Southeast New England Program and New
England Environmental Finance Center
Launch SNEP Network
SNEP
Do you live in a community that struggles to finance water quality improvements? Have you looked for
ways to bolster resilience to storms and reduce frequent flooding? Are you happy with your town's
ability to manage environmental programs? Do you worry about the loss of the special places that
make your town "home"?
You are not alone. Flooding, harmful algal blooms, shellfish bed and swimming beach closures, fewer
boating and fishing opportunities, and lost aquatic habitats are all shared problems — problems on
track to get much worse and more widespread as our climate changes.
Stress no more. Help is at hand. The Southeast New England Program (SNEP) is here to offer no-cost
training and technical assistance to address these and other local needs to communities, tribes and
environmental organizations. Under a $1.75 million grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA), the New England Environmental Finance Center (NE EFC). is gearing up a team of local
experts, the "SNEP Network", to offer financial and technical services encompassing stormwater
management, water quality and habitat restoration, green infrastructure, low impact development,
climate resiliency, and environmental restoration.
And because we know that the specific causes of poor habitat and water quality vary by watershed,
the services will also vary — customized to provide one-on-one assistance not only in water quality
resources and habitat restoration, but also in financing, consensus building, stakeholder engagement,
and project management. With decades of experience working in New England, the network's broad
range of experts and local organizations will act as partners to communities, tribes, and environmental
organizations, helping them figure out what they need to do and building a regional community of
practice that encourages collaboration, communication, and innovation.
SNEP Network Partners include:
Audubon Society in Rhode Island
Mass Audubon's Shaping the Future of Your Community
Program
Brown University
Cape Cod Commission
Environmental Finance Center at Syracuse University
Environmental Finance Center at University of North Carolina
Elizabeth Scott Consulting
Kimberly Groff Consulting
The Nature Conservancy in Rhode Island and Massachusetts
Rhode Island School of Design
Save the Bay
Throwe Environmental
University of New Hampshire Stormwater Center
University of Rhode Island
Look for future announcements on how you can request assistance and join the Network.
Southeast New England Program
www.epa.gov/snecwrp

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SNEP Network
Works in Progress
•	"One-Day Primer for Elected/Appointed Officials in
State/Local Government" workshops in MA and one in Rl
on March 11 & 12, 2020. The workshops are to build
awareness and galvanize action by community decision
makers around climate resilience.
•	A series of 5 "Show Me The Money" workshops, starting
February, 2020. Funding and Financing workshops to
address and prioritize sustainable financing for
stormwater management, improved water quality, and
more successfully funded grants.
•	Mapping existing partnerships with a stewardship
"StewMap" to glean strengths and gaps in provider
networks in the SNEP region.
•	Climate financing conference in Massachusetts in April.
•	Development of a New England Stormwater Retrofit
Manual which will provide innovative ways to fix
stormwater problems in highly impacted areas.
•	A "Leadership Exchange" program to spur the
emergence of new local leaders who can inspire and
mentor others working on stormwater, resilience
planning, and environmental financing into the future.
•	Access to "on-call" assistance, a prequalified consultant
pool, and an opportunity for communities to receive
assistance through a "call for participants" process is set
up to help communities plan and execute activities and
projects, and to tap into the expertise of the SNEP
Network.
•	More information can be found on snepnetwork.org
with more content coming soon!
For more information please contact Project Manager, Jon
Kachmar: jon.kachmar@maine.edu
SNEP.
"This is an important
milestone for EPA's Southeast
New England Program/ said
EPA New England Regional
Administrator Dennis Deziel.
"Establishing this technical
network will fill a significant
need, helping communities,
tribes, and local
organizations build and
enhance their abilities to
manage their programs in
ways that produce multiple
environmental and fiscal
benefits
Southeast New England Program
www.epa.gov/snecwrp

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