U.S. Forest Service Partnership Focuses on Protecting Grand Mesa Watershed from Wildfire Risk

Effort aims to reduce wildfire risk in Western Colorado communities

GRAND VALLEY DISTRICT, Colo. (RFD News) — The snowpack on Colorado’s Grand Mesa plays a key role in supplying water to communities and farms across the Western Slope. The U.S. Forest Service now has a partnership focused on protecting the watershed that feeds those systems.

The Grand Mesa Watershed Resiliency Partnership is working to reduce wildfire risk in high-elevation forests, where snowmelt eventually becomes domestic water that local cities and communities depend on, as well as water for power generation.

Hannah Holm, Director of Strategic Projects and Partnerships for American Rivers Southwest Region, says the area serves as a critical source of water.

“The Grand Mesa really serves as the water tower for this part of Colorado. Our drinking water supplies and also our rivers come from high elevation places like the Grand Mesa.”

Recent wildfires across the Colorado River system have raised concerns about the vulnerability of these areas.

Project leaders say their work focuses on breaking up fuel in key parts of the watershed so that future fires have less impact. The goal is to protect water sources that hundreds of thousands of people depend on.

Officials say for communities across the Western Slope, protecting water starts with protecting the land it comes from.

Related Stories
Regulatory changes may influence farm costs and operations.
Biofuel policy decisions may influence planting economics. Today, March 18, is also National Biodiesel Day.
Nebraska’s largest wildfire on-record has burned 650,000 acres, with three other major fires also burning across the state, destroying pastureland and threatening cattle.
Farm Legal expert Roger McEowen discusses new dicamba regulations, compliance requirements for growers, and the evolving outlook for herbicide use.
Strong exports support ethanol margins and corn demand.
Vanessa Wood shares more about Ag Women Connect, the importance of uplifting women in agriculture, and upcoming projects designed to highlight stories across rural America.

Knoxville native Neal Burnette-Irwin is a graduate from MTSU where he majored in Journalism and Entertainment Studies. He works as a digital content producer with RFD News and is represented by multiple talent agencies in Nashville and Chicago.


LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

$2 million project tests fogging system to stop the virus in poultry facilities
Museum explores how early car makers played a part in advancing agriculture
The thief pleaded guilty and received an eight-year sentence.
Moody Blooms grows more than 20 varieties of tulips and has opened its farm to the public as a spring agritourism destination in Texas.
“Cow goggles” are helping farmers experience cattle vision in real time, offering new tools to reduce stress, improve movement, and enhance livestock management.
National FFA Organization CEO Scott Stump has been inducted as an honorary member of Purdue’s Alpha Gamma Rho chapter, recognizing his leadership in agriculture.
Agriculture Shows
Farm Monitor shines a light on Southeastern agriculture and is the only weekly news and information program dedicated to Georgia’s largest and most important industry: agriculture.
Check out FFA Today, a fun and fast-paced show featuring fascinating stories about amazing kids and unique agriculture industries.
Farmweek is broadcast from Mississippi, one of the South’s most geographically diverse states. The Magnolia State’s most important resource is its people—and about a fourth of the state’s population hold jobs tied to agriculture.
“DocTalk” with host Dr. Dan Thomson will be teaming up with practitioners around the country to tackle issues with your livestock.