Janesville utility receives water efficiency award

We’re proud to report that the Janesville Municipal Water Utility received the Wisconsin Water Association’s 2011 water efficiency award. Over the last couple of years, Clean Wisconsin has worked closely with the city of Janesville to develop a conservation-based rate structure that rewards residents and businesses for conserving water.

This award confirms that this important work is helping to protect one of Wisconsin’s most valuable natural resources – our groundwater. Many places across the state have experienced the unfortunate effects that result from overusing groundwater. Clean Wisconsin is working with communities across the state to find solutions, like those in Janesville, that will help ensure groundwater remains plentiful for generations to come.

For more information on Janesville’s water program, here is an excerpt from the Wisconsin Public Service Commission’s Water Currents Newsletter:

Janesville utility receives 2011 water efficiency award
The Janesville Municipal Water Utility received the Wisconsin Water Association’s Water Efficiency Award for 2011. The utility has implemented inclining block water rates and offers rebates for high- efficiency toilets, showerheads, and faucets to help customers use water more efficiently. Janesville also has undertaken a system-wide leak detection and repair program to reduce the amount of water lost in its distribution system. To reduce energy use, the utility replaced constant-speed pump drives with more efficiency variable-speed drives and has modified its operating strategies to utilize its system storage to minimize on-peak pumping and demand charges. For more information about Janesville’s conservation program, visit: http://www.ci.janesville.wi.us.

Wait! Don’t flush! Responsible options for unused prescriptions

It’s no secret that the compounds and chemicals found in prescriptions and over-the-counter medications have also been found in our lakes, rivers, streams, groundwater and drinking water, and the old adage to flush unused prescriptions is now the least desirable option for clearing out your home and medicine cabinet. We now have options to help minimize the pharmaceutical ingredients found in our waters.

Saturday is the federal Drug Enforcement Agency’s National Prescription Take Back Day. Originally designed as an effort to curb prescription drug abuse, especially among teens, it has other benefits as well. By keeping these chemicals and compounds out of our waters, we keep them out of our bodies, minimizing the effects on our health. It also helps retain the effectiveness of our existing pharmaceutical options, as environmental exposure can lead to drug-resistant germs and “superbugs.”

The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) reported that a record 37,642 pounds, or 18.7 tons, worth of prescription drugs were dropped off at collection sites throughout Wisconsin during the April 2012 Take Back event, making our state the third largest contributor of unwanted medications in the country.

To find a facility or medical waste drop site near you, a good starting place is the DEA’s Office of Diversion Control, which offers a searchable database of sites near you that will take old, unused and expired medications; you can search by city and state or by ZIP code.

If you’re in the greater Dane County area, check out the list of available MedDrop locations around the county; there are now 10 drop-off locations available. In the greater Milwaukee area, check out the list of participating police departments collecting medical waste; most communities are not accepting this waste.

Interestingly, some research on the topic also found that Wisconsin has a Drug Repository program. Patients may donate certain unused or discontinued medications and supplies to a participating pharmacy or medical facility. Those items will be given to individuals with cancer or chronic disease that do not have insurance or are underinsured. There are, understandably, restrictions on what can and cannot be donated; the website doesn’t specify what drugs can be donated other than to list a few that cannot, but you learn more on the website.

Have other non-pharmaceutical medical supplies you want to dispose of properly? The DNR offers this resource.

While the above disposal options have numerable benefits, responsible medical waste management starts before you even open the bottle. Take the full course of medication as prescribed. For as-needed medications, talk with your provider about obtaining a quantity you’ll reasonably use, reducing waste and possibly out-of-pocket costs. Store medications properly to reduce spoilage.

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Update: Please check with your pharmacy as well. Some pharmacies provide take-back programs as well.

Return to Lake Tainter

“Disgusting. Acrid. It smells like you’re walking into a pig barn.”

That’s how Melissa Malott, water program director at Clean Wisconsin, described the smell of an algae-filled bay on a recent tour of Northwestern Wisconsin’s Tainter Lake with Dick Lamers, President of the Tainter Menomin Lake Improvement Association.

After visiting this spring to discuss the effects of recurring blue-green algae blooms in lakes Tainter and Menomin and capture video, Malott and Clean Wisconsin communications director Sam Weis returned to Menomonie in August to see the algae blooms firsthand.

What they found was shocking, despite having heard dozens of accounts from locals before.
A thick layer of paint-like green algae bubbled atop the water, sending off noxious, gag-inducing odors in the back bays of Lake Tainter and the Red Cedar River. Piers, boats and backyards remained empty and unused on this beautiful summer day. The video above captures some of the sights, smells and stories we captured on this trip, as well as highlights DNR Secretary Cathy Stepp’s subsequent visit.

Being on the water is not only unpleasant, but also can be dangerous. The thick mat of green and blue-swirled algae is cyanobacteria, a toxic occurrence better known as blue-green algae. The toxic algae blooms that occur each year on these lakes results from excess phosphorus pollution and can cause cause rashes, vomiting, diarrhea, severe respiratory illness, and nerve and liver damage.

Reducing the frequency of toxic blue-green algae blooms in lakes like Tainter and Menomin and preventing them in other waters across the state, is why Clean Wisconsin works so hard to curb phosphorus pollution in our waterways.

Touring Lake Tainter was a terrific reminder of just how important that work is.

Click here to see the complete Tainter-Menomin video series and learn about how you can help clean up Wisconsin’s most impaired waters!

Photos With Fish

The fishing opener is only one day away, and anglers across the state are readying their reels, rods, tackle boxes and boats to head out tomorrow for the first fishing adventure of the year.

In the spirit of this holiday (at least it’s a holiday from this author’s perspective), we thought that we’d share some of our favorite pictures of staff with fish.

Do you have a favorite fishy picture of your own?  We’d love to see it.  Make sure to upload it to our Facebook page. Next week, we’ll even choose a few pictures at random and send those who posted them a shiny new Clean Wisconsin water bottle to bring along on their next fishing adventure.

Staff Attorney Elizabeth Wheeler with a mighty panfish

Media Specialist Amanda Wegner with Driftless Region Brown Trout

Communications adult intern extraordinaire Daniel Mostaza "The Staz" with fish and a stylish Wolf sweatshirt.

Communications Intern Ella Schwierske with a Walleye

Clean energy specialist Katy Walter with a yellow perch in Rhinelander

Membership assistant, Jenny Lynes with a Lake Superior lake trout

Media specialist Sam Weis with a bigger Lake Superior lake trout

WINNER: Senior policy director, Keith Reopelle, with a musky on Lake Waubesa

Whether the fish were big or small, or the photos taken recently or years ago, these pictures bring back some fond memories for all of us here at Clean Wisconsin. For many of us here, the love of fishing is a huge reason we fight so hard to protect Wisconsin’s wonderful environment.

From all of us, good luck to all of the anglers heading out this weekend for the fishing opener!

-contributed by Sam Weis, media specialist.

It Stinks to Fish in a Green Lake

As a kid, my dad convinced my siblings and I to give our mom a fishing pole as a Mother’s Day gift several years in a row. Of course, we thought it was a great idea since it meant we’d be doing plenty of fishing, but Mom wasn’t as enthusiastic.

Aside from the obvious fact that it had become a gag gift, fishing, something that should be relaxing and rewarding, was work for my mom. Why? She was the only one who could take the bullheads we’d catch off the line without getting stung by the barbs on their fins. With five kids casting lines, that’s a lot of bullheads.

Green, stinky and gross

Catching a bullhead isn’t that exciting, but it was the only thing that lived in our pond.

I grew up on a homestead farm in south-central Wisconsin, 200 acres of fields, wetlands and woodlands. And a spring-fed pond that, through my youth, was either surrounded by crops or cattle. The land, my dad would say, was too valuable to let lie fallow. While there are bottom-line benefits to our hardworking farmers for planting more corn or allowing cattle to graze freely, doing so within yards of a water body can have devastating effects on its ecosystem.

And that’s why Mom spent her summer nights handling the bullheads.

In the 1980s, crop farming included heavy doses of herbicides, pesticides and fertilizers, which contain phosphorus. Cow manure also contains a large amount of phosphorus. A nutrient for plants, phosphorus gets picked up rainwater or snowmelt and is washed off fields into neighboring water bodies and waterways. In the water, it causes overgrowth of aquatic plants and algae; algal blooms can be dangerous to humans, pets and aquatic life. As these algal blooms grow and cover water’s surface and eventually die and decay, creating a blanket that blocks sunlight from entering the water. This kills the plants below and reduces oxygen, food and shelter for fish.

YUCK! A brown bullhead

Except bullheads.

Species like bullheads, suckers, redhorse and carp, dubbed “rough fish” and undesirable to most anglers, can live in these subpar waters; some, like bullheads, can thrive on little oxygen and even live on the algae and fish that die because of the warm, stinking habitat created by these blooms. In the ’80s, when our family spent many summer nights and weekend afternoons at the pond, it had become a haven for bullheads. By the 1990s, after years of being inundated with phosphorus-filled runoff from the fields and cattle and around the same time my four siblings and I couldn’t stand to spend time with one another, the pond had become a green, gross, stinking mess.

Like our pond, phosphorus is devastating prime fishing waters around the state; here’s an interesting map from the DNR on waters and watersheds that have been impaired by the stuff. In 2010, a set of state rules were adopted that would cost effectively reduce the amount of phosphorus entering our waterways and, over time, greatly improve and protect water quality. Though it’s a non-budget item, Gov. Scott Walker wants to delay implementation of this set of vital phosphorus rules for two years in budget bill. This delay is harmful and unnecessary; communities are already committed and coming together to clean up their waterways.

Back at the farm, the pond is slowly recovering; some time in the late 1990s, my dad came around to the fact that heavy fertilizers were a bad choice (and getting extremely expensive) and he moved the pasture away from the pond. But cleaning up a water body is no easy task; it takes years for phosphorus to cycle through its ecosystem. We need action today, not two years from now.

It really stinks to fish in a green lake (or pond, as it were). Don’t believe it? I’m sure my mom would be happy to teach you how to take a bullhead off the line without getting stunned. It will be a valuable skill in the future if we don’t take polluted runoff and phosphorus pollution seriously.

 

–Contributed by Amanda Wegner, Media Specialist