Recipients in 47 of 88 Ohio counties, including Clermont County
Fifty-eight local health departments and municipalities across 47 Ohio counties are receiving $1,060,682 in grants from Ohio EPA for mosquito control activities, including $188,368 for the removal of scrap tires, which can become breeding grounds for mosquito larvae. The funding will help mitigate the spread of mosquito-borne viruses such as West Nile, La Crosse Encephalitis, and Eastern Equine Encephalitis.
“The mosquito control program is one of our most successful and meaningful partnerships with local health departments,” Ohio EPA Director, Anne Vogel, said. “The grants go directly into funding education and outreach efforts in communities, and equipment that helps to prevent and eliminate mosquito breeding grounds to protect Ohioans from serious mosquito-borne illnesses.”
Some 14 health departments joined Dir. Vogel on May 15 when she announced the grant recipients.
In Southwest Ohio, 12 health departments and municipalities are receiving grants, including Clermont County General Health District, $7,150.
Grants are being issued in collaboration with the Ohio Department of Health’s larger effort to mitigate the potential for an outbreak of mosquito-borne viruses. Over the last eight years, Ohio EPA and the Ohio Department of Health have awarded $8.5 million to local health departments and communities for mosquito control programs.
For additional information or questions about the mosquito grant programs, email mosquito.grant@epa.ohio.gov.
(Press release edited for space.)