Green Links gets second round of funding for waterways in Victoria

The Victorian State Government is enhancing Victoria’s local waterways with projects that protect the environment and create more green open spaces for the community to enjoy the great outdoors.

The Victorian State Government is enhancing Victoria’s local waterways with projects that protect the environment and create more green open spaces for the community to enjoy the great outdoors.

Minister for Water Harriet Shing opened the second round of the Green Links Grant Program, which will invest $2 million in projects that help to restore and improve local waterways throughout Victoria.

“As our communities grow, it’s so important to respect and protect our precious waterways and the environments that we know and love – the Green Links Grants are helping more people get involved and make a positive and lasting difference,” she said.

Under round two, eligibility has been extended to include projects delivered by schools, giving young people more opportunities to get involved in restoring and safeguarding the state’s precious rivers and creeks.

Community groups, water and land managers, Traditional Owners, local councils, and schools are now encouraged to apply for project funding of between $20,000 and $350,000.

“The Green Links Grants program is essential for the long-term health of the environment along our cherished creeks and rivers while creating more cool green spaces for locals to enjoy close to home,” said Member for Oakleigh Steve Dimopoulos.

Victoria’s waterways are home to more than 1,800 species of native plants and 600 species of native animals, and revegetation projects are essential for the health of our waterways and their parkland corridors.

Projects funded through the Green Links Grants create more environmental corridors and help native plants flourish. Funding will help target urban areas that have experienced a loss of green spaces.

“This is a great opportunity to get involved in protecting what we love about our local waterways and environment, so they can continue to be enjoyed for generations to come,” Member for Ashwood Matt Fregon said.

The first round of the Green Links Grant Program saw 23 projects share more than $6 million, supporting the revegetation of almost 200 hectares of land across the Yarra, Maribyrnong, Werribee, and Barwon Rivers and their connecting tributaries and waterways.

Successful projects include $464,000 to improve habitat conditions and connectivity along a 4-kilometre stretch of the much-loved Merri Creek in Melbourne’s inner north, more than $700,000 for 13 revegetation sites along the Yarrowee River and tributaries around Ballarat, and much more.

The $10 million Green Links Grant Program builds on the Victorian Government’s $262 million investment in maintaining the health and resilience of waterways and catchments across regional Victoria and Melbourne.

For more information on the Green Links Grants Program and future funding opportunities, visit water.vic.gov.au/grants/green-links-grants.

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