Central

Coursing through the heart of the Central Region, both the mighty Mississippi River and the storied Missouri River are rich in historical, cultural, ecological, and economic significance. They provided both the starting point and guiding path for the Lewis and Clark Expedition to the Pacific Ocean. Their adjacent rolling hills, forested bluffs, and expansive floodplains are the ancestral lands to dozens of tribal communities, such as the Sioux, Osage, Chickasaw, and Natchez. They form a globally important flyway for roughly 60% of all North American birds, including raptors, waterfowl, songbirds, and other species that nest, migrate, and winter from the Arctic down to the Gulf. The entire 31-state Mississippi River Basin produces approximately 95% of U.S. agricultural goods each year, and the Mississippi River alone generates over $400 billion each year in commercial shipping.
contact us
Central
American Rivers
1101 14th Street NW, Suite 1400
Washington, DC 20005
Toll-free: 877-347-7550
The outdoor recreation economy supports more than 400,000 jobs and generates $25 billion, annually. The communities of the Central Region, whose homes and livelihoods have been impacted by flooding, are familiar with potential risks of living and working along its rivers. Now, however, these river systems are facing changes in the timing, duration, and intensity of floods, intensity of precipitation versus extent of drought, and aging water infrastructure. As American Rivers looks to the future of the Central Region we are committed to working with the communities, agencies, and all others who are interested in the long-term sustainability of its rivers.

Let's stay in touch!
We’re hard at work in the Midwest for rivers and clean water. Sign up to get the most important news affecting your water and rivers delivered right to your inbox.
Key Issues Facing the Rivers of the Central Region
Floodplains
Floodplains are an integral part of healthy rivers, and floods are a natural occurrence on rivers. In fact, floods are very important to the health of a river and the land around it. Functional floodplains that are connected to river flooding provide many benefits, including room for floodwaters to dissipate, nutrient filtration that improves water quality, recharging groundwater, and storing floodwaters that may otherwise flood-out a community. They nurture life in and around rivers. However, when larger floods occur and their floodwaters cannot spread out across the floodplain, damage to towns and infrastructure, impacts to businesses and crops, and potential for the loss of life are all drastically increased by higher levels, longer duration, and more seasonable variability of these flooding events.
American Rivers is focused on the integration of natural infrastructure opportunities into the long-term management, conservation, and restoration of the floodplains of the Central Region. This includes projects that better connect and/or restore historic floodplains with their rivers, using such techniques as levee setbacks, passive-operation infrastructure, full wetland restoration and bottomland hardwood reforestation, and conservation programs that engage private floodplain landowners and businesses in these efforts.
Clean Water
Whether for urban, municipal, or rural use, the river communities of the Central Region depend upon clean water from its rivers. They use it in their homes, for their businesses, and for their recreation. However, there are wide detrimental impacts to the quality of that water which they all depend upon, including consolidated stormwater and sewer systems, aging or non-existent municipal water infrastructure, and inputs from agricultural, industrial, or other land-uses. Impact that can all be further complicated by increasingly precipitation events, extended river flooding, growing populations, and aging infrastructure.
American Rivers is dedicated to working with those communities that depend on healthy rivers to provide them with the clean water they need to thrive. We will continue to expand our partnerships with cities, community organizations, government agencies, and other non-profits throughout the Central Region to identify clean water concerns, develop real-world solutions, and identify the steps forward to success.
Free-flowing Rivers
Few things have such a fundamental impact on a river as a dam. Dams block the movement of fish and other aquatic species, inundate riverine habitat, impair water quality, and alter the flow regime necessary to sustain river life. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has catalogued at least 90,000 dams greater than six-feet tall that are blocking United States rivers and streams. There are tens of thousands of additional small dams that fall through the cracks of that national inventory. As these dams begin to age and decay, they can also become public safety hazards due to potential failure, injury to the public, and other unsafe conditions.
American Rivers is expanding the success of its National Dam Removal Program to the Central Region, to help remove unsafe and/or unnecessary dams, expand the miles of connected streams, improve public recreation and safety, and re-establish aquatic wildlife habitat and populations. Through a combination of stream connectivity partnerships, knowledge and resource sharing, and on-the-ground project coordination, we are focused on expanding the network of dam removal experts working toward this common goal.
Track Record of Success
River Protection: Today, American Rivers leads the Nicollet Island Coalition, which works to protect and restore the Upper Mississippi River by advocating for reforms to the navigation system. And all along the Mississippi River, we are working to improve flood protection policies to protect people and property and safeguard the health of the region’s rivers.