MRCTI's work is divided into five program areas that protect and enhance the Mississippi River corridor
Through these five program areas, MRCTI addresses the most pressing challenges facing the Mississippi River and the communities that depend on it
Our clean water program is a top priority because clean water is tied to all aspects of a better life in our cities - from food security to economic competitiveness.
Learn MoreWe're working to sustainably build the river economy, add jobs, and improve intermodal movement through cities along the Mississippi River.
Learn MoreOur disaster resilience and adaptation program is the result of hard lessons learned from droughts, floods, extreme heat, and tornadoes totaling over $50 billion since 2011.
Learn MoreAs representatives of the planet's largest food-producing river, we work to ensure food and water security for the future through international cooperation.
Learn MoreWe celebrate and preserve the rich cultural heritage of the Mississippi River corridor, including initiatives like the French Heritage Corridor.
Learn MoreThe Mississippi River Cities & Towns Initiative (MRCTI) clean water program is a top priority because we can tie all aspects of a better life in our cities to clean water. Truly, if we have clean water in the River then we have food security because clean water means sustainable agriculture is being practiced on the landscape.
If we have clean water, then we are better protected from droughts and floods because we have a healthy ecological system. If we have clean water, then our economy has a competitive edge in that it too is sustainable. Most importantly, if we have clean water, then the 50 cities (20 million people) drinking the water can be assured of a secure source into the future.
Mayors along the Mississippi River, in a drive to sustainably build the river economy, add jobs, and improve intermodal movement through their cities, have built a coalition of major stakeholders comprised of organizations such as FedEx Trade Networks, Home Depot, the Inland River Port & Terminal Association, Ingram Barge, and the IL Soybean Association.
DOT Secretary Foxx has confirmed that the Mayors' effort to restore container movement to the Mississippi River has been made an official project within the U.S. Department of Transportation under the MARAD Marine Highway Program.
The Mississippi River Cities & Towns Initiative (MRCTI) disaster resilience and adaptation program is the result of hard lessons learned over the short history of the Association. The Mississippi River Valley has sustained considerable disaster impacts from droughts, floods, extreme heat, and tornadoes totaling over $50 billion since 2011.
Our cities have experienced a 1,000-year rain event only five years after a 500-year flood. Disasters along the Mississippi River have cost nearly 10 percent of the region's economy in some cases and at least 3 percent annually.
As part of the MRCTI International Food & Water Security Programme, U.S. Mayors work to protect food and water sources of the world. The Mississippi River is #1 in Food Production. Mississippi River Mayors have formed delegations to attend international meetings.
"Most of the world's food and fresh water come from river basins and those basins are being compromised. As representatives of the planet's largest food-producing river, it is up to us to help ensure food and water security for the future." -Lionel Johnson, Mayor of St. Gabriel, LA
The French Heritage Corridor initiative comprises seven states in the Midwest (Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, and Wisconsin). This network, joined by waterways connecting with the Mississippi River and the Great Lakes, transcends borders to recreate in the Midwest what was once la Nouvelle France.
While French history and heritage of eastern Canada and of Louisiana is typically well known and understood by the general public, the region comprising the French Heritage Corridor which lies between them is not as universally appreciated.
Work with MRCTI to protect and enhance the Mississippi River corridor for future generations
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