Credit Valley Conservation (CVC) is one of 36 conservation authorities in Ontario, Canada, responsible for protecting, restoring, and managing natural resources at the watershed level. CVC operates within the Credit River watershed and smaller adjacent watersheds that drain directly into Lake Ontario, as well as along a section of the Lake Ontario shoreline. Together, these areas make up CVC's jurisdiction. CVC is a member of Conservation Ontario.
Founded | May 13, 1954 |
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Type | Conservation authority |
Focus | Habitat conservation, water conservation, wildlife management |
Location |
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Area served | Credit River Watershed, including parts of Peel Region, Halton Region, Wellington County and Dufferin County |
Key people | Deborah Martin-Downs, CAO[1] Karen Ras, Chair |
Website | www |
CVC works in partnership with municipal governments, schools, businesses, and community organizations to deliver locally based environmental programs.
CVC receives its funding from municipal sources, as well as grants and donations made to the Credit Valley Conservation Foundation, self-generated user fees, and other service fees.[2] CVC was founded in 1954 when much of the Credit River watershed was used for rural agriculture and pasture. Since then, there has been rapid urban development within the southern portion of the Credit River watershed, within the Cities of Mississauga and Brampton.
Conservation Areas
editCredit Valley Conservation operates 11 conservation areas and other protected territories:
- Belfountain Conservation Area
- the Cheltenham Badlands
- Elora Cataract Trailway
- Island Lake Conservation Area
- Ken Whillans Resource Management Area
- Limehouse Conservation Area
- Meadowvale Conservation Area
- Rattray Marsh Conservation Area
- Silver Creek Conservation Area
- Terra Cotta Conservation Area
- Upper Credit Conservation Area[3]
Activities
editCVC is actively engaged in water management. The average daily flow of the Credit River is 690,000 cubic metres, 65% of which comes from groundwater.[4] An estimated 750,000 residents in the Credit River Watershed, 87% of whom live in the lower third of the watershed, in present-day Mississauga and Brampton. In 1999, 21% of the watershed was developed, and by 2020, 40% of the watershed will be developed (based on approved development and the official plans of the municipalities).[4]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Deborah Martin-Downs". New York City, New York: Bloomburg Business Profiles. Retrieved 8 November 2015.
- ^ Credit Valley Conservation, Our Funding, archived from the original on 2009-05-19, retrieved 2009-01-23
- ^ CVC/Conservation Areas
- ^ a b Credit Valley Conservation, Credit River Watershed, archived from the original on 2009-05-19, retrieved 2009-01-23