Natural Resources Conservation Service
Volunteer Center of Rhode Island
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Natural Resources Conservation Service


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Last updated on October 2, 2008

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Helping People Help The Land.

Description:
Since 1935, the Natural Resources Conservation Service (originally called the Soil Conservation Service) has provided leadership in a partnership effort to help America's private land owners and managers conserve their soil, water, and other natural resources.

NRCS employees provide technical assistance based on sound science and suited to a customer's specific needs. We provide financial assistance for many conservation activities. Participation in our programs is voluntary.

• Our Conservation Technical Assistance (CTA) program provides voluntary conservation technical assistance to land-users, communities, units of state and local government, and other Federal agencies in planning and implementing conservation systems.

• We reach out to all segments of the agricultural community, including underserved and socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers, to ensure that our programs and services are accessible to everyone.

• We manage natural resource conservation programs that provide environmental, societal, financial, and technical benefits.

• Our science and technology activities provide technical expertise in such areas as animal husbandry and clean water, ecological sciences, engineering, resource economics, and social sciences.

• We provide expertise in soil science and leadership for soil surveys and for the National Resources Inventory, which assesses natural resource conditions and trends in the United States.

• We provide technical assistance to foreign governments, and participate in international scientific and technical exchanges.

History:
A Story of Land and People
NRCS draws on a tradition of principles in working with private landowners that is as relevant today as when it was a dream to Hugh Hammond Bennett in the late 1920s and early 1930s.

A career soil scientist in USDA, Bennett became convinced that soil erosion was a national menace and that its solution lay in tailoring conservation practices to fit the capability of the land and the desires of landowners.

Simple solutions for all situations would be fruitless. The crops, the land, and the climate were so diverse that specialists in agronomy, forestry, soil science, biology, engineering, and social sciences contributed to conservation methods. They worked with farmers to find solutions that benefited the land and fulfilled the landowners' aspirations.

In 1933, the Soil Erosion Service, predecessor to the Soil Conservation Service and NRCS, began working with farmers in the Coon Creek watershed of southwestern Wisconsin to transform the square, eroding fields into what one sees today—a conservation showplace of contouring, stripcropping, terracing, and wise land use that benefits the soil, air, water, as well as the plant, animal, and human life of the whole watershed.

The carpeting of the land with soil conservation works nationwide was hastened with the passage of the Soil Conservation Act in April of 1935. Recognition of the first conservation district, bounded by the Brown Creek watershed in North Carolina, on August 4, 1937, established a method for the Service to assist farmers in the conservation districts. Locally elected citizens established priorities and plans for the district's work.

The following principles are NRCS's heritage and still guide its work:

Assess the resources on the land, the conservation problems and opportunities.
Draw on various sciences and disciplines and integrate all their contributions into a plan for the whole property.
Work closely with land users so that the plans for conservation mesh with their objectives.
Through implementing conservation on individual properties, contribute to the overall quality of the life in the watershed or region.

Contact person: Michelle Moore, Secretary, (401) 822-8844, (email)
Office fax number: (401) 828-0433

Address:

 60 Quaker Lane, Suite 46
Warwick, RI 02886
(See a map)

Web Site: http://www.ri.nrcs.usda.gov/

Directions:

 Directions from Route 95 Take exit #10 into Route 117 West. At the sixth traffic light turn left onto Quaker Lane. (There is a Pizza Hut and a Gulf gas station at this intersection.) The USDA Service Center, located at. . . (more)

Miscellaneous Information

Handicap accessible?
Yes
Does your agency accept court-appointed volunteers?
No

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