Resource Conservation Districts in California's Central Coast Region

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An environmental summary created by the ENVS 560/L Watershed Systems class at CSUMB.

Summary

Resource Conservation Districts (RCDs) are special districts established to implement and monitor natural resource conservation projects across private and public land [1]. They were originally established by the U.S. federal government as Soil Conservation Districts- now called the Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS)- and in 1939 were formally authorized as a California state special district by Division 9 of the California Public Resources Code [2]. RCDs are governed by an independent Board of Directors made up of locally appointed or elected individuals, within boundaries set by the State of California. The mission of these non-regulatory locally governed special districts is to educate the public and land owners about resource conservation in each area. In doing so, they provide an integral link to conservation programs and agencies on the local, state, and federal level. RCDs engage in:

  • Agricultural land conservation
  • Conservation education
  • Forest stewardship
  • Fuels management
  • Irrigation management
  • Recreational land restoration
  • Soil and water management on non-agricultural lands
  • Urban resource conservation
  • Watershed planning and management
  • Water conservation
  • Water quality protection and enhancement
  • Wetland conservation
  • Wildlife habitat enhancement


The RCDs of California's Central Coast Region include:

References

  1. RCD (Resource Conservation District). 2017. Resource Conservation District Assistance. State of California Department of Conservation.
  2. CaliforniaPublic Resources Code. 1975. DIVISION 9. RESOURCE CONSERVATION [9001 - 9972.

Links

Disclaimer

This page may contain student work completed as part of assigned coursework. It may not be accurate. It does not necessary reflect the opinion or policy of CSUMB, its staff, or students.