Tag Archives: Utah Lake bridge

Water News Roundup – May 24, 2010

24 May

Deseret News: Invasive quagga mussel found in Utah reservoir – State wildlife officers say divers have found what appears to be signs of the invasive quagga mussel in a Utah waterway.

Salt Lake Tribune:

Suspected quagga mussel found in S. Utah – The long-feared first case of an invasive, troublesome and costly exotic mussel is suspected at Sand Hollow Reservoir in southern Utah.

Thirsty farmers in Sanpete County may get dam soon – After nearly 80 years of hoping, bickering and legal challenges, farmers in northern Sanpete County are closer than ever to having water flow to their fields in the arid months of summer from a dammed creek high on the Wasatch Plateau.

Skip the sprinklers: rain will water for you this weekend – The bad news is that yet another spring weekend in Utah is likely to be wet. The good news: you still don’t need to start up the sprinkler system. (Check out the regional, weather-station/ET-based Weekly Lawn-Watering Guide!!)

St. George Spectrum: Water services expanding – The St. George City Council approved a bid for a $3.7 million water project Thursday that should improve water capacity and pressure on the south side of the city.

Provo Daily Herald: Pl. Grove needs $3M to pipe mountain runoff – A massive effort to pipe the Murdock Canal has left Pleasant Grove looking for ways to pay for its own $3 million pipeline.

Provo Daily Herald – Opinion: Another look at Utah Lake bridge plan – I am writing in response to the recent guest opinion by Howard Johnson (“Facts support need for Utah Lake bridge” in the May 17 edition of the Daily Herald).

I know I should be thrilled for our water supply, but dang it!! This is asking too much:

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Water News Roundup – May 17, 2010

17 May

Happy Monday!  Loads of water news today.  When it rains it pours?

Provo Daily HeraldTask force formed to discuss water access on private lands – There have been few issues in the past five years hotter than recreational access to water flowing over private property.

Provo Daily Herald – OpinionFacts support need for Utah Lake bridge – In the last few weeks there have been two news articles that state the bridge across Utah Lake is "a bad idea" and it is "not viable." People can have thoughts and beliefs, but not their own facts.

Salt Lake Tribune:

A new approach to the Great Salt Lake – Great Salt Lake Minerals Corp.’s expansion plan is moving forward so America’s farmers can continue to feed our country and help meet growing worldwide food needs.

Wyoming worried about Green River water grab – Wyoming has an unusual problem among the states in the Colorado River system: lots of water and, other than supporting some fine trout fishing, no way to put a significant amount of it to use.

Deseret NewsComments sought on Gooseberry Narrows dam project – Envisioned 77 years ago as a way to supply water to northern Sanpete County residents, the proposed Gooseberry Narrows reservoir remains on the drawing board and a subject of bitter contention between two counties.

St. George Spectrum: Event highlights water education – A wet winter has water supplies looking good in Southern Utah, but water managers are reminding residents to do what they can to help those supplies last.

KCPW: Salt Lake County adopts stricter drinking water protections – Salt Lake County adopted a water source protection ordinance this week to beef up protections already in place and to comply with a new state law.

Water News Roundup – April 26, 2010

26 Apr

Daily Herald:

Pipeline to bring 400 jobs, $235 million to local economy – As a massive project to pipe the Murdock Canal gets underway, officials are lauding the work as a boon to the local economy.

CUP pipeline construction will start this fall – Engineers for a 5-foot water pipeline project are looking for input from the public on where the pipeline should go.

Santaquin gets $7 million for water treatment plant – Representatives of the U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development stopped by to present Santaquin with a $7 million loan/grant for its forthcoming wastewater treatment plant.

Deseret NewsBishop and Chaffetz join water fight in congress – A frontier proverb said that whiskey is for drinking, and water is for fighting over. Holding true to that, a big water fight broke out in Congress on Wednesday.

Salt Lake Tribune:

Official: Water deal is critical – A top Nevada water chief made a splash during a recent Las Vegas television interview, trash-talking Salt Lake City for being too bucolic, its residents for not being able to spell conservation and Utah Gov. Gary Herbert for not signing a contentious Snake Valley water-sharing agreement.

Back on the Green – Emmett Heath caught his first trout on the Green River below Flaming Gorge Reservoir before the dam was even completed.

Will we be ready when drought comes to stay? – In 1934, the driest year of the Dust Bowl, Big Cottonwood creek, which supplies almost 25 percent of Salt Lake Valley water, ran dry. In 1935, the year of Black Sunday, Utah Lake was empty.

Salt Lake Tribune – Editorial: Bridging Utah Lake – Leon Harward wants to build a 5.8 mile-long private toll bridge across Utah Lake. Because this project would alter the air and water quality in Utah County in multiple ways, the importance of an environmental assessment cannot be overstated. Yet this project will not be subject to a federal environmental impact statement.

Water News Roundup – April 21, 2010

21 Apr

Salt Lake Tribune:

Analyst: Utah Lake Bridge will lose money – Environmentalists have attacked the proposed Utah Lake Bridge as harmful to Utah Lake’s environment and a potential enabler of urban sprawl on the lake’s west shore.  Now, the Sierra Club and other environmental groups say studies show the bridge will not be cost-effective.

Colorado River water policy faces an age of shortage – Change comes hard to Western water policy. The Prior Appropriation Doctrine, interstate compacts, groundwater law, the “law of the river” — all of these seem set in stone in the minds of the region’s policymakers.

Utah water dubbed world’s best – It’s sweet and has a perfect PH balance — water from southern Utah’s Tushar mountain range.  The spring water was judged the world’s best for bottlers in a prestigious contest.

Opinion: Mulroy’s Addiction – The recent hot-headed ranting and raving about Utah and Salt Lake City by Pat Mulroy, director of the Southern Nevada Water Authority, reminds me of a deranged crack addict who can’t support her habit any more and whose whole world is about to collapse.

Water News Roundup – April 7, 2010

7 Apr

Ogden Standard Examiner: Meteorologist: Moisture in April not unusual – Remember the snowstorms of last April? While it shocked some to see snowplows on the street Tuesday, the first days of last April were spent in much the same way.

Deseret News: Environmental group Utah Valley Earth Forum submits no-build proposal for Utah Lake bridge – An environmental group has a plan for Utah Lake, and it doesn’t include a bridge.  The Utah Valley Earth Forum recently submitted to state officials a no-build option to counter a developer’s proposal to construct a bridge across Utah Lake.

New York Times: Study says U.S. waterways are warming – Many streams and rivers in the United States are getting warmer, with the greatest increases in urbanized areas, according to research to be published in an upcoming edition of the journal Frontiers of the Ecology and the Environment.

An interesting opinion piece on water-related rhetoric in California…

L.A. Times – Opinion: Deceptive arguments are being made in California’s water wars – Who needs absinthe, vodka or even a six-pack of beer? Judging from the quality of our debate on natural resource policy, all it takes to addle the political mind in California is water.

Water News Roundup – April 6, 2010

6 Apr

KSL: Court, Moab group can sue to stop subdivision – The Utah Supreme Court says neighbors have the right to challenge an approved subdivision south of Moab on top of a freshwater underground aquifer.

Provo Daily Herald – Opinion: A bridge to somewhere – Dreams of preserving Utah Lake in its natural state are more than ever on a collision course with the Utah County that actually exists.

Salt Lake Tribune – Opinion: Countdown – It’s been nine months since the Logan & Northern Canal failed, contributing to a mudslide that inundated Canyon Road in Logan, killing a family of three.

Water News Roundup – April 5, 2010

5 Apr

Salt Lake Tribune:

Utah county leaders OK trail funds – The Murdock Canal Trail is planned for the strip left exposed once the canal — a drowning hazard in the past — is enclosed in pipe. It will include one path serving walkers and cyclists and a separate path for horses. It also will have rest areas with restrooms, picnic tables and parking lots, all for a cost of $17.3 million.

Travel perks will dry up in water districts – Your water bill still might pay for an occasional golf outing, but it no longer will go toward spousal perks that some Salt Lake County water districts once included on their travel tabs.

Salt Lake Tribune – Editorial: No Utah Lake Bridge – The proposed private toll bridge bisecting our public treasure, Utah Lake, is a bad idea that is being evaluated in an inadequate, flawed process. The bridge is neither needed nor wanted. It benefits a few developers at the expense of our health, our well-being and the lake’s viability.

Ogden Standard Examiner: Water worries ease a bit in Northern Utah – Utah’s water managers love it. After a dry fall followed by a so-so winter and now a dry spring, the snow is a welcome addition that has boosted Top of Utah’s snow pack to nudging 70 percent of normal.

Deseret News: Federal water projects impact residents – Living in a federal construction project along 400 East is fun for the kids but extra work for Jennifer Soter.

“It’s mostly muddy, and on warm days, it’s dusty,” the Springville homemaker said.

Soter’s block was among those torn up by construction crews in January to begin laying a 60-inch water pipe to carry pressurized Strawberry Reservoir water from Diamond Fork Canyon to Salt Lake County.

Water News Roundup – April Fool’s edition (but no jokes… sorry)

1 Apr

Provo Daily Herald: Citizens groups propose bridgeless Utah Lake – Hunters, sailors, birders, recreation-lovers and environmentalists joined together on Wednesday to tell the state to leave Utah Lake bridge-free.

Salt Lake Tribune:

Brian Head resort for sale, but who will buy? – Taking advantage of a good snow year, the owners of Brian Head Resort have stepped up their efforts to sell the ski resort above Parowan in southwestern Utah.

Governor signs contentious stream bill – Gov. Gary Herbert signed a bitterly contested bill Wednesday that could restrict fishing and recreation access to some streams that cross private land, saying he believed it will foster negotiations in a clash over public water rights and private property.

KSL: Cache council to sponsor canal project – The Cache County Council will sponsor a multimillion dollar canal project aimed at restoring irrigation water to shareholders adversely affected by a canal breach in Logan last year.

New York Times: New efficiency standards for water heaters – The Obama administration on Thursday released new energy efficiency standards for water heaters and other appliances that it said would save consumers $10 billion over 30 years while cutting greenhouse gas emissions.

Water News Roundup – March 25, 2010

25 Mar

Deseret News: Group questions Utah Lake bridge decision process – The possibility of a bridge over Utah Lake troubles Jim Westwater, and not just because of possible environmental consequences.

Wall Street Journal: Strains after Bay Area cities outsource water services – Over the last decade, many Bay Area cities have outsourced management of their water or sewer systems to private companies. In some communities, unanticipated strains of that shift are surfacing.

IPS: Water crisis high on policy agenda, Clinton says – On a rainy morning here Monday, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton emphasized the centrality to U.S. foreign policy of addressing the world’s water challenges.

Water News Roundup – February 24, 2010

24 Feb

Deseret News:

Canal safety bill passes House – Utah canals that pose potential safety hazards— like one in Logan that failed last summer, killing a mother and two children — would be subject to new safety requirements under a proposal that passed the House on Tuesday.

State division allows competing bids for use of Utah Lake land – Utah Crossing Inc. may not be alone in applying for use of land it wants to utilize to build a bridge across Utah Lake.

Salt Lake Tribune: House passes canal safety bill – The state would encourage canal companies to create management plans for risky stretches of canals but shield those plans from public scrutiny under a bill that passed the Utah House on Tuesday.

2010 Legislature: Representative McIff’s substituted stream access bill has passed the House.  The bill now moves to the Senate.

Water News Roundup – February 16, 2010

16 Feb

Deseret News:

Murdock Canal Trail finally moving forward – It’s been 14 years since Utah County Commissioner Larry Ellertson first started working on the Murdock Canal Trail project.

Ecology study ordered for sports complex plan – Panned by local environmentalists, a plan to build a multimillion-dollar sports complex along the Jordan River must first pass muster with ecologists, Mayor Ralph Becker’s administration announced Thursday.

Environmentalists seek alternatives to proposed bridge over Utah Lake – Western Utah County residents may have two future options to travel east: over land or over water.  About 25 people from the Utah Lake Sailing Club, including representatives from the Sierra Club and the Utah Lake Commission, met in the Utah Lake State Park visitors center Thursday night to discuss alternatives to a proposed bridge over Utah Lake.

KSL:

Despite poor snowpack, water supply still in good shape – Many in Northern Utah woke up to a surprise snowstorm Thursday morning and to headlines about the incredible snowfalls on the East Coast.  It’s ironic, then, that snowpack numbers in Northern Utah are grim and almost certain to stay below normal the rest of the year.

KSL investigates spending by Kearns Improvement District – The Kearns Improvement District serves more than 13,000 customers — providing clean water and maintaining sewer systems.

Salt Lake Tribune:

Project to reduce mercury in lakes gets good review – Toxic mercury makes the wipers in Newcastle Reservoir too dangerous to eat.  And, while scientists might not know why the popular fishing spot is so polluted, they think they might have a means of dramatically reducing the danger levels.

Bear Lake Commission may be eliminated – A loss of funding could force the dissolution of the 40-year-old Bear Lake Regional Commission.  The cross-state commission is comprised of city and county officials from Bear Lake-area communities in Utah and Idaho. It runs on about $100,000 annually, with both states providing about half the funding.