Plants should provide habitat, runoff absorption in future

January 11, 2015 | 8:02 pm

CEDAR RAPIDS An innovative program to plant native grasses in electric transmission line corridors in the Cedar Rapids area will help restore a dwindling Iowa resource native prairies.

Its a win for us, a win for wildlife and the environment and a win for the public, which owns the land, said Tom Petersen, communications director for ITC Midwest, the company whose electric transmission lines cross the properties.

Contractors for ITC Midwest earlier this month planted native prairie plants on 6 acres at Beverly Park, city property in southwest Cedar Rapids; on 30 acres of city property east of Cole Street SE near the Sac and Fox Trail; and on 6 acres near Squaw Creek Park, east of Highway 13, on land owned by the Linn County Conservation Department.

The plantings generally extend for several hundred yards along the 100-foot-wide easements allowing ITC transmission lines to cross the public properties.

We recognize that we have impacts on the environment and remain open to projects that help us improve that relationship, Petersen said.

The plantings, featuring native grasses, wildflowers and broad-leaved native plants, should take root next year and become more prominent with each succeeding year, he said.

The native vegetation will provide wildlife habitat, especially for ground-nesting birds, and make the land more absorbent to slow runoff from heavy rains, he said.

While he was watching the seeding contractors work on Dec. 6, Petersen said neighbors approached to thank the company for its consideration of the environment. It was cool to see the neighborhood appreciate the effort, he said.

Read the original here:
Company plants prairie grass to protect transmission lines

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