Wisconsin Association of Lakes
September 2006

This month's articles

Manure management discharge rules (NR 243): hearing results

Ask candidates to be your voice for conservation if they are elected in November

Citizen based monitoring conference

Share your experience with fellow lake leaders!

Help “Get the Lead Out!” with new lake association kits

Lake's rusty crayfish decline thanks to trapping, boosting fish numbers

County Board of Supervisors protects Lake Nancy: denies zoning committee recommendation

Houses go up, aquifer goes down

Working with you for clean, safe, healthy lakes


 

Citizen-based Monitoring conference. October 5 and 6. Wagon Trail Resort, Door County. Download brochure. Regi stration information.

Wisconsin Association of Environmental Educators conference. October 26-28. Register before September 27th to receive the early bird discount rate! Detailed concurrent session, workshop, fieldtrip and registration information is available at the WAEE website.

SAVE THE DATE!

2007 Wisconsin Lakes Convention April 26- 28. KI Convention Center, Green Bay. This year's theme is Agents of Change: we make a difference.





  • Manure management discharge rules (NR 243): hearing results
  • On August 4th, the Assembly and Senate committees on agriculture held a public hearing on the Manure Management Discharge Rules (NR 243). These rules only apply to Wisconsin's 150 largest farms (called Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations or CAFOs). CAFOs have more than 1000 animal units and are required to get a point source pollution permit under the federal Clean Water Act. Wisconsin's CAFOs make up less than 1% of Wisconsin's farms but produce 10% of the manure.

    The Senate Agriculture Committee voted to return the proposed rule to the DNR for unspecified modifications. NR 243 has taken 4 years to develop; 5 agribusiness lobby groups, three producers (including 1 CAFO), and 3 representatives from DATCP and NRCS were on the technical advisory committee to develop these rules.

    The Wisconsin Association of Lakes is looking forward to working towards a resolution to this important issue so Wisconsin has rules that work for agriculture and for public health and clean water.

    Learn why rule revisions are necessary to keep lakes manure free
  • Ask candidates to be your voice for conservation if they are elected in November
  • Wisconsinites value—and depend on—clean water, clean air and pristine open spaces. Unfortunately, many values that we hold dear have been ignored by some of our elected representatives in recent years. A connection between a voter and his or her representative is critical to protecting our natural resources. Are you connected to your current legislators and candidates running for office?

    Wisconsin is your land, your water, your future.

    If you want to be heard, send a personalized letter to the candidates looking to represent you, asking them to be your voice on three urgent conservation issues:

    • Protecting drinking water from manure contamination
    • Keeping Great Lakes water in the Great Lakes by protecting the lakes from water diversions and
    • Decreasing the amount of waste dumped by other states into Wisconsin landfills

    Please contact your legislators and candidates by Monday, October 30th.

    Let candidates know water issues are important issues: click on ‘Be My Voice’ link
  • Citizen based monitoring conference
  • The 2006 Citizen-Based Monitoring Conference will be held on the shores of Rowley's Bay at the Wagon Trail Resort in Door County October 5-6. This year's conference will focus on reviewing and initiating successful monitoring efforts for individual properties including state parks, forests, wildlife areas, lakes, rivers or private lands. Agenda topics will help property managers and citizen groups interested in participating in monitoring to develop monitoring programs that lead to more effective conservation efforts.

    Download brochure

    Registration information
  • Share your experience with fellow lake leaders!
  • Is the 2007 Wisconsin Lakes Convention is looking for you?

    We’re looking for presentations from lake leaders that highlight local lake management experiences for the 2007 Wisconsin Lakes Convention. This year’s theme is “Agents of Change.” We’ll focus on ways citizens and lake organizations can be a force for positive changes that will result in clean, safe, healthy lakes. The deadline to submit a proposal is October 20, 2006.

    Download submission guidelines and application form

    Wisconsin Lake Stewardship awards

    Wisconsin Lake Stewardship Awards recognize an individual or group whose outstanding contributions of time and effort have made a positive difference in the well-being of a Wisconsin lake (or lakes) and the human communities and natural life living around and in the lake (or lakes). Winners of this prestigious award will join a distinguished group of lake leaders that have been formally recognized for the mark they made on Wisconsin’s lakes, lake life, and/or lake people. Deadline for nominations is March 16.

    Nomination guidelines and form

     
  • Help “Get the Lead Out!” with new lake association kits
  • Keep lakes safe for loons, eagles, swans, and other wildlife, by sharing a Get the Lead Out! informational kit, developed by LoonWatch, with others. Each year, loons and other waterbirds die from lead poisoning due to ingestion of lead fishing tackle. Get the Lead Out! is a campaign in several states and Canadian provinces aimed at educating anglers about the impact of lead fishing tackle on loons and other wildlife. Informational lake association kits help spread the word and may be used to organize a local lead-tackle exchange event.

    Kits include: a table-top Get the Lead Out! display about alternatives to lead tackle, handouts on the risks of lead tackle and retailers that sell non- lead tackle, twelve packets of non-lead tackle, and Get the Lead Out! posters for hanging in tackle shops. The handouts, posters, and tackle are free for associations to keep and distribute. There is no charge to borrow a Lake Association Kit, but the borrower is responsible for paying the return shipping for the display.

    Request a kit

    More information about the lead fishing tackle and the Get the Lead Out! program
  • Lake's rusty crayfish decline thanks to trapping, boosting fish numbers
  • Researchers at the University of Wisconsin- Madison and the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources are successfully fighting off the invasive rusty crayfish in northern Wisconsin. Over harvesting (trapping) adult rusty crayfish combined with maintaining high populations of fish that like to feed on young crayfish are reducing the crayfish population without damaging the lake. Intensive trapping and hands on fish-management has reduced the rusty population in Vilas County's Sparkling Lake by 90%. The technique—which does not use chemicals or high-tech equipment, and is relatively inexpensive—can be used by individual lake associations.

    Rusty crayfish appeared in Wisconsin waters in the 1950s, likely introduced when anglers brought them in as fishing bait, and dumped their unused bait into the water. Rusty crayfish out compete native crayfish, clear cut aquatic plants, devour tiny invertebrates, and reduce or destroy certain fish populations by demolishing their nursery, feeding and hiding grounds.

    Read full story
  • County Board of Supervisors protects Lake Nancy: denies zoning committee recommendation
  • The Washburn County Board of Supervisors voted 12 to 8 to reject a recommendation by the Washburn County Zoning Committee to rezone more than 126- acres for a proposed development by the Mosinee Timberland Company. The proposed development would have developed 12 plated lots abutting Lake Nancy and two larger lots behind the 12. The last time the county board completely rejected a recommendation was at least 15 years ago.

    The proposed development site has a resource conservation designation on it bordering the lake, restricting any development 300 feet from water. The designation is given to ensure the protection of specific environmentally sensitive areas. Under the resource conservation designation, lakeshore lots are required to be a minimum of three acres and at least 200 feet wide.

    Lake Nancy is very shallow, nearly four feet or less in most places; residents and the Lake Nancy Association opposed the development because of concerns over the effect on shallow water in the nearby bay, disruption to green space, preventing lake degradation, and preserving water quality and wetlands. 90 citizen letters were submitted in opposition.

     
  • Houses go up, aquifer goes down
  • Rapid growth and development across Dane County could eventually create more water quality problems and increasing use of groundwater. In the absence of a regional management plan, this could cause local stresses on what is now a very reliable source of drinking water. Dane County is listed as one of a handful of areas in the state where rapid growth is having a discernible impact on the deep aquifer, which is depended upon for drinking water, and on streams and wetlands and other surface waters that are also fed by groundwater.

    Since pre-settlement times the water level in the aquifer has dropped some 60 feet in some spots. As a result of such use, springs have dried up. The base flow of the Yahara River has dropped. Water from lakes Mendota and Monona now supplies the aquifer instead of the other way around.

    Read full story
  • Working with you for clean, safe, healthy lakes
  • The Wisconsin Association of Lakes is the only statewide organization working exclusively to protect and enhance the quality of Wisconsin’s 15,000 lakes.

    We represent citizens like you who care about Wisconsin’s lakes as a natural resource, and who also recognize the value healthy lakes bring to property values, tourist economies, and overall quality of life.