Skip to content

Va. grant funds will aid local homeowners with riparian buffers

Virginia Department of Forestry is offering funds on first-come-first-served basis
riparian-river-0195-adobe-stock

The Virginia Department of Forestry (DOF) has announced a new program that provides landowners free, flexible riparian forest buffer installation plus one year of maintenance.

The Riparian Forests for Landowners (RFFL) program is a unique watershed-based partnership including the Department of Forestry, Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay, Friends of the Rappahannock, James River Association, Terra Habitats LLC and York River Steward.

Riparian forest buffers are transition areas that protect streams, creeks or other water features by capturing sediment, nutrients and pollutants in the soil before they reach the water.

 This program is open to all Virginia private property owners including homeowner associations and civic leagues in rural, urban and suburban areas. Funding is provided through state and federal dollars. Those interested in participating will complete a survey form, and a DOF forester or partner organization will respond.

(For full information, see the Website at bit.ly/3K4mAnE.)

“This turnkey program covers free services including planning, site preparation and planting of buffers, as well as one year of maintenance,” said program coordinator Deya Ramsden. “Trees established in these buffers will act as filters to provide cleaner water, reduce erosion and flooding, and help replenish underground aquifers.”

Eligible projects will be awarded on a first-come, first-served basis with planned buffer establishment from fall 2024 to spring 2025, with follow-up maintenance support through 2026.

Buffer-installation details:

• Buffers can be installed on open land adjacent to a water feature where a forested buffer of at least 35 feet in width from the water’s edge can be planted.

• Existing buffers may be expanded up to 300 feet from the water’s edge.

• Buffers may be planted with pine seedlings, hardwood seedlings or a mix of both.

• Buffers must be at least 35 feet wide and no greater than 300 feet wide per side from the water’s edge.

• Land must have less than 20 percent coverage by invasive plant species to qualify for this program.

• Landowners must agree to retain the buffer as forest for 15 years.

The water feature may be any of the following bodies of water, including streams rivers, lakes, ponds, reservoirs, springs, seeps, wetlands, sloughs, marshes and irrigation ditches.