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LETTER: Nottawasaga River the area's 'crucial life blood' and worth protecting

Nottawasaga Valley watershed covers 3,700 square kilometres and touches on 18 municipalities
nott river 2
Submitted photo of the Nottawasaga River.

CollingwoodToday welcomes letters to the editor at [email protected]. Please include your daytime phone number and address (for verification of authorship, not publication). The following letter is from Byron Wesson, director of conservation services with the Nottawasaga Valley Conservation Authority.
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The Nottawasaga River starts with humble beginnings, surfacing from a wetland just west of the Niagara Escarpment. It takes never ending twists and turns for an approximate 160 kilometres and lands on the shore of Lake Huron in the Town of Wasaga Beach.

This river is considered crucial life blood for the entire Nottawasaga Valley watershed. The loss of this river would be tragic to life as we know it.

Fear mongering? No. Got your attention? I hope so.

Never in our lifetime has it been more important to hang on to our natural resources and protect them like they protect us. As a society, we cannot take our natural environment for granted as our current and future quality of life depends on it.

So how does one go about protecting and enhancing such a large river and its rivers and streams? One that flows through a watershed of 3,700 square kilometres, touching on 18 distinct municipalities and impacting approximately 200,000 residents, plus millions of annual seasonal visitors?

The Nottawasaga Valley Conservation Authority (NVCA) calls it “integrated watershed management,” or IWM, and it works.

In short, IWM is the process of managing human activities and natural resources on a watershed basis, taking into account social, economic and environmental concerns, as well as local community interests and issues, such as the impacts of growth and climate change. IWM is a balancing act that receives input from all sectors with an end goal that strives to ensure the best for all. 

We start the process by pulling from a tight group of talented professionals who have made it their mission to ensure the health and integrity of one of the fastest growing watersheds in Ontario. This talent pool includes biologists, foresters, teachers, hydrogeologists, engineers, ecologists, land management and professional planners, mapping, enforcement and communication specialists.

It is time that people recognize that NVCA’s involvement with development and watershed management will benefit their lives immensely and the lives of many generations to come.

Byron Wesson
Nottawasaga Valley Conservation Authority, director of conservation services

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