Pat Harrison Waterway District

Pat Harrison Waterway District
Formation 1962
Type State Agency
Purpose Flood control, Recreation
Headquarters 6081 U.S. Route 49 south,
Hattiesburg, Mississippi
Region served
Southeastern and East Central Mississippi
Executive Director

Hiram Boone[1]
Website Pat Harrison Waterway District

Pat Harrison Waterway District (PHWD) is a Mississippi State Agency with headquarters in Hattiesburg. The agency was created in 1962 with a directive of flood control in southeastern and east central Mississippi.

History and mission

Pat Harrison Waterway District Headquarters in Hattiesburg, MS

When the Waterway District was created in 1962, its main mission was flood control for rivers and their tributaries along the Pascagoula River Basin in southeastern and east central Mississippi.[2] In addition to flood control, the agency’s mission expanded to include water management and recreation.[3] The District derives its name from Pat Harrison, who served Mississippi as U.S. Representative (1911–19) and Senator (1919-41).

Funding

Funding for PHWD comes from ad valorem taxes collected in member Counties, park recreation fees, timber sales, and interest from investments.[4] PHWD is governed by an 18 member Board of Directors, with one Director appointed from each of the 15 member Counties and three Directors appointed by the Governor of Mississippi.[5] Full-time employees are located at the central office in Hattiesburg and at the District’s eight water parks.

Member counties

Originally, there were 15 Mississippi counties in the Pat Harrison Waterway District:[5]

As of 2014, three counties (Forrest, Jasper, and Lamar) had withdrawn from the District.[6]

Water resources

Water resources in the Pascagoula River Basin, over which Pat Harrison Waterway District has jurisdiction, include:[5]

Water parks

The agency oversees eight water parks with public amenities that include camp sites, boat launches, cabins, picnic areas, swimming areas, and meeting facilities.[5]

Little Black Creek Water Park (Lumberton, MS) was formerly managed by PHWD, but was leased to a private developer in 2013.[7]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/11/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.