Help clean Lac Courte Oreilles, other Wisconsin waters
This has been, regrettably, a year of attention to water pollution in Wisconsin.
And there is an approaching December 29 comment deadline on a pollution matter which needs more publicity, particularly as it involves the need for a strong public response to spur the clean-up of a key waterway system - - Lac Courte Oreilles in Sawyer County - - by pressuring officials to aggressively facilitate clean water there.
In a nutshell: the DNR, as I noted some weeks ago, here, has proposed adding 240 more waterways to the official list of impaired waterways in Wisconsin, while proposing the removal of a lesser number, 35.
These impairments are principally due to the discharge or runoff of phosphorous that leads to the growth of algae which rots, clogs the water, harms fish and otherwise degrades the water and its surroundings.
The DNR in a news release last month put a positive spin on the growing number of impaired waters statewide without mentioning that Walker in 2014 signed a bill extending for many years a previously-agreed-upon schedule for aggressive phosphorous discharge prevention:
And the agency showed how the public could comment on the new listings:
Of note: this is not a new issue.
From a COLA email:
And there is an approaching December 29 comment deadline on a pollution matter which needs more publicity, particularly as it involves the need for a strong public response to spur the clean-up of a key waterway system - - Lac Courte Oreilles in Sawyer County - - by pressuring officials to aggressively facilitate clean water there.
In a nutshell: the DNR, as I noted some weeks ago, here, has proposed adding 240 more waterways to the official list of impaired waterways in Wisconsin, while proposing the removal of a lesser number, 35.
These impairments are principally due to the discharge or runoff of phosphorous that leads to the growth of algae which rots, clogs the water, harms fish and otherwise degrades the water and its surroundings.
The DNR in a news release last month put a positive spin on the growing number of impaired waters statewide without mentioning that Walker in 2014 signed a bill extending for many years a previously-agreed-upon schedule for aggressive phosphorous discharge prevention:
The legislation gives a municipal permit-holder the option to delay stricter limits on phosphorus if it can show financial hardship. That delay or variance could last as long as 20 years, but during that time, the permit-holders would have to gradually reduce their discharges.But the DNR release did explain that the up-side of a phosphorous-impaired designation is that it makes the polluted river or stream or lake eligible for crucial improvement funding.
And the agency showed how the public could comment on the new listings:
Public comments may be submitted by December 29, 2017, and can be emailed to DNR at DNRImpairedWaters@wisconsin.gov, or sent by U.S. mail to Ashley Beranek, DNR, Water Evaluation Section (WY/3), Box 7921, Madison, WI 53707.
Comments postmarked or received by December 29, 2017, will be considered before submitting the final draft list to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for approval.
The 2018 list and other materials can be found by searching the DNR website, dnr.wi.gov, for keywords "impaired waters" and clicking on the link for the "2018 impaired waters list."Which brings us to the Courte Oreiiles Lakes Association, (COLA) and the Lac Courte Oreilles Chippewa band, (LCO), which are urging comments before the December 29 deadline specifically aimed at making more than 5.100 acres of Sawyer County waters' eligible for needed improvement funding.
Of note: this is not a new issue.
From a COLA email:
On November 15, 2017, the WI Department of Natural Resources (WDNR) issued a notice soliciting public comments on its proposed 2018 list of Impaired Waters.
The WDNR is proposing to list all of Lac Courte Oreilles as impaired—which is a good thing. But, they are proposing to list “low dissolved oxygen” (DO) as an indicator of that impairment without citing Total Phosphorus as the cause of the impairment.
We just need a final push from COLA members to get that correct cause listed as well. Most of the other 240 impaired waters have a cause listed, but not Lac Courte Oreilles. Letters from COLA members can help correct this.Here is the full email. Read on,and follow through:
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