The National Forest Foundation and Salt River Project recently announced a new partnership that will help reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfire across the Salt and Verde River watersheds in Arizona “and allow SRP to continue providing an affordable and reliable water supply for the Phoenix metropolitan area,” SRP said.
NFF and SRP entered into a five-year agreement that establishes the foundation for the entities to work together to fund forest restoration projects and programs throughout SRP’s watersheds.
SRP will donate $500,000 per year to NFF to help support specific forest restoration projects.
SRP will also be donating $25,000 per year to support NFF’s Wood For Life program. The WFL program provides wood from forest restoration efforts to fuel Indigenous communities that rely on firewood to heat their homes.
Forest restoration projects generate a large volume of small-diameter, low-value, woody material that often has no outlet. WFL salvages a portion of this small-diameter timber and donates it to Navajo and Hopi partners. Tribal youth crews and tribal fire crews work to distribute the wood directly to elders and families in need.
This year, SRP and NFF are partnering on two restoration projects located in the Tonto National Forest that will thin approximately 3,600 acres -- Pine Canyon and Deadman Mesa. These projects will directly protect the Wildland Urban Interface communities of Pine, Strawberry, and Randall Place, reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfire, as well as protect critical water supplies for the town of Pine and downstream users.
The water that SRP supplies its 2.5 million customers originates from snow and rain that falls across 8.3 million acres of forested watershed in northern Arizona.