Thursday, July 30, 2009

Proposal would restrict development in areas containing 'hydric soil'

WI State Journal

...Some 117,000 acres in Dane County are designated hydric soil — about one in every seven acres


...In Dane County’s towns, there are 1,803 buildings on hydric soil, or 3.3 percent of all 65,228 buildings. Another 1,221 buildings are built in floodplains. In the cities and villages, excluding Madison

...The proposal wouldn’t apply to cities and villages ...

...Phil Salkin, government affairs director for the Realtors Association of South Central Wisconsin, said he had concerns about the proposal because not all hydric soil areas will necessarily flood — much of the Isthmus contains hydric soil, he noted. The proposal, he said, would empower the county’s zoning committee to make land use decisions without a scientific standard.

Family appealing loss of cabin, land

Judge rules DNR owns lakefront site

Milw Journal Sentinel

...In 1998, the Legislature changed a real estate law that had stated that if people possessed any disputed land, uninterrupted, for more than 40 years, it was legally theirs.

The Wieds argued that because they bought the land in 1965, and have occupied it for 44 years, it should be theirs.

However, the judge denied that defense, ruling the law applies only until 1998. Therefore, they would have had to have purchased the land before 1958.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Kilbourn Dam turns 100

Some dams are good, others are bad, and DNR will determine what is what...

WI State Journal

But its significance carries well beyond the electricity it created.

The dam evened out water flow and raised water levels on the river, making some of the scenic spots amid the high sandstone cliffs accessible to tourists.

“It allows us to go into backwater such as Coldwater Canyon and Witches Gulch and be able to navigate the boats and bring people into those areas,“ said Jason Garbacz, operations supervisor for Dells Boat Tours. “Without the dam, water levels wouldn’t be high enough for us to get into some of these spectacles.”

“We hold back a little water at night and then release it during the day for boats and amphibious vehicles,” Wilson said. “It (the dam) is very integral to the entire Wisconsin Dells.”

DNR called too political in Assembly hearing testimony

Milw Journal Sentinel

...Still, critics of the current system did not complain about the current secretary, Matt Frank, a career attorney in state government who was appointed in September 2007.

Frank said the current system makes the DNR more accountable to an elected official. He questioned whether the Great Lakes Compact would have been passed without Doyle's leadership and questioned whether the changes being sought would be effective.

"Democracy is often noisy, and one person's politics is another person's policy," he said.

Business wants status quo
Business interests are siding with Doyle to maintain the status quo. Scott Manley, director of environmental policy with Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce, said his group doesn't see the DNR as any different from other state agencies.

"The cabinet form of government works," Manley said.

Joel Haubrich, manager of state government affairs for Milwaukee-based We Energies, said the DNR is a critical agency in the utility's decision-making process, costing the company about $5 billion in regulatory costs in 10 years.

We Energies is concerned a change might put more emphasis on natural resources issues and less on air and water regulation, he said.

_____________________

Perhaps the answer is to split the WDNR into 2 agencies as Illinois, Michigan and Minnesota does...

FROM 2006

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Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Weather Forecasters are Frauds

What is the difference between "partly cloudy" today, and "mostly sunny" tomorrow?

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Between DNR Target and Max

Lake Level - 776.27

3 consecutive days of increased inflow

Monday, July 27, 2009

2009: Year Without True Summer

Accuweather.com

...For people across the Great Lakes and Northeast, this has been the coolest summer in more than a decade. After a period of more classic summer heat in the coming weeks, cooler weather is expected to continue the trend of the "Year Without True Summer."

...Chicago had 12 days in June when temperatures did not exceed 70 degrees. This has happened only one other time in 1969. That year was followed by a snowy winter as well.

...The Midwest and central Plains, which have been hit hard the past two winters, may end up with a lack of snowfall this year. Places like Chicago, Omaha, Minneapolis and Kansas City may have below-normal snowfall and could even average a bit milder than past years

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It's Been a Cool, Mild Summer

Accuweather.com


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Gate Ops

Lake Level = 776.24

All slide gates are open - both wicket gates are closed.

Kim has been doing a great job at filing our daily reports with DNR, and keeping the lake level at or near DNR summer target level.

Water Rescue Training

Hello Brian,

Thanks for the feed back on the Water Rescue Training we had on July 15 TH. Just a little history, this is the program that was initially put together by Tom Emerick, Mike Reel, (Fort Fire), Mike Zenoni, (Jefferson Co Sheriff's Dept), Dave Sheen, (Janesville Fire), and myself, when I was with Rock County Sheriff's Dept.

As a result of the many drownings on our water ways we envisioned and created this Water Rescue Program. This was over 13 years ago and many of the same people and Departments are still involved. Fort, Lake Mills, Edgerton and Milton Fire Departments as well as Jefferson and Rock County Sheriff's Departments have been a part of and have made major contributions to this program since it's inception.

The RRSP is still involved with this program. Tom Kunkel and myself volunteer our time to help keep this program going and to contribute our many years of water rescue experience. The focus of this program is to provide rescue services to Lake Koshkonong and the Rock River.

The Water Rescue Program is a program that the Lake District should take note of. The members of the Lake District are the recipients of the benefits from this Programs efforts.

Thanks

Henry

Monday, July 20, 2009

Mock boat crash provides lake rescue training

Daily Union

...Encompassing portions of Jefferson, Rock and Dane counties, Lake Koshkonong extends into the coverage area of multiple emergency agencies. Milton Fire and Rescue, Edgerton Fire and Rescue, Lake Mills Fire Department, Fort Atkinson Fire and Rescue, the Rock River Safety Patrol, the Rock County Sheriff's Department and Jefferson County Sheriff's Office each participated in the training exercise.

...After record-setting flooding last year, Lake Koshkonong and the Rock River's water levels are low right now.

"We had trouble getting the boats into some areas
," Reel said. "That's where we utilized airboats from Lake Mills Fire Department and the Rock County Sheriff's Department."

...For the purposes of the scenario, it was assumed the boaters were from outside of the area and got lost on the lake, ultimately going aground near Vinnie HaHa Road, killing one person and injuring three others.

"It took us a while to search and find out where they were," the captain said. "It was a very realistic, real-time event that involved nine different agencies."

Fort riverwalk panel debates restrictions

Jefferson County Daily Union

Newville moves on

But scars of 2008 flooding still show in neighborhood

By Stacy Vogel
svogel@gazettextra.com  
NEWVILLE

Pete Sisco and his family seemed worry-free Saturday as they built a retaining wall around his driveway on Ellendale Road along the Rock River.

The men joked about who was doing the most work and enjoyed the unseasonably cool weather.
You’d hardly guess that a year ago, the Siscos and their neighbors were scrambling to save their homes from the relentlessly rising water flooding their backyards and basements.

The thousands of sandbags used in the effort disappeared long ago. People no longer are dragging flood-damaged goods out of soggy basements, and no homes are visibly crumbling in this close-knit neighborhood.

But if you look closely, you still can see scars from the historic 2008 flooding.

Sisco was lucky. When he rebuilt his home two years ago, he followed recommendations to put it higher and further from the river than the old home. The water came up to the deck stairs behind the house, but it did not enter the structure.

His brother-in-law and next-door neighbor, Sam Tomasello, wasn’t so lucky. About 600 gallons of water came into his home in two minutes as the river breached the sandbag wall two houses away last June, he said.

A year later, the home’s tiny basement still is damp and smelly. Water seeps through the walls and gathers in tiny crevices on the floor. A small crack in the basement floor popped open during the flooding, and though Tomasello covered it with hydraulic cement, the water still creeps in around the edges. Tomasello has just begun to assess the structural damage, he said. “They (the experts) said they can’t fix it,” Tomasello said. “They said they can contain it.”

If Tomasello had the money, he would lift the house and put it on a new foundation, he said. He didn’t have flood insurance, and he doesn’t qualify for federal grants because the house is a secondary residence, he said. He and his wife live there about half the year.

That’s a problem for many Newville homeowners, said Dave Somppi, Rock County community development manager.

The county has given out $250,000 in community development block grants for homeowners to repair their homes, but only three of the 24 grants issued so far have gone to Newville.

“None of the grant programs have provided funds to address seasonal or secondary homes, and unfortunately in some parts of the county a large majority of the homes are seasonal or secondary,” Somppi said.

Secondary homes also don’t qualify for hazard mitigation grants, which allow the county to buy and raze homes with damage totaling more than 50 percent of the value of the home.

The county has applied for grants to tear down six homes outside of Janesville and Beloit, said Scott Heinig, Rock County Planning and Development Agency director. It also has identified four homes that must come down but don’t qualify for grants. The county has offered to pay for the demolition costs in those cases.

Heinig didn’t know how many of the homes that need to be torn down are in Newville.

The problems with Tomasello’s house don’t seem to rise to that level, and he plans to fix them the best he can, he said. He hopes to retire in a few years and live in the Newville home year-round.

Still, his heart always will race when the river hits flood stage, as it did in March, he said.

“When it went up to that 11.5 (feet), I was really worried,” he said. “I’m like, ‘I don’t know if we can handle this again.’”

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Ellendale Road Flood Aftermath

Sam Tomasello stands in the basement of his Newville home and remembers the home as it looked just a year ago. Tomasello’s basement floor cracked and heaved due to water pressure. The home also has other water damage that still has to be repaired. Even though the river level is near normal for this time of year, Tomasello still has seepage in the basement and the sump pump runs constantly.

Bill Olmsted/ bolmsted@gazettextra.com  

Public Comments on Newsletter

Brian -
After reading the latest Waves & Whitecaps I just had to write a note of Thanks to you and all the Commissioners of RKLD - the enormous time you all put in for all of us is sure appreciated by me and I know many others. The newsletter was clear, concise, and brought me up-to date on all the Lake District "happenings"
Thanks again
Jim Dovgin
JAD Realty
Brian -
Thanks for the newsletter. I was especially interested in the dredging information. Do you know if the dredging would include the shoreline? I'm on Vinne Haha, and we just can't seem to get a pier that's long enough to keep the boat at the pier!
Thanks,
Candice

Sunday, July 19, 2009

3 slide gates closed today

Both wicket gates remain closed

Lake Level = 776.23

4 Day INFLOWS -
786
682
670
647 cfs

Warmer weather on tap after 2 days record-setting cold

Sunshine will return Sunday after record-setting cold the last two days.

Like Friday, Saturday's high temperature of 66 degrees broke the record for coldest high of 68 degrees for July 18 set in 1924.

Sunday's forecast calls for partly sunny skies with a high near 72 degrees and a low around 50 with some patchy fog later tonight.

Monday will bring more sun and higher temperatures to start the work week, warming up to 78 degrees. Clouds cover will increase into the night, dropping down to 56 degrees with light winds.

Showers and thunderstorms might be possible Tuesday afternoon through Saturday. High temperatures will hover around the low 80s.

Saturday's low was 53, 8 degrees below normal and 6 degrees above the record low of 47 for the day, set in 1979.

Friday's high of 66 degrees broke the record coldest high of 67 degrees for July 17 set in 1900.

Record-setting cold Friday could repeat today

Friday's mercury dropped just low enough to break a 109-year-old record for the coldest high for July 17.

Yesterday's chilly peak of 66 degrees edged out the previous record of 67 degrees set in 1900, according to Weather Central's Kacie Krueger. The high was 17 degrees below normal and 32 degrees below the record high set for the date in 1936.And we could be in for another record-setting cold today.

Saturday's forecast calls for another high of 66 degrees, while the record coldest high for July 18 is 68, set in 1924.Sunshine could peek out this afternoon, but there's also a slight chance for a light shower.

Tonight will be chilly with a low right around 50 degrees.

Sunday will warm up, with highs in the mid-70s. We'll have more sunshine and partly cloudly skies.

Temperatures will rebound Monday to right around 80 degrees and should stay around there for the rest of the week.

Friday's low was 54, 7 degrees below normal and 9 degrees above the record low of 45 for the day, set in 1976.

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Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Gate Changes

Here's something you have not read in a VERY long time -

Both wicket gates are closed.

Level 776.23 (776.20 DNR Summer Target)

Inflow = 1050 - 958 - 904 - 772 cfs

All slide gates remain full open.

Underwater Obstructions

Brian,

Can the lake district get involved with placing buoys on the lake in specific known rocky areas to warn boaters who are not familiar with the water. We are constantly towing eople when simple warning bouys would have caused them to avoid the problems. How about a few bucks for safety for a change.

Please advise
thanks
Larry Schauder
____________________________________

Hi Brian,

A township can mark navigational hazards by simply applying for a waterway marker permit. There is no need to write an ordinance as is the case with slow-no-wake or swim area bouys.

The only other requirement would be that the bouy would have to meet the legal requirements for marking.

(milk jugs, etc are not legal markers and that is why they are removed by wardens)

It would need to be a white bouy with orange stripes and a diamond shape in the middle marking a danger area.

Let me know if I can be of further assistance.

P Jeremy J. Plautz

Conservation Warden Supervisor
Madison Enforcement Team Bureau of Law Enforcement
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
(608) 275-3318
Jeremy.plautz@dnr.state.wi.us

Lake Level Predictions

Brian:
Any idea why the predictions on the NWS Newville station are not being displayed? Someone commented they thought it was because the levels were dropping...

Who is responsible for the NWS site and can we find out why it's not being updated? It's really been a tremendous source of information for many of us, especially since last summer.
Thanks
Barry Reddington
Hello –

Just curious, where’s the prediction of water levels on the “advanced hydrological prediction service?” For more than a week now, the Rock River Newville graph has been indicating the current lake level only.

Thanks!

Brian,

I'm not certain but I think the National Weather Service only makes predictions when they think levels will get to flood levels (or close to it). If they don't anticipate flooding they direct their resources elsewhere. The NWS makes the forecasts so you'd need to check with them to verify that.

USGS

Rock Aqua Jays

Janesville Gazette



How cool would it be if we could have the skiers to Newville for a show after their season ends!?

Franklin couple's pain lingers year after flood

Milw Journal Sentinel

..."It was horribly unfair," Lazich said. "Lake Delton is getting all this treatment with their homes. That's a question the governor has to answer: Why not help the Pollmans?"

Gov. Jim Doyle announced in September that the state still needed $1.22 billion to cover flood damage for housing, businesses and infrastructure.

As of June, the state had received about $124 million from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

"Obviously, we're concerned with all the people hit hard with the flooding," said Doyle's spokesman, Lee Sensenbrenner. "The governor has worked hard to get federal and state aid to people affected to the floods."

Not in floodplain
Another possible route for homeowners is to have the city or state buy their damaged homes. Agencies pay to demolish the home and zone the land so future developers can't build there (because the land is deemed a high-risk area).

Monday, July 13, 2009

RRSP Update

Hello Brian,

The RRSP has had to remove some smaller stumps from the lake as a result of the flooding. We can do very little about the hazards that are floating on the lake. I wonder if the RKLD should contract with someone that has the proper equipment to remove some of the stumps, trees, pier sections and dog houses that are floating in the lake.

Yesterday I had to stop a pontoon boat, that was pulling a child on an inflatable tube, from hitting a rather dangerous stump. It was a lucky thing I was there, but I think it's only a matter of time before someone gets injured because of the hazards.

Henry

Lake Level Will Keep - Dropping

BC -
This weekend I was chatting with a guy that lives on the lake near Gilberts Bay. He said they had to push their boat off the bunks because when they placed the lift the water was much higher. He said they lowered it all the way down and it was still 4+" off the water. He said they had all they could do to get it off the lift and on the water.
RP

Alternatives to retaining walls are, quite literally, green

WI State Journal

...The cost of the socks, when planted, is $12 to $14 per "face feet" (aka square feet), which is just a bit more expensive than boulder walls, and four times cheaper than a cast concrete wall.

776.3

DNR Summer High Water reached...

Yes, today is considered High Water by WDNR...

Sunday, July 12, 2009

776.41

Only 2 1/2 inches yet to drop before we reach the DNR Summer target level.

I am betting after the past three years, many have forgotten just how low the DNR summer water level really is...

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Below 777.00

Lake Level 776.83

Inflow - 1,060 cfs
Outflow - 2,010 cfs

DNR Summer Max = 776.33
DNR Summer Target = 776.20

7.56 inches yet to drop....

This weekend, and the rest of July, RKLD will be struggling to keep a decent water level.

Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Flood funds set to pour in

Janesville Gazette

Despite NR115, state pushes waterfront development

Lakeland Times

...By statute, shoreland zoning rules apply only to unincorporated areas, and to all such localities. The proposed code revision would limit construction by maintaining a 75-foot setback for new structures and by capping impervious surfaces at no more than 30 percent of any shoreland parcel, or 15 percent without a mitigation requirement.

By contrast state statutes do not require general shoreland development standards for incorporated cities and villages - no setbacks and no impervious surface restrictions.

So while the governor's revitalization grants can flow to unincorporated and to incorporated areas, the ways in which those entities can use those dollars are radically different.

Boom time in the cities

Saturday, July 04, 2009

Fireworks over Lake Koshkonong July 11

Jefferson County Daily Union

Happy Independence Day!

Lake dropped 2.16 inches overnight - starting to pick-up momentum - 777.45


Thursday, July 02, 2009

Patriotic Water Level

Lake Level = 777.76

Dropping almost 2 inches per day.

Now if only the temp would increase 2 degrees > per day!