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Door County Board urges statewide phase
out of phosphorus in lawn fertilizers |
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Door County wants the state to cut the connection
between lush green summertime lawns and lush green
Wisconsin lakes. The County Board passed a resolution
Tuesday designed to press Wisconsin legislators to
pass a statewide ban on the sale and use of lawn fertilizers
that contain phosphorus. The only phosphorus use allowed
by the resolution is for new lawns or turf during
their first growing season, or if a soil test shows
that phosphorus is necessary.
Phosphorus is one of the three major plant nutrients
commonly sold in lawn fertilizers. When phosphorus runs off
land into lakes, rivers and streams, phosphorus does what it
does best: It provides a necessary nutrient for the growth of
plants, which, in the water, can result in excessive algal
blooms.
A single pound of phosphorus in runoff can cause up to 500
pounds of algal growth, according to the resolution. And lawn
applications of the stuff are more dangerous because a lawn
can carry up to eight times more phosphorus than runoff from a
similarly-sized wooded area.
Bill Schuster, county conservationist, said soil testing
was done on about 20 different lawns in Door County, and all
but two had excessive phosphate levels. Elimination of
phosphorus from lawn fertilizer will reduce the presence of
algae in Wisconsin's waters and help improve water quality,
according to the resolution.
The Wisconsin Association of Lakes board passed a
resolution supporting a statewide phosphorus lawn fertilizer
phase out modeled on the existing Dane county phosphorus lawn
fertilizer ordinance.
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Survey mistakes may cost lake front
property owners money |
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Wisconsin lakes are public resources owned in common
by all Wisconsin citizens under the Public Trust Doctrine.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court has ruled that the state
owns title to lakebeds, and that the ordinary high
water mark (OHWM) establishes the boundary between
public lakebed and private land. The lakefront property
owner only owns the land above the OHWM – where the
regular action of water against the bank leaves a
distinct mark.
Unfortunately, not all Wisconsin lakes have been surveyed
and some property owners not only “own,” but also pay taxes on
a parcel that includes all or part of a lake. When government
surveyors first surveyed Wisconsin in the 1840s and 1850s,
they only meandered and surveyed lakes that were larger than
40 acres and lakes that lay across section lines. All other
lakes within the sections were not surveyed and the beds of
these lakes were included in parcel acreage. Over the years,
the sections were divided and subdivided and lakes that lay on
the new property lines generally were surveyed so that acreage
figures were for actual land and did not include lakebeds.
Regrettably, some of these owners have sold their parcels
and the real estate brokers, county taxing authorities,
parties and others involved in the transaction apparently have
missed the fact that the acreage includes a lake. In one
reported case, the property sold was represented to be 16
acres, notwithstanding that 12 of those acres were
lakebed.
In all of these lakebed and OHWM scenarios, property owners
should consider the following actions:
- Survey the property.
- Make sure the OHWM is properly
identified.
- Compare the survey with the legal description on deeds
and at the county assessor’s office, and discuss
discrepancies with the assessor
- Consult with the local zoning office and check local
ordinances.
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Comments sought on proposed Groundwater
Rule (NR 820) |
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The 2003 Groundwater Protection Act establishes protections
for Wisconsin’s Exceptional and Outstanding Resource
Waters, trout streams and springs; establishes two
Groundwater Management Areas where the water table
has dropped by 150 feet or more; and creates requirements
for owners of high capacity wells (those that pump
more than 100,000 gallons per day).
The DNR has been developing administrative rules (NR 820)
to implement the Groundwater Protection Act; public hearings
about these rules have been scheduled. The Groundwater
Advisory Committee has been advising the DNR on these rules
and has drafted recommendations
to the legislature.
The Groundwater Protection Act and proposed implementing
rules only apply to a limited set of waters—in the case of
lakes, only those lakes designated as Outstanding Resource
Waters (ORW). The Statute did not give DNR the authority to
consider the needs of lakes that are not designated ORWs.
ORWs are official designations for lakes, flowages, rivers,
and streams that the State of Wisconsin has identified as high
quality waters. ORWs typically do not have any direct point
source discharges (e.g. from an industry or municipal sewage
treatment plant) and any future discharge must not change
background water quality. Currently there are 97 lakes and 6
flowages designated as ORWs. 99% of Wisconsin’s 15,000 lakes
are not covered under Wisconsin’s current groundwater law.
If future legislation is passed to close the gap in the
groundwater law with regard to lakes, these rules could
establish the precedent for what information is reviewed, how
decisions are made to grant approval for a high capacity well
and/or under what conditions high capacity wells can operate
near lakes.
Opportunities to comment
Written comments on the proposed rule may be
submitted by mail to Mr. Lawrence Lynch, Bureau of Drinking
Water and Groundwater, P.O. Box 7921, Madison, WI 53707.
Comments must be submitted by Jan. 5, 2007. Public hearings
are set for the following times and dates:
- Dec. 13, Menomonie – 1 p.m. in the Multipurpose
room of the Dunn County Judicial Center, 615 Stokke Parkway.
- Dec. 15, Green Bay –10 a.m. in Room 207 of the
Green Bay City Hall, 100 N. Jefferson St.
- Dec. 18, Waukesha –1 p.m. in Rooms 255 and 259 of
the Waukesha Administration Building, 515 Moorland Road
(Enter through the Court House).
- Dec. 19, Madison –2:30 p.m. in the St. Croix Room
of the state Department of Administration Building , 101 E
Wilson St.
- Dec. 20, Stevens Point –6 p.m. in Conference
Rooms 1 and 2 of the Portage County Courthouse Annex 5 1462
Strongs Ave.
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Water levels may be at 50-year-lows in
some lakes |
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Lakes in Wisconsin are no strangers to fluctuations
in water levels. They respond to changes in climate,
weather patterns and to what is happening on the land
that drains into them. Snow cover, rainfall, seasonal
average temperatures, and human consumption all can
play a role. Climate trends can last for many years,
affecting lake levels, streamflows, and groundwater.
The recent unusually dry weather patterns have made
low lake levels particularly noticeable. These water
level fluctuations can become more pronounced depending
on the lake type, weather, and human water use patterns
within a lake’s watershed.
Natural fluctuations in lake levels are an important part
of a lake ecosystem. Fish, wildlife and people need the near
shore vegetation to grow back as water levels recede. As water
levels return these plants become habitat for fish and
wildlife and improve water quality. Many lakes that are
controlled by dams manually lower water levels to trigger this
response as a form of management.
The low water levels have been more common on “seepage
lakes,” landlocked lakes that have no inlet or outlet streams
but are fed by groundwater or springs. Water levels on these
lakes typically fluctuate substantially from season to season
and year to year, responding to the amount of rain and snow
that soaks into the ground and replenishes the groundwater
supply feeding the lake. There’s also evidence such lakes
naturally fluctuate over decades, responding to larger weather
patterns.
A study of water levels on 28 Wisconsin lakes over 20 years
estimated that water levels on nine out of 10 natural lakes in
the state typically fluctuate by about 1 to 3 feet annually.
Over longer time periods, these fluctuations are greater.
Seepage lakes fluctuate most widely, ranging from 2.5 to 10.9
feet over 20 year periods.
Recent dry summers and lack of winter precipitation are
exacerbating these normal fluctuations. Increased water use is
also playing a role in lower lake levels. High capacity wells
drawing water for municipal water supplies and irrigation for
agricultural crops is probably measurably lowering (exact
amount unknown) groundwater and lake levels where density of
irrigation and high capacity wells is large.
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Lake, stream shorelines off limits to
motorized vehicles |
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Lake and stream levels are at historic lows across
northwestern Wisconsin and other areas of the state,
exposing environmentally sensitive shorelines that
state officials are reminding people are off limits
for the operating motor vehicles such as all terrain
vehicles (ATVs).
Operating ATVs or other motor vehicles on exposed
shorelines in illegal in Wisconsin because such actions can
destroy or damage bull rushes, native grasses, and other
shoreline plants. The plants maintain a valuable transition
between the water and uplands.
"These plants are important to the ecology of the lake.
They are really important for fish spawning and stabilizing
sediment. They have a whole community associated with them of
fish fingerlings and invertebrates, " says Susan Borman, the
expert who did a comprehensive survey of aquatic plants in
Whitefish Lake last summer.
According to state law, adjacent property owners have
exclusive use of dry or exposed lakebed; however, even
lakefront property owners may not operate ATVs or other
motorized vehicles an exposed shorelines. Individuals who wish
to access these areas by foot should first get permission from
the adjacent property owner.
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Do
you know a group doing good things for
lakes? |
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People you know are making positive contributions
to our lakes in many ways. Here’s your chance to recognize
their efforts!
Many groups—including lake associations, lake districts,
county-wide associations, and other collaborative efforts—are
working to make their lakes clean, safe, and healthy for
everyone. Maybe you know a lake group who has organized its
members and lake residents to make positive contributions to
lake quality by starting shoreland restoration programs,
participating in local government decision making, working
collaboratively with other organizations, or other activities.
If so, please show your appreciation for the important
local work people are doing to keep our lakes clean, safe, and
healthy for everyone by nominating a deserving lake leader for
a Wisconsin Stewardship Award in the Citizen Category.
Lake Stewardship Award categories to recognize outstanding
contributions of time and effort to the future of our lakes
include: Organized group, Educator, Youth, Public official or
employee, and Business. Nominations are due March 16th,
2007.
Please contact the Wisconsin Association of
Lakes with questions about these prestigious
awards.
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