Showing posts with label watershed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label watershed. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Red Lake Watershed District and DNR progress on Pine Lake flood project


The Red Lake Watershed District and the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources continue their efforts toward better water management of the Pine Lake watershed in Clearwater County.

One of several flood damage reduction projects in the watershed district, the Pine Lake project will allow for water level management throughout the year by constructing a new control structure on Pine Lake and creating upstream retention basins to reduce flood damage at the lake and areas downstream.

A 45 square-mile drainage area flows into Pine Lake. Runoff causes rapid increases in lake levels in the spring and cabins have been flooded in 13 of the last 33 years. Lower lake levels in late summer, fall and winter can result in lake access issues for shoreland owners and may be detrimental to over-wintering fish populations.

Recently, the watershed district and the DNR signed a memorandum of understanding to seasonally hold water in the wetland located on the Little Pine Lake Wildlife Management Area (WMA) as part of area flood damage reduction efforts in the watershed. The WMA is located upstream from Pine Lake.

Under the memorandum, the watershed district will build a new dam on the wetland on Little Pine Lake WMA and the DNR will use it to manage water levels upstream to reduce flood damage and enhance wildlife habitat. In late fall, the DNR will drop water levels 2 feet in anticipation of holding upwards of 4 feet of water during a flood.

“Lower fall, and in drier years, lower spring water levels would offer some natural resource enhancements,” said Dave Rave, Bemidji DNR area wildlife supervisor. “Lower water levels will provide breeding and migrating waterfowl and shorebird habitat. In very wet springs, we will hold back water to minimize flooding at Crookston and other areas downstream.”

Better water management in this and other watersheds will ensure that they work efficiently to meet local needs and also help address a Red River basin region-wide goal, the Red River Basin Commission established to reduce peak flows along the Red River of the North.

Landowners and other watershed partners attended public meetings last July and provided input on the Pine Lake project, as well as a similar project on the Four Legged Lake watershed. The project teams met in August. The public input is now being used to determine the best options for both projects.

“Public input has been helpful in determining suitable alternatives for evaluation,” said Myron Jesme, Red River Watershed District administrator. “We’re encouraged that the DNR and the Red Lake Watershed District have signed an agreement that establishes authority and responsibility for water level management on the Little Pine Wildlife Management Area.”

For more information on both Pine Lake and Four Legged Lake Watershed projects and progress, visit www.redlakewatersed.org/.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Ag Commissioner seeks recommendations for new water quality pilot projects

ST. PAUL, Minn. – Minnesota Agriculture Commissioner Dave Frederickson is seeking recommendations for pilot project watershed areas for the Minnesota Agricultural Water Quality Certification Program (MAWQCP). The program is designed to accelerate voluntary adoption of agricultural practices that enhance water quality.

This program will be the first of its type in the nation and is the product of a state-federal partnership that includes the MDA, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA), the Minnesota Board of Water and Soil Resources (BWSR), the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR), the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

Commissioner Frederickson says the pilot projects provide local communities the opportunity to lead the state in developing and implementing this unique approach to recognizing the stewardship and cooperation our neighbors demonstrate every day.

Minnesota farm organizations, soil and water conservation districts, commodity councils, wildlife organizations and other agriculture-related groups can recommend a watershed in their area as ideally suited for a pilot project location,” said Frederickson. “The pilot project watersheds will serve as a guide for the rest of Minnesota in producing a water quality program that will best serve farms and families throughout the state.”

The Minnesota Agricultural Water Quality Certification Program pilot areas will be located in each of the primary agricultural regions of the state: the Northwest, Central/Southwest, and Southeast and be representative of the local diversity of agriculture (predominant land use types, crops, livestock, water quality goals and resource concerns).

Pilot areas could receive significant funding from multiple agencies to enhance water quality in their areas. Projects will be a maximum three-year duration to enable diverse sample conditions in weather, production systems, practice implementation, and other factors including emphasis on replication of successful MAWQCP implementation and operation locally. The pilot areas will be required to produce measurement of key elements needed for a successful program.

The deadline to submit recommendations is March 1, 2013. For more information about the pilot project or to obtain a recommendation form, contact Brad Redlin, Program Manager, at 651-201-6489 or Brad.Redlin@state.mn.us