022

Larry Weber discusses the Iowa Watershed Approach in this radio interview.

 

 

6:09 now on your morning show clock. It's 80 degrees in Davenport. It feels like 84. 75 and clear skies in Cedar Rapids in Iowa City. Talking with Larry Weber.

He is with the University of Iowa's, IWA, Iowa Watershed Approach. And, Larry, good morning to you. I appreciate you joining me on the show. We were talking before everybody before, we got you on the air here. I said, 14 years to the day yesterday from the 2008 floods, and I didn't recognize it until last night.

It's kind of like when somebody you love passes away and it's that first time that you don't recognize the anniversary of their death. You kinda feel melancholy about it, but it's really neat that, we're talking about this. The, what you're gonna be doing today, a bus tour to visit some built structures like wetlands that talk about the success that you have at the Iowa Watershed approach to make Iowa more resilient to floods. Good morning, Larry. What are we gonna be looking at today?

Well, good morning, Doug. We are going to be touring farm ponds and wetlands, and a number of conservation projects that we built on private lands, to hold water back during heavy rainfall and reduce flooding downstream and help to process, water quality, pollutants, yeah, all throughout the year. So the flood first and flood focus project that also has a secondary benefit of improving water quality and, you know, subsequent benefits for water resources and natural systems and, you know, the enjoyment of the outdoors. So it really serves many purposes. It's interesting because you're gonna be joined by somebody from the US Department of Housing and Urban Development that helped to fund the IWA activities.

And that urban development and flooding, talk to me about how those two those how those two meet. Well, when we have these major floods, oftentimes, we think about, you know, our urban areas. Those are the most kind of visually devastating and impacted, housing stock and businesses that are impacted during floods. But sometimes we lose sight, you know, of the impact on rural America as well. And, throughout Iowa, we have, you know, our floods are kinda slow evolving usually.

They're not they're not flash floods. Mhmm. Most of the time, they come from rainfall that happens over a several day period, and they impact people, across, you know, the rural landscape as well as in the urban areas. Yeah. And it comes from a large watershed.

In a lot of cases, I remember there was a flood back in 2000 it was 2002 to 2006 that happened in Cedar Rapids where you had just this, like, nine inches over a 24 hour period in the Northern Cedar River watershed, and then everything just started collapsing down into Cedar Rapids. And I remember that on Indian Creek and then how it affected the Cedar River as well. Larry Webber joining us from the Iowa Watershed Approach. It's a $97,000,000 initiative to reduce flooding and improve water quality throughout the state. You say that you completed 800 flood mitigation practices to Iowa's landscape. This is all across the state of Iowa?

Well, it is, across the state. We worked in eight different, rural watersheds from the Upper Iowa, far up in Northeast Iowa, all the way over to the East and West Mission of botanist in Far Southwest Iowa. So we had eight targeted watersheds that we, implemented those 800 practices in. Such a neat opportunity for people to take a look at this and, obviously, this thing today that's gonna be going on at Cassina Farms.

Is it open to the public? Can people still come to this today if or they did they need to preregister?

Well, they needed to preregister, because we are gonna be doing a bus tour, and we wanted to accommodate everybody on the tour buses. So, unfortunately, if folks have a last minute interest, it'll be a little hard for us to accommodate more than just a couple.

Understood. Understood completely. But I would imagine you're gonna be, facing forward into the public again sometime in the future. What's the website where people can take a look at what you're doing at the Iowa Watershed approach? Well, the easiest way to get to us is go to the Iowa Flood Center's website.

Mhmm. So anybody that can Google Iowa Flood Center, they'll come to the Flood Center website, and then the Iowa Watershed Approach Project is displayed prominently there.

Hey, Larry Weber. Thank you for joining me here in the morning show. All this impacts the Mississippi River here in the eastern side of the state, so we appreciate all the hard work that you and IWA and the Iowa Flood Center are doing to take care of these watersheds..