North Carolina Land and Water Fund (NCLWF) was created by the North Carolina General Assembly in 1996 as the 'Clean Water Management Trust Fund'. The fund is an independent non-regulatory agency housed in the Division of Land and Water Stewardship in the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources. The special revenue fund was created "to clean up pollution in the State's surface waters and to protect and conserve those waters that are not yet polluted. The intent of the fund is "to focus on the cleanup and prevention of pollution of the State's surface waters, the establishment of a network of riparian buffers and greenways, and the preservation of property for establishing clean water supplies, the General Assembly believes that the results of these efforts will also be beneficial to wildlife and marine fisheries habitats." NCLWF issues grants to a variety of entities including local governments, state agencies and nonprofit corporations "whose primary purpose is the conservation, preservation, and restoration of our State's environmental and natural resources".
The fund is authorized under North Carolina general statute Article 2; Part 41 ç143B-135.234: <blockquote>(a) Fund Established. â The Clean Water Management Trust Fund is established as a special revenue fund to be administered by the Department of Natural and Cultural Resources. The Clean Water Management Trust Fund shall also be known as the "Land and Water Fund." The fund receives revenue from the following sources and may receive revenue from other sources:
</blockquote>Funding purposes are laid out in the legislation, and have evolved over time. Septic and sewer infrastructure are no longer eligible, and natural heritage elements were added as part of the merger with the former NC Natural Heritage Trust Fund. Section C of the enabling legislation lays out the purposes as of June 2021:<blockquote>(c) Fund Purposes. â Moneys from the fund are appropriated annually to finance projects to clean up or prevent surface water pollution and for land preservation in accordance with this Part. Revenue in the fund may be used for any of the following purposes:
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Local governments, state agencies, and nonprofit conservation organizations, such as land trusts and watershed groups, are eligible applicants. Grant applications to the fund are due in early February and are guided by a set of application ranking criteria.
GS ç 143B-135.238 lays out general grant requirements and eligible applicants:<blockquote>(a) Eligible Applicants. - Any of the following are eligible to apply for a grant from the fund for the purpose of protecting and enhancing water quality:
(b) Criteria. - The criteria developed by the Trustees under G.S. 143B-135.242 apply to grants made under this Part.
(c) Matching Requirement. - The Board of Trustees shall establish matching requirements for grants awarded under this Part. This requirement may be satisfied by the donation of land to a public or private nonprofit conservation organization as approved by the Board of Trustees. The Board of Trustees may also waive the requirement to match a grant pursuant to guidelines adopted by the Board of Trustees.
(d) Restriction. - No grant shall be awarded under this Part for any of the following purposes:
(e) Withdrawal. - An award of a grant under this Part is withdrawn if the grant recipient fails to enter into a construction contract for the project within one year after the date of the award, unless the Trustees find that the applicant has good cause for the failure. If the Trustees find good cause for a recipient's failure, the Trustees must set a date by which the recipient must take action or forfeit the grant. (1996, 2nd Ex. Sess., c. 18, s. 27.6(a); 2003-340, s. 1.3; 2005-454, s. 6; 2006-178, s. 1; 2007-185, s. 1; 2014-100, s. 14.8(c); 2015-241, s. 14.30(k1), (r1); 2020-18, s. 12(b).)</blockquote>The fund receives allocations from two primary sources: annual appropriations from the General Assembly and special registration plates under G.S. 20âÂÂ81.12.
Since a legislative restructuring in 2013, the board of trustees is composed of 9 board members. 3 of which are appointed by the Governor (including the chairman), 3 appointed by the President Pro Tempore of the Senate, and 3 appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
The board membership as of June 2021 is as follows:
Prior to 2013: The board of trustees was a 21-member board which was appointed by state elected officials including the governor of NC who appointed seven members with varying staggered terms, the President Pro Tempore of the Senate appointed seven members with varying staggered terms, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives who also appointed seven members with varying staggered terms.
The qualifications must include knowledge in one of the following areas: acquisition and management of natural areas, conservation and restoration of water quality, wildlife and fisheries habitats and resources, or environmental management.
As of May 2021, the fund employs ten individuals including: executive director, deputy director, stewardship program manager, executive assistant, acquisition program manager, acquisition project manager, restoration program manager, infrastructure administrative assistant, two field representatives representing the two geographic areas (western and eastern) of the state. The current executive director is Walter Clark (2017âÂÂpresent). Former executive directors are as follows: Bryan Gossage (2013-2017), Richard Rogers (2009âÂÂ2007), D.G. Martin (Interim Director) (2007), Bill Holman (2000âÂÂ2006), and David McNaught (1996-2000).
The fund typically makes key investments in NC's four primary economic sectors:
The fund lists funded projects going back to 2013.
Acquisition projects â 750 projects funded as of 2012 for a total investment of $523,000,000 (fee simple and conservation easements combined)
Donated easement minigrants â 170 projects funded as of 2012 for a total investment of $3,900,000
Stream restoration projects â 175 projects funded as of 2012 for a total investment of $116,000,0000