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North American Drainage Conference moves to virtual

No need to pack a bag, cross a border or even start the car. Now, anyone can register for this half-day educational summit taking place March 5.


LICA’s View: A proud tradition

LICA president David Gallahan discusses how he found his passion for contracting, and why it's important to share stories through the LICA platform.


Drainage Innovation Webinars to return, offer soil and water management CEUs

This year's webinars will focus on identifying common issues with drainage systems, drainage effects on soil health, and advances in automation for controlled drainage and drainage water recycling.


 
 
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High-functioning, farmer-run

The Tetlock Conservation and Development Area Authority (Tetlock C&D) has a major claim to fame: it’s a drainage management network in Canada cooperatively run by landowners – and it has operated for nearly seven decades. The Tetlock C&D operates on 64 quarters of land near Grenfell, SK, where Three Mile Creek discharges into Ekapo Creek and finally the Qu’Appelle River. It’s an area with very slight elevation that, in the 1950s, was very wet. That’s when the Saskatchewan Department of Highways identified the need for drainage in the area. The original drainage ditches were constructed with dynamite in the 1950s. By the 1970s, the department had asked local landowners to form a board to maintain the ditches, or they’d close the project. The farmers agreed: the value of drainage to their land was already clear. Over the years, they’ve maintained and improved the existing network and added more land and ditches–investments totalling roughly 3.5 to four million dollars. » Read More...
 
 
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