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The
Depression-era Dust Bowl fostered the concept of
soil and water conservation districts. In many
parts of the country, poor farming practices had
caused some of the most productive topsoil in
the world to either blow away or wash into
streams in the form of polluting silt.
While Ohio did
not experience a Dust Bowl, as such, some areas
of the state- especially in the hilly southeast
– were badly eroded as a result of antiquated
farming techniques. As the soil became less and
less productive, some landowners actually
abandoned their farms to seek livelihoods
elsewhere.
Into this
bleak 1930s agricultural landscape stepped Hugh
Hammond Bennett, a prominent soil scientist, who
saw soil as more than mere dirt. Bennett was a
friend of Ohio’s pioneer conservation farmer and
author Louis Bromfield. Both men viewed soil as
a valuable natural resource that must be managed
for preservation in much the same way as
wildfire, forests and waterways must be managed.
Bennett’s philosophies thrust him to the
forefront of a national soil conservation
movement and he became the first chief of the
Natural Resource Conservation Service of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.
His ideas
led to federal legislation and eventually
individual state laws that created county
agencies to help farmers with their soil
erosion, drainage and stream pollution problems.
Ohio’s law was passed in 1941. Within 20 years,
all 88 Ohio counties had formed locally governed
districts to support farmers in the conservation
and management of their soil and water
resources.
Legislation
passed in 1959 allowed Ohio’s county soil and
water conservation districts to hire staff and
expand their role to other areas of resource
management. Today, soil and water conservation
experts continue to work at reducing soil
erosion from farmlands, as well as construction
sites, urban development areas and timbered
woodlands. They also work with livestock and
poultry farm operators to prevent manure runoff.
Four hundred and forty locally elected, unpaid
volunteers, serving on five members boards,
oversee operations for each of Ohio’s 88 soil
and water conservation districts.
It used to
be that 95 percent of the people in the
districts worked with farmers, today they are
also working with municipal leaders, developers
and watershed groups.
Educating
the public about nonpoint source pollution in
waterways has become a major role of the county
districts. Nonpoint source pollution involves
water runoff from parking lots, rooftops,
roadways and other fixtures of the urban and
suburban landscape.
We work with
people who don’t have much connection with the
land to show it takes the cumulative actions of
many people to protect water quality.
Eighteen
county districts also have received grants from
the ODNR Division of Wildlife to fund wildlife
specialists. These specialists offer technical
assistance to farmers seeking help with
wildlife-related crop, orchard or nursery
damage. Landowners seeking ways to create
wildlife-friendly habitats on their property
also can consult these specialists for advice,
as can local schools planning wildlife education
classes.
Ohio’s
landscape has been changing and will continue to
change, but the mission of county soil and water
conservation districts is still that of local
people working with local people to do good
things for the land and water.
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