Stewardship training informs and inspires volunteers

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Woman hand clearing, pulling out some weed form her garden, using garden equipment

On a local level, residents are sometimes looking for ways to help improve and protect their watersheds. However, it’s important to not just recruit volunteers, but to share information with them on key issues in nearby waterways. These well-informed stewards can take leadership roles in their communities on a variety of projects, including beach and stream cleanups, ecosystem restoration, and natural resource education.

Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant’s Illinois-Indiana Master Watershed Steward Program (MWSP) provides an opportunity to educate residents interested in natural resource issues and to grow a cadre of volunteers. Through eight sessions for a total of 20 hours, Purdue and Illinois Extension educators, along with our specialists, trained six residents in Porter County, Indiana in 2024. In Illinois’ Boone County, 10 residents took part in stewardship training and another 35 were trained through a newly developed Watershed Leadership Program.

In 2024, each of five new Indiana stewards engaged in 35 volunteer hours to complete stewardship requirements and six continuing stewards volunteered 240 hours. These volunteers engaged in beach cleanups at the Indiana Dunes National Park and other locations, pulled invasive plants and planted native ones, and engaged with local planning committees. The total volunteer efforts contributed 415 hours and nearly $14,000 to the northwest Indiana economy. Since MWSP’s inception in 2019, stewards have participated in over 1,900 volunteer hours.

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Explore the history, impact, and educational power of Meaningful Watershed Educational Experiences (MWEEs).eeLEARN: MWEE 101 is a free, self-paced online course that walks you through the MWEE framework with examples, planning tools, and downloadable resources that you can use immediately.Start learning today at the link in bio.
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This February marks a major milestone: 30 years of aquatic invasive species outreach by our team! To celebrate, IISG Director, Stuart Carlton, and Strategic Communication Coordinator, Renie Miles, sat down for a Sea Grant Chat with two key figures in IISG’s AIS history: Pat Charlebois, our assistant director and program leader, who spent over two decades leading our prevention efforts, and Katie O’Reilly, who took over that role in 2022. We discussed the evolution of the invasive species issue in the Great Lakes, the shift toward understanding human behavior, and the creative strategies that make this team so effective. Dive into the full interview at the link in bio.