Friday, June 28, 2013

Congrats from constituents....Well Said!


Brian
Great news now that the SNW will be at 8.0', good news for the boating public, that a fair and balanced SNW level for property owners was reached!

Getting the county supervisors out to see for themselves, before making important and impacting decisions, shows the public, that they are making judgments based on fact not biased hearsay.

Property owners who made  the decision to place the height of their piers so low that they are still under water at 8.0', should either remove or raise them. It's their responsibility and  they should be reminded that it's a privilege to be allowed to place a private pier in the PUBLICS' waterway! 

Thanks again to Ivan Collins and the rest of our County Board for taking the time and basing their final decision on real facts.
Mike & Debbie Green 

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Grumpy Old Men and the Slow/No Wake Trigger - aka "Get Off My Lawn!!"

Hank Stockwell lives along the river in the Indianford-to-Koshkonong section and said the supervisors did not spend enough time on the river to see the damage the high water can do.
   “There’s dead trees, acres of land, and when there’s high water, all of it is going to disappear,” Stockwell said. “Both of my neighbor’s piers are underwater right now. It’s just a no-win situation for anyone who lives on the river.

________________

The boldness to which Henry Stockwell makes such careless, erroneous statements overwhelms the brain.  I guess some folks might accept him as a long-time river homeowner who knows what he is talking about - but, sadly, he doesn't.

First, his neighbors' piers are underwater because the lake is more than a foot and a half OVER the new 778 trigger.

Long ago I set my wood pier at 6 inches above 778, and guess what, it's TOO LOW.  It's underwater too.  When the lake level drops 3 feet - back to 776.30 DNR Summer MAX - I will either raise it, or more likely, move to a floating system.

Why?  Because me and my family LIKE TO RECREATE on the water.

And that brings me to my second point - the "no-win situation" comment.

In fact, 'everyone" wins from ALL user groups being able to access decent water levels - from boaters, to wakeboarders, from fishermen, to duck hunters, from homeowners, to business owners.

Perhaps it is time for the grumpy anti-boaters to leave the shoreline - sell your homes, cash-out, and take your huge profit.  

For those who are fond of saying, I have lived on this water for 30-40-50 years, what did your home cost you back then?  And look at market values today.  OK, so the market tanked for the past 5 years, but it is coming back and waterfront property will always be in demand.

God only made so much waterfront property.

And we ALL want to enjoy its use.


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If Your Property is in the boundaries of the Town of Fulton and RKLD, Think About Which Gov't is PROTECTING Your Home Value....

Evan Sayre, chairman of the town of Fulton, said he thinks the level should be even lower than 7.5 feet for the upper section because of the damage the waves cause to property along the river, although at that level, the land along the river at least had a chance to dry out before people were speeding along the river again.
   “If they’re going to do 8 feet, they need to wait a week,” Sayre said. “That would give it a chance to get the water out from behind the sea walls and give the water a chance to get out of the bank.”
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"Water out from behind the sea walls..."

DOH!

Thankfully, the 22-2 vote of the Rock County Board endorsed the data  presented last year by our hydologist and other science by UW PhDs - otherwise, RKLD would have to spend your tax dollars proving both this perverse theory wrong, and likely trying to find where the sea walls are on the Rock River and Lake Koshkonong.

Sea Walls???  Really??

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Slow No Wake Trigger is AMENDED - 778.00 = Exactly as RKLD had suggested


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The Voice of Reason on the Rock County Board RE: SNW Orders

The county board passed the proposed changes with a 22-2 vote.
   Many supervisors who originally supported amending the level to 7.5 feet said they changed their minds after touring the river and realizing 8 feet was an acceptable level that did not cause much damage to property and was a good compromise for boaters.
   “I just feel that 8 feet is feasible. It’s a little bit to help the businesses. It’s a little bit to help the landowners,” Supervisor Ivan Collins said.

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SNW: RKLD Wins; Lake Koshkonong Wins; Rock RIver Wins; Grumpy Ole Men Lose.


County board OKs changes to slow/no wake
River split into three sections
Samantha Jacquest
   sjacquest@gazettextra.com 
   JANESVILLE
   Rock County boaters and businesses near Newville will get an extra 6 inches of water to play with on the Rock River due to changes the county board approved Thursday to the countywide slow/no-wake ordinance.
   The new ordinance puts the slow/no-wake levels along the river at:
   8.5 feet from the Beloit-Rock Townline Road bridge south to the state line.
   6.5 feet from the Beloit-Rock Townline Road bridge north to Indianford Dam.
   8 feet from the Indianford Dam to Lake Koshkonong near Newville.
   Before 2012, towns were responsible for slow/no wake rules, leading to a confusing patchwork of regulations for boaters.
   Then last year, the county board enacted a countywide ordinance that split the county’s portion of the river in two. The trigger point north of the Indianford Dam to Newville and Lake Koshkonong was set at 7.5 feet. The much longer stretch south, through Janesville and Beloit to the Illinois line, was set at 6.5 feet. On Monday—partly in response to complaints about slow/no wake from boaters—the 
board’s public safety and justice committee agreed to recommend dividing the river into three parts and raising the section from the Beloit-Rock Townline Road bridge south to the stateline to 8.5 feet, based on the gauge in Afton. The committee recommended that the midsection north of that bridge to the Indianford Dam remain at 6.5 feet, based on the Afton gauge, and the run above Indianford remain at 7.5 feet, based on the gauge at Lake Koshkonong.
   At Thursday’s meeting, the depth in the ordinance for the third stretch of the river north of the dam to the lake was amended twice: from 8 feet, to 7.5 feet and back to 8 feet.
   The county board passed the proposed changes with a 22-2 vote.
   Many supervisors who originally supported 
amending the level to 7.5 feet said they changed their minds after touring the river and realizing 8 feet was an acceptable level that did not cause much damage to property and was a good compromise for boaters.
   “I just feel that 8 feet is feasible. It’s a little bit to help the businesses. It’s a little bit to help the landowners,” Supervisor Ivan Collins said.
   Many residents who attended the meeting opposed the change to 8 feet.
   Evan Sayre, chairman of the town of Fulton, said he thinks the level should be even lower than 7.5 feet for the upper section because of the damage the waves cause to property along the river, although at that level, the land along the river at least had a chance to dry out before people were speeding along the river again.
   “If they’re going to do 8 feet, they need 
to wait a week,” Sayre said. “That would give it a chance to get the water out from behind the sea walls and give the water a chance to get out of the bank.”
   Hank Stockwell lives along the river in the Indianford-to-Koshkonong section and said the supervisors did not spend enough time on the river to see the damage the high water can do.
   “There’s dead trees, acres of land, and when there’s high water, all of it is going to disappear,” Stockwell said. “Both of my neighbor’s piers are underwater right now. It’s just a no-win situation for anyone who lives on the river.”
   The changes in the ordinance may be put in effect as early as July 4, but slow/no wake orders are likely to remain on all stretches of the river through the holiday and beyond because of water approaching or exceeding flood levels


______________________________________

Evan Sayre lives miles from the Rock River shoreline and rarely visits the businesses in Newville that are dependent on recreation.  He bases nothing he says on data, or reality.   

Henry Stockwell lives on the river, but apparently, never looks at the USGS gauges - if he did, he would see that the reason his neighbors' piers are "underwater right now" is because the river is at 779.48, or 18 inches ABOVE the 778 trigger for Slow No Wake.
 

With everything this vocal minority  of opponents to RKLD spews - saying it does NOT make it true.


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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Rock County Board Meeting Tonite on Slow No Wake - Be Sure to Say Hello to Sup. Brian Knudson

What’s next: 

The Rock County Board will take up the ordinance at its meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday night.

A public comment period will be held before the discussion and vote on the ordinances.

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Best Bar Owner ever...RIP Jim.


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Scott Purlee of NAH


Wednesday, June 26, 2013

County board wades into slow/no wake issue


Be sure Committee member and Supervisor Brian Knudson knows you are there and what he did to recreation on Lake Koshkonong and the Rock River...
__________________

County board wades into slow/no wake issue
Changes appear likely to ordinance governing Rock River boat speeds
By Catherine W. Idzerda

   JANESVILLE

   More than 35 people came to a Rock County Board committee meeting, and each had an opinion about how the Rock River should be managed.

   On Monday, the board’s public safety and justice committee voted to repeal and re-create parts of the county ordinance regarding slow/no wake orders.

   The vote was good news for recreational boaters in the southern part of the county, where water levels would have to be significantly higher before slow/no wake goes into effect.

   But a mid-meeting amendment to the proposed changes would mean that the tipping point for slow/no wake could remain the same for boaters north of the Indianford Dam, and not everyone was happy about that.

   On Thursday, the proposed changes will go to the county board, and they could be in effect as soon as July 4.

   Slow/no wake orders take effect when the river reaches a certain level. When the orders are in effect, boats must go slow enough to create no wakes—the waves that wash out from a boat and onto shore. When water levels are high, wakes can damage piers and cause the banks of the river and the properties along them to erode.

   Until 2012, towns were responsible for slow/no wake orders, often creating a confusing patchwork of regulations. Now, the county issues orders that affect the entire length of the river within its borders.

   Sheldon Lloyd lives on North Parker Drive in Janesville.

   “If you don’t live on the river, you don’t know what the damage can be like,” Lloyd said. “I’ve lost six feet of shoreline in the time I’ve lived at my home.”

   Trent Tinder lives on the river in the town of Beloit. He told the committee that taking care of the shoreline was his responsibility.

   “It’s part of the ‘greens fee’ for living on the river,” Tinder said. “You have to do what you can to protect it.”

   Others, however, said slow/no wake orders mean it takes them 90 minutes to get from the area above the Indianford Dam to Newville and the mouth of Lake Koshkonong, and that is simply too long.

   The proposed ordinance divides the river into three areas:

   From the Beloit-Rock Townline Road bridge south to the state line. Currently, slow/no wake goes into effect when the water reaches 6.5 feet at the U.S. Geological Survey gauge in Afton. Under the ordinance, that level would rise to 8.5 feet.

   Mike Lee, owner of Lee Marine in the town of Beloit, said he supports raising the level, as did Tinder, who is his neighbor on the river. The slow/no wake has been hard on business and doesn’t make sense in an area where the river is so wide, he said.

   From the Beloit-Rock Townline Road bridge north to the Indianford Dam. This area would continue to have a slow/no wake trigger of 6.5 feet level based on the gauge at Afton.

   From the Indianford Dam to Newville and the northern county line. The ordinance proposed raising the slow/no wake trigger from 7.5 feet to 8 feet, based on the U.S. Geological Survey gauge in Newville.

   This area was the most hotly contested. Committee member Brian Knudson moved to amend the ordinance so the slow/no wake trigger would remain 7.5 feet. The amendment passed, 4-1, with committee Chairman Ivan Collins voting against.

   The ordinance changes will go to the county board Thursday night. Collins said he would ask the board to amend its rules so the ordinance changes could go through their first and second readings in one night. That way, the ordinance changes would be in effect for the Fourth of July.

   What’s next: The Rock County Board will take up the ordinance at its meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday night. A public comment period will be held before the discussion and vote on the ordinances.

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More storms could mean more flooding in Rock County area


By Gazette staff
Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Although a flash-flood warning for south-central Wisconsin has ended, the area could still be hit with thunderstorms this week, and flooding could become an issue if that happens.
Meteorologist Marcia Cronce from the National Weather Service said the warning was for weather rolling through the upper Midwest. Sunday night, a weather system went through Iowa and reached northern Illinois.
“If we do get under one of these big complexes, then the risk is there that we would have some flash-flooding concerns,” Cronce said.
A large complex of thunderstorms could develop anywhere in the upper Midwest between today and Wednesday. Even without substantial additional rain, the Rock River is likely to reach a minor flooding point by Monday, Cronce said.
The river is expected to reach 9.3 feet at Afton Road south of Janesville in the next week.
Flood stage is declared at 9 feet, which the National Weather Service describes as “minor flood damage … in lowland and agricultural land adjacent to the river.”
Current predictions are “based on a forecast precipitation amount at a conservative level.” Cronce said she does not know when the rain will occur, so the forecast could change.
“We are in a weather pattern where a thunderstorm complex can roll through and dump very heavy rain on any part of south-central Wisconsin,” she said.

Published at: http://www.GazetteXtra.com/news/2013/jun/25/more-storms-could-mean-more-flooding-rock-county-a/

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Prediction from USGS - Here we go again Lake Koshkonong


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Question regarding yesterday's County Board meeting to reconsider their errors in SNW ordinance


Brian, 

What happened at the meeting to have the committee  vote  to amend level back to 7.5' ? 
 It sounds like in the Janesville Gazette the public was very strong in support of 8.0' as being the trigger for SNW!
  I'm glad to see that the sheriff Dept. got some of the board members out to view the situation for themselves.

 To get to the point, is there any chance the board will go against the Safety Committee and agree with the majority of the boating public and put the level  to the 8.0' which is supported by scientific data, boating public, sheriff dept.and RRKD?

 Is this a majority vote by the board? 

Mike   

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Monday, June 24, 2013

Special Meeting of the RKLD Board tonite at 6pm

Monday June 24th
At Tallgrass
CTH N & STH 59

_________

This is the last board meeting until our 2013 Annual Meeting of Electors on Saturday, August 10th.

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SNW Meeting at 3pm today

See Below.

The county board sure does not make it easy for working people/shoreline taxpayers to attend.....

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"Video: Rock River swimming snakes"

"Video: Rock River swimming snakes" by Glen Loyd Videos -- GazetteXtra

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Sunday, June 23, 2013

SNW Meeting on Monday Afternoon

 What: A meeting of the Rock County Board’s Public Safety and Justice Committee to consider a recommendation to amend the countywide slow/no wake ordinance for the Rock River. Officials are considering relaxing current criteria for when the county sets and releases slow/no wake orders on parts of the river.
   When: 3 p.m. Monday.
   Where: Rock County Courthouse, 51 S. Main St., Janesville, fifth floor, room N-1.

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Rock County Board Coulda Got it Right a Year ago....

A year after the county ingored all the SNW data and the draft ordinance we had the RKLD legal counsel provide them, they have admitted the errors of their ways.

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Saturday, June 22, 2013

Sheriff Spoden Responds


Give the Sheriff credit - he is much more responsive than our local county board supervisors who ignored all of the RKLD photos, maps, data and personal testimony from last year's effort to fix this mess.

________________________________


ROBERT D. SPODEN
ROCK COUNTY SHERIFF
Rock County Ordinance 25.50 which was enacted by the Rock County Board of Supervisors on January 12, 2012, requires a slow-no-wake speed restriction be placed on the Rock River when water levels exceed 7.5 feet on Lake Koshkonong and 6.5 feet in Afton, as measured by US Geological Survey Gauges. On March 21, 2013, water levels exceeded prescribed levels and a slow-no-wake speed restriction was enacted as required by the ordinance. Since then, water levels have fluctuated but never fallen below prescribed levels to allow for an abeyance of the speed restriction.
The Sheriff’s Office recognizes that the boating public is frustrated and strongly desires to engage in recreational boating on the waterways in Rock County. In fact, for weeks, the Sheriff’s Office has been inundated with calls from citizens expressing grievance with the continuation of the speed restriction. Following a brief explanation, citizens are referred to the Sheriff’s Office website to review the ordinance in its entirety, along with Rock County’s website to learn which Rock County Board Supervisor they should contact for grievance purposes.
Sheriff Spoden strongly encouraged review of this ordinance and has worked with County governing officials to facilitate review and potential amendment of the ordinance. With the assistance of the Rock County Sheriff’s Office Recreational Safety Team leader, several Rock County Board Supervisors recently toured the waterways to view conditions. As a result, the Sheriff’s Office recently learned Rock County Board Supervisors are strongly considering an amendment. On Monday, June 24, 2013, the Rock County Board Public Safety and Justice Committee will meet at 3:00 p.m., at the Rock County Courthouse on the fifth floor in Room N-1 to discuss and possibly act on amendment of the ordinance. Our information indicates that the amendment of ordinance 25.50 will likely go to the full County Board for a vote on June 27, 2013.
To read the ordinance, go to the Sheriff’s Office website; and under quick links, click slow-no- wake ordinance: http://www.co.rock.wi.us/index.php/departments/departments-m-z/sheriffs-office
To learn contact information for County Board Supervisors, follow:
http://www.co.rock.wi.us/districts-a-supervisors
ROBERT D. SPODEN SHERIFF

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Making waves over wake orders


Listening to the RKLD recommendations  - Better Late then Never...and RKLD is not a "quasi" government - RKLD is a statutory body of local government, and RKLD predicted these troubles when the county board chose to side with Henry Stockwell and Bill Carter's anecdotal testimony, rather than the PhD hydrologists who work for RKLD.
_________________

Making waves over wake orders
County could amend Rock River slow/no wake rules
By Neil Johnson
   njohnson@gazettextra.com 
   JANESVILLE
   A Rock County Board committee is considering changes to ease a countywide slow/wake ordinance that has proved unpopular with Rock River boaters.
   The board’s Public Safety and Justice Committee on Monday will review and could relax a 2012 countywide mandate which now uses 6.5 feet as trigger for slow/no wake on southern parts of the Rock River, and 7.5 feet in the northern parts near Lake Koshkonong and Newville.
   The proposed changes come as the board and Rock County Sheriff’s officials have faced mounting pressure from boaters who 
are complaining that lingering high water levels on the Rock River and the county’s slow/no wake rules are hampering the boating season.
   Public Safety and Justice Committee member Hank Brill said the committee likely would have a recommendation by Monday on new water levels that would serve as a trigger for slow/no wake orders.
   “We’ll get it all figured out, and it’ll probably go (to the county board) Thursday,” Brill said.
   That would bring a change in time for the Fourth of July weekend, which typically brings the summer’s heaviest boating traffic on the Rock River.
   According to a draft ordinance released Friday, the ordinance would relax criteria for when slow/no wake is imposed on the Rock River, including the following provisions:
   The water level which would trigger slow/no wake orders at the river north of the Indianford Dam would be relaxed from 7.5 feet to 8 feet. That would allow the river to rise 6 inches above the current trigger for slow/no wake orders near Lake Koshkonong and Newville.
   The Rock River would be broken into three zones, instead of the two used now. In the proposal, areas of the river south of the Beloit-Rock Townline Road bridge south to the county line would use 8.5 feet as a slow/no wake trigger. Now, that part of the river has a trigger of 6.5 feet.
   The river from the Indianford dam south to Beloit-Rock 
Townline Road bridge would continue to have a slow/no wake trigger of 6.5 feet.
   Rock County Sheriff’s Captain Jude Maurer said Friday he has fielded dozens of phone calls in the last month from boaters frustrated that they can’t have the run of the river.
   As summer boating season enters full swing, irate calls from boaters have ramped up, Maurer said.
   The sheriff’s office is responsible for enforcing slow/wake orders, not setting and removing them during times of high water on the river.
   The angriest boaters who have complained say they’re looking at the river, particularly in the southern parts of the county, and that water levels seem low enough to lift slow/no wake orders.
   Those boaters, Maurer said, have demanded that the sheriff’s office simply quit enforcing slow/no wake orders.
   “They’re wondering why it is the orders are still in effect when perceived water levels are low enough for boaters to have unabated access,” Maurer said. “Their grievance is that you (county officials) need to take care of this, and not enforce the ordinance.”
   While it’s unlikely police would suspend enforcement to appease boaters, Maurer said he has been referring the fuming boaters to county board members, who wrote and enacted the ordinance.
   Part of the reason for boaters’ frustration: The river has lingered above slow/no wake levels since March, when heavy snow runoff swelled the river to near-flood conditions. This spring, days of heavy rainfall 
pushed the river into a critical flood stage.
   Floodwaters this spring from Lake Koshkonong south to the state line reached levels second only to the Rock River flood of 2011, and waters have been slow to recede.
   “I think Fourth of July has become a trigger point. They (boaters) have a tradition of being able to go out and enjoy the water on boats,” Maurer said.
   Maurer said he’s not sure if businesses that serve boaters or quasi-governmental bodies such as the Rock-Koshkonong Lake District have voiced concerns to county officials about the slowly receding river remaining locked in a slow/no wake pattern.
   The county board in 2012 set blanket mandates for slow/no wake triggers for north and south portions of the river based on United States Geologic Survey river gauge readings. The ordinance was put in place for safety and to ensure protection of seawalls that Rock residents on the shores of the Rock River have built to control wave erosion.
   Prior to the ordinance, towns in the county were responsible for setting and releasing slow/no wake orders. That resulted in a patchwork for slow/no wake orders that proved problematic for boaters and riverfront residents.
   At times, one town might have had a slow/no wake order in effect while others might not have one set. Maurer said that created confusion for boaters and residents and it was one of the main reasons why the county set a blanket mandate for slow/no wake orders on the river.


IF YOU GO
   What: A meeting of the Rock County Board’s Public Safety and Justice Committee to consider a recommendation to amend the countywide slow/no wake ordinance for the Rock River. Officials are considering relaxing current criteria for when the county sets and releases slow/no wake orders on parts of the river.
   When: 3 p.m. Monday.
   Where: Rock County Courthouse, 51 S. Main St., Janesville, fifth floor, room N-1.

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Friday, June 21, 2013

SNW Orders are worse now than they have EVER been...


Brian,
I'm glad to hear they aren't enforcing the SNW ordinance in Fulton and Milton townships. It was very confusing to the general boating public.

What is confusing is on Wed. I observed while bring my pontoon home thru the posted SNW in Newville a fishing boat that went SNW then opened it up when it past the last SNW buoy, only to be chased down from behind and stopped by what appeared to be a DNR boat. 

The DNR boat opened it up with lights and siren going well within the SNW buoys. Also as of Thur. at the DNR boat landing they still have the SNW signs posted! 

Please comment as to my confusion. 

I wish I could comment and clear it up - Henry Stockwell land Bill Carter might be the appropriate people to comment why they fought RKLD so vigorously last year when RKLD was trying to partner with the county and the Sheriff's Dept to bring clarity and predictability to the SNW orders. 

These are 2 individuals who simply hate boat traffic, and they spread falsehoods that must have persuaded Rock County to do what they did last year.

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Constituent Letter to the Sheriff's Dept Re: SNW

Sheriff Spoden,

Is it true that Sheriff's office will not be enforcing the no-wake at this time?  If so, can the Sheriff's office please issue a press release to that effect which also indicates who makes the decision, and when it is effective?  The public has the right to know.

Thank you.

Kenneth Brey

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

DNR Grant Process for Experimental Dredge Project


Hi Brian and Siggi,
 
I’m just looking over the payment request for the Lake Koshkonong/Mud Lake Restoration Project.  Once Sue Graham approves the progress report, I can make a partial payment up to $90,000.  The final 10% must be withheld until the final report is submitted and approved.  It won’t be necessary for you to submit another reimbursement request because you’ve already shown here that you’ve earned the entire grant.  Let me know if you have any questions.  Thanks.
 
P Sandy Chancellor Environmental Grants Specialist Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources 

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The Nonsensical Nonsense of the SNW orders


To answer your question “Does this make sense to anyone?”, the answer is No, it doesn’t.  But it does bring up more senseless questions:

Who decides when to enforce SNW and when not to, and what law gives him or her that power?  Do we have to waste more RKLD and Rock County money on a suit to take that undeserved power away?  

And now, the beginning and end of enforcement aren’t published, and the signs on the boat launches don’t mean anything anymore.  If the postings don’t mean anything to anybody now, then who can expect they will mean anyone will heed them the next time the lake is at 9 feet?   

Ken Brey

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Wednesday, June 19, 2013

From Rock County - Does this Make Sense to Anybody??

Rock County still has the SNW on the full length of the river, in Rock County.  

They are waiting until the water levels in Beloit are normal then they will take off the SNW in Newville.  

Fulton Township put their buoys out and that really confused the boaters.  

Some followed the County SNW postings and some followed the SNW buoys. 

I contacted a Rock County supervisor and he said that they are not enforcing the County SNW in Fulton or Milton Townships.  

The RRSP will not be enforcing the County SNW ordinance either.

________________

Perhaps river complainers Bill Carter and Henry Stockwell - the 2 leaders in fighting RKLD's attempt to bring some reason and sanity to the SNW orders to the county level --  will put their energy in to working WITH RKLD, not AGAINST RKLD (fat chance).

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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

With weather, normal is subjective


Recent years’ extreme conditions adding up for a pleasant summer
By Catherine W. Idzerda
   cidzerda@gazettextra.com 
   JANESVILLE
   The definition of “good weather” always has been a matter of perspective.
   The definition of “normal weather” is becoming more difficult to pin down.
   Here’s one thing that’s certain: Above average spring rains and the long-term forecast are good news for local gardeners, farmers and anyone who enjoys being outdoors.
   But first, a quick recap:
   In 2012, a warm March was followed by a normal April and then a drought that dried fields to the color of overdone toast.
   This year, winter attempted a hostile takeover of spring but was neatly foiled in the final days of May. Snow in April was a nuisance, as were flood conditions in May. At the same time, those flood conditions mean the ground, still parched from last year, was able to drink its fill.
   In April, Janesville had 9.5 inches of precipitation, more than 6 inches 
above the average of 3.3, according to The Gazette’s weather data, which date to 1948.
   In May, Janesville had 3.3 inches, just under the monthly average of 3.5 inches. And through June 17, the city has had 1.1 inches so far.
   By June 17 of last year, the city had only had 0.4 inches of rain, and farmers and gardeners already were beginning to talk about a drought.
   Not any more.
   “The stream flow measures from the U.S.G.S. (U.S. Geological Survey) are looking good all over the state,” said Bill Bland, UW-Madison assistant professor of soil science. “They are at normal levels or above normal levels, and that is an indication that the drought is gone for good.”
   In fact, a significant portion of the central part of the state has had too much rain, putting many farmers behind in their planting, Bland said.
   Ed Townsend, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Sullivan, said both the one-month and threemonth forecasts call for rain amounts that are normal or close to normal. In other words, no extremes.
   For Scott Skelly of Skelly’s Farm Market, it wasn’t last year’s drought that hurt them so much as the 80-degree days in March.
   Strawberries are perennial plants. The weather in March 2012 got them off to a good—but far too early—start.
   April frosts were hard on the berries and the only thing that kept the tender plants alive was a gentle misting from the farm’s irrigation system.
   Still, the spring was hard on the plants, and many of the blossoms froze.
   “This year, it’s certainly been a slow start to the growing season, but we have a nice crop of berries, with very good quality,” Skelly said.

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