TERRE HAUTE —
Indiana is making plans to acquire up to 43,000 acres along the Wabash River and Sugar Creek floodplain in west-central Indiana, part of an unprecedented land conservation/
wetlands project that will benefit wildlife, public recreation and the environment.
Gov. Mitch Daniels announced the initiative Thursday at The Landing. He spoke outdoors, with the Wabash River flowing in the background.
The area involved, which follows 94 river miles along the Wabash River, stretches across four counties from Shades State Park to Fairbanks Landing Fish & Wildlife Area in Sullivan County.
The planned Wabash River wetlands area is expected to be larger than the combined size of the Morgan-Monroe State Forest and Brown County State Park.
“It will be one continuous wildlife habitat, one of the largest in the eastern United States,” Daniels said. His comments drew applause from the large crowd.
The project, which includes two separate habitat areas, is the largest ever undertaken by the Department of Natural Resources. Daniels will announce the second part of the project, located in southeastern Indiana, today.
Daniels said the goal is to make Indiana a national leader in wetlands and wildlife protection. “Coupled with Goose Pond [in Greene County], our experts believe that the new, 94-mile continuous Wabash River habitat will become one of the major Eastern U.S. waterfowl destinations and a tourist destination along with it,” he said.
The state will use $21.5 million from the Lifetime License Trust Fund, a state trust fund dedicated to conservation purposes, and $10 million from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service to begin the acquisitions. That investment will leverage millions of dollars in additional private and federal funding for both the protection and restoration of the corridor.
The Lifetime License Trust Fund contains revenue from the sale of lifetime fishing, hunting and trapping licenses. No state tax dollars are involved.
Additional support will come from The Nature Conservancy, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service and Ducks Unlimited, a national conservation group based in Memphis, Tenn.
Mary McConnell, Indiana state director for the Nature Conservancy, described the project as “the most amazing and perhaps the most significant investment in conservation in a generation in Indiana. It’s exactly the kind of project that we should be working on as a state,” she said.
The Wabash corridor has long been a priority for the nature conservancy, she said. The Wabash is “Indiana’s river,” she said. It is 475 miles long and one of the most biologically diverse rivers in the country, she said.
The DNR will work to acquire land in the area from willing sellers, building upon the recent excitement regarding the Wabashiki Fish & Wildlife Area, a proposed 7,000-acre project along the Wabash River in West Terre Haute.
McConnell credited local partners involved with the Wabashiki project as being a catalyst for the larger project announced Thursday. “It’s the local partners here that have had a vision from the very beginning,” she said, naming John Mutchner, Keith Ruble and Max Miller. She also referred to Wabash River Development and Beautification Inc., Riverscape and the Vigo County Parks and Recreation Department.
After the governor’s announcement, Miller said the wetlands project will have a major impact not only on wildlife and waterfowl, but on the local economy as well. “We [Terre Haute] are the central city of this project,” he said.
Miller described it as a “once-in-a-lifetime chance” to use a dedicated state trust fund, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service funds and other private funding to create the Wabash River wetlands corridor. “I think it’s a legacy that he [Daniels] has put together,” Miller said.
Miller said he may not be around when the project is completed, but “it’s for my grandkids. It’s for the future.”
Robert D. Hoffman, director of Ducks Unlimited for the Great Lakes/Atlantic Regional office, said during the news conference, “This is unprecedented for a state to be developing a corridor … with this many acres.” He described it as an “amazing” initiative
“We should all be very, very proud of what’s going on here,” Hoffman said.
Ducks, geese and other waterfowl that migrate from the Arctic and Canada down through the United States to Mexico will find more and better habitat in Indiana, he said. It will change local migration patterns of waterfowl in this portion of the Mississippi Flyway.
“This is fantastic news” for waterfowl enthusiasts in Indiana, Hoffman said.
While the project could take several years, Daniels said it’s the state’s goal “to make this real as fast as it can practically be done.”
He thanked private and public groups who came together “to do something I hope generations of Hoosiers will look back and be grateful for and enjoy.”
In an interview, Daniels said he believes the Wabash River wetlands project will eventually become known nationally as a wildlife habitat, drawing tourists and outdoor recreation enthusiasts. He also hopes it means a boost to the Terre Haute economy.
The project also will bring significant flood control advantages, the governor said, one reason the federal government is participating.
It will involve purchase of property that can be adversely impacted by flooding, including farmland.
As the project develops, the goal will be to provide plenty of public access for fishing and other outdoor recreational activities, said Nick Heinzelman, DNR director of land acquisition. The state’s goal is “to try to connect the bigger parcels we already own into a continual habitat corridor down the river.”
The property will be acquired from “willing sellers, something that will take time,” Heinzelman said. Some people will be ready to sell their floodplain property immediately, while others may want to wait a few years. Some people may not sell at all.
The overall Wabash project eventually will be six times larger than the 8,000-acre Goose Pond Fish & Wildlife Area, which was purchased in 2006.
Other key objectives of the initiative are to protect habitat for threatened and endangered species; preserve significant rest areas for migratory birds, especially waterfowl, and to create a regionally significant conservation destination.
Terre Haute Mayor Duke Bennett said the Wabash River wetlands project represents “a once-in-a lifetime project. You don’t have many things that are this large in scale. Terre Haute sits right in the heart of it. We all stand to benefit from this state project.”
Sue Loughlin can be reached at (812) 231-4235 or sue.loughlin@tribstar.com.
Top Story
Groundbreaking wetland initiative seeks to encompass 43,000 acres
Spans four counties, 94 river miles of Sugar Creek, Wabash
- Top Story
-
-
Vigo polls close, counting begins
Polls in Vigo County closed at 6 p.m., and the vote counting is underway.
The key local race is for Vigo County Council at large — which features eight Democrats and four Republicans vying for three nominations in each party. -
BREAKING: Santorum suspends GOP presidential campaign
Rick Santorum is suspending his campaign for the GOP presidential nomination, clearing a path for Mitt Romney to become the nominee.
-
UPDATE: Federal authorities fear 'sextortion' case involves many teens
Federal authorities say a Clay County man has confessed to coercing scores of teenage boys into recording sexually explicit videos after he threatened to expose them on pornographic websites.
-
Navy jet crashes into Virgina apartments, pilots eject
A Navy jet crashed and set fire to an apartment complex in Virginia Beach today and the two-member crew ejected safely, officials said.
-
Large tornadoes, damage reported in Dallas area
Tornadoes tore through the Dallas area today, tearing roofs off homes, tossing trucks into the air and leaving flattened tractor trailers strewn along highways and parking lots.
-
Kansas digs hole too deep against Kentucky
This time Kansas couldn't come all the way back.
-
UPDATE: Rockville rally comes up short in IHSAA boys Class A title game
The list of things Rockville did right on Saturday in Bankers Life Fieldhouse is a fairly extensive one, with defensive effort and hustle and determination fighting for spots at the top of it.
-
AP Source: Peyton Manning chooses Broncos
Peyton Manning wants to play for the Denver Broncos in Act II of his outstanding career. A person briefed on negotiations said the NFL’s only four-time MVP called Tennessee Titans owner Bud Adams and told him that he had picked the Broncos.
-
UPDATE: Fugitive remains at large; police urge caution
The search continues today for a fugitive wanted by police.
Michael Joe Cheesman, 44, remains at large as of 9 a.m., according to Chief Deputy Clark Cottom of the Vigo County Sheriff’s Department. -
UPDATE: Storms kill at least 14 across southern Indiana, number expected to rise
A series of powerful tornadoes that tore through southern Indiana on Friday killed at least 14 people and left several small towns in ruin. Authorities warned a death toll that rose throughout the night could grow further after dawn as rescue teams began to search in the daylight.
-
PHOTO UPDATE: Man trapped in grave under burial vault treated and released from hospital
A man who became trapped in an open grave under a 3,000-pound burial vault this morning escaped serious injury and was successfully extricated by rescue workers in less than an hour.
-
Vehicle crashes into downtown storefronts
Downtown Terre Haute got a noisy shock late this morning.
A motorist backed her Pontiac G6 through the store-front windows of Mic’s Pics and the Blu Katt Lounge on Wabash Avenue in the heart of the city. -
Perfect game: ISU shoots NCAA record 12-for-12 from 3-point range in win over SIU
Indiana State set an NCAA record for 3-point percentage and consecutive 3-pointers made Saturday afternoon in Hulman Center, connecting on all 12 attempts during a 78-68 win over Southern Illinois.
-
Indiana House approves right-to-work bill
Indiana’s Republican-controlled House of Representatives cleared the way Wednesday to become the first right-to-work state in a traditionally union-heavy Rust Belt increasingly targeted by non-union foes.
-
ISU men knock off No. 25 Vanderbilt 61-55
The Indiana State men's basketball team ended the game on a 16-2 run to defeat No. 25-ranked Vanderbilt on Saturday night 61-55.
-
Burglary suspect dies in police shooting
The shooting death this morning of a West Terre Haute burglary suspect is being investigated by the Vigo County Sheriff’s Department.
-
Dem caucus picks Crooks as 8th District candidate
From cities, farms and the towns in between, Democrat leaders of the “Bloody 8th” named Dave Crooks their man for 2012.
-
VIDEO: Will Ferrell stands at crossroads, odd locations in Terre Haute ads
America is at a crossroads, and Will Ferrell stands right in the middle of it.
-
VIDEO UPDATE: Will Ferrell’s Terre Haute beer ads hit the TV airwaves
That whirlwind visit to Terre Haute made by comic actor Will Ferrell three months ago had a purpose after all.
-
Bennett wins re-election in Terre Haute
Incumbent Terre Haute Mayor Duke Bennett won a resounding re-election victory Tuesday night.
-
BREAKING: Gibault walk-away dies following crash of stolen truck
The rear-seat passenger in a stolen pickup truck that crashed while fleeing an Indiana State Police trooper has died of his injuries. The crash occurred late last evening in the city limits of Terre Haute on U.S. 41 (Third Street) northbound at College Street.
-
UPDATE: Gadhafi, Libya’s leader for 42 years, killed
Moammar Gadhafi, who ruled Libya with a dictatorial grip for 42 years until he was ousted by his own people in an uprising that turned into a bloody civil war, was killed Thursday when revolutionary forces overwhelmed his hometown, Sirte, the last major bastion of resistance two months after his regime fell.
-
UPDATE: Indy 500 winner Dan Wheldon dies after massive crash in Vegas
Indianapolis 500 winner Dan Wheldon died Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway after his car became ensnarled in a fiery 15-car pileup, flew over another vehicle and landed in a catch fence just outside turn 2.
-
Hauteans do a double-take when Will Ferrell makes surprise appearance downtown (see Video)
Actor/comedian Will Ferrell was in downtown Terre Haute this morning at Seventh and Wabash, the Crossroads of America.
-
Special 9/11 section on Saturday
As part of the Tribune-Star's 10th anniversary coverage of the 9/11 attacks on New York City, Washington, D.C., and Shanksville, Pa., we offer a special section — 9/11: Ten Years Later — in Saturday's print and online editions. The 10-page section includes more 9/11 memories and stories on how events on Sept. 11, 2001, changed life in the Wabash Valley.
-
9/11: Where were you?
As part of our coverage of the upcoming 10-year anniversary of 9/11, the Tribune-Star and Tribstar.com invite you to share your recollections with us and our legions of readers. We will compile responses and post them online in coming days.
-
SUNDAY UPDATE: 5 dead in Indiana State Fair stage collapse
Five people have now died and more than 40 injured when a stage collapsed Saturday night during a storm at the Indiana State Fair, where the country group Sugarland was set to perform.
-
Two new Brent Long memorial items in time for today's National Night Out
The Terre Haute Police Department has two new items for sale to benefit the Officer Brent Long fundraiser, available in time for the Terre Haute National Night Out celebration scheduled 5 to 9 p.m. today in Fairbanks Park.
-
PHOTO UPDATE 2: Abducted Terre Haute child recovered, suspects in custody
A Terre Haute boy abducted Tuesday has been recovered unharmed, and the two suspects in his abduction are in police custody.
-
PHOTO UPDATE: Hunt on for missing 4-year-old
Federal assistance has been requested in the case of a 4-year-old Terre Haute boy allegedly abducted Tuesday morning by a Terre Haute couple.
- More Top Story Headlines
-




