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̽»¨¾«Ñ¡ and partners are working to restore Hatcher Park and Marshalltown Marsh Complex, one of the largest opportunities to restore habitat, protect against floods, and provide recreational opportunities for residents in Gary, Indiana.
The goals of the restoration project are to create access and recreational opportunities to residents, create and improve wetland habitats along the West Branch of the Little Calumet River, remove invasive species, and reintroduce native species to make Gary Indiana more resilient in the face of pollution and climate change.
Hatcher Park and Marshalltown Marsh are a gateway to the myriad habitats and levee trail connecting over five miles of prairies, woodlands, and wetlands along the Little Calumet River.
Hatcher Park, named after Gary’s first African American Mayor, Richard Gordon Hatcher, is a treasure to the community and holds historical value despite the environmental degradation it has experienced over time. It contains a mix of habitats including woodland, savanna, and wet prairie and serves as excellent migratory stopover habitat for birds that migrate through Gary every spring and fall.
Marshalltown Marsh is 280-acres of degraded floodplain that also contains some marginal agricultural fields. The Little Calumet River runs in an unnatural straight line through the site, which prevents high-quality wetland and marsh habitat from being established.
These sites also fall within the Calumet priority region, which has been identified by ̽»¨¾«Ñ¡ scientists as one of the 12 most important coastal wetland regions across the Great Lakes that are most valuable to conserve or restore for vulnerable marsh birds. ̽»¨¾«Ñ¡ Great Lakes is working with partners in each of these priority regions to coordinate landscape-scale bird monitoring and habitat restoration.
Through this project, ̽»¨¾«Ñ¡ Great Lakes and partners are hoping to provide Gary residents with a win-win for birds and people. By restoring Hatcher Park and Marshalltown Marsh, we can change the narrative around Gary and emphasize the notion that healthy nature leads to healthy human communities, clean air and water. To ensure this happens, we hope that residents across Gary and Northwest Indiana provide input and support the ongoing work at these important sites, which will serve as symbols of a new paradigm in Gary, focused on improving the health of its residents and green spaces.
Community engagement has already begun and will be emphasized throughout this process to ensure that Gary residents’ voices are heard and that their ideas are incorporated into final designs at the sites. Workshops and surveys are distributed at events held at Hatcher Park and other Gary public events.
Background and History
̽»¨¾«Ñ¡ Great Lakes has been working across more than 400 acres of the West Branch of the Little Calumet River for over five years, as part of The Little Calumet River Conservation Collaborative.
Together, work has consisted of monitoring secretive marsh birds, restoring marsh habitat, informing land management practices, and engaging Northwest Indiana residents in stewardship and educational activities.
The Gary area is home to many wetlands, some of which are degraded and in need of human intervention to ensure that their key ecological functions like flood prevention and water filtration remain intact.
Partnership and Collaboration
Planning, monitoring, restoration, and engagement efforts for this project involve a diverse group of partners, including: ̽»¨¾«Ñ¡ Great Lakes’ Wild Indigo Nature Explorations Program, Brown Faces Green Spaces, NOAA – National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and The Little Calumet River Conservation Collaborative which consists of ̽»¨¾«Ñ¡ Great Lakes, The Wetlands Initiative, The Nature Conservancy, Lake County Parks, Little Calumet River Basin Development Commission, City of Gary, City of Gary Parks & Recreation, and Northern Indiana Public Service Company.
Funding and Support
This project is funded by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
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