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Tuesday, February 11, 2025
HomeCommunitySoil and Water District Releases Report on 2024 AIS Prevention

Soil and Water District Releases Report on 2024 AIS Prevention

At the end of January, the Cook County Soil and Water District (SWCD) released a report sum­marizing the work of its Aquatic Invasive Species Prevention Aid Program during the past year. This program, which focuses on organ­isms not native to our water sys­tem, is crucial to our community’s efforts to protect our local waters.

For the last decade, the Minneso­ta DNR has funded AIS prevention and education efforts with annual $10 million grants appropriated by the legislature every two years. DNR allocates those funds to coun­ties based on the number of boat launching sites in each county. The SWCD receives $200,000 as its grant.

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz has proposed a 50% cut to the DNR AIS budget in his proposed budget for fiscal year 26/27, effectively reducing SWCDs’ grants by half. Although the budgeting process is still in its early stages, the public must know this possibility.

For her part, Amanda Weberg, the SWCD AIS Program Supervi­sor, has not lost any sleep over the budget gyrations just yet. “There is uncertainty on when any of those will start,” she said.

The local AIS program, which is solely reliant on the DNR grant to fund its efforts, used less than the full amount of the DNR grant in 2024, totaling $188,477. This fund­ing was used for a range of activ­ities, including watercraft inspec­tions, public education campaigns, and support for local initiatives aimed at limiting the spread of AIS.

Weberg, a part-time employee at SWCD, devotes 100% of her work time to AIS education and preven­tion.

For the second year in a row, We­berg employed four DNR-trained Level 1 Watercraft Inspectors who worked at 24 access points on 22 bodies of water. Those inspectors reflect a little over a third of annual expenditures.

Level 1 inspections include a vi­sual and tactile inspection of wa­tercraft, from paddle boards and kayaks to fishing boats and pon­toon boats set to enter or leave a body of water to determine if AIS are present. In addition, the Level 1 inspector ensures that watercraft owners understand the importance of draining, drying, and cleaning any equipment and makes them aware that state law requires that bilge plugs be removed whenever the boat is in transit on public roads to ensure that water from one lake is not transported to the next launch point.

From June through September 2024, four level-one inspectors devoted 1,996 hours to watercraft inspections, about the same as the previous year. However, almost 1,900 inspections were performed, compared to 1,127 in 2023. These inspections were, by far, the larg­est number in the ten years the pro­gram has operated here.

It’s a testament to the program’s effectiveness that nearly all the wa­tercraft inspected complied with AIS mitigation protocols.

Weberg has become the leading expert on Minnesota’s rusty cray­fish, Faxonius rusticus. This spe­cies is native to the Ohio River Val­ley and debuted in northern lakes almost twenty years ago. It was possibly brought to the area as bait or released by aquarium owners in a local water body. A regulated in­vasive species in Minnesota, it is most prevalent in the northeastern part of the state.

Weberg has assisted Yusef Or­est of Grand Marais, who set up Crawdaddies MN, a commercial harvester of the invasive crayfish, and supported lake property owner associations in their work to limit the spread.

Additional information about the AIS prevention aid program can be found on the SWCD section of the Cook County website, www.co.cook.mn.us.

Steve Fernlund
Steve Fernlund
Typically these “about me” pages include a list of academic achievements (I have none) and positions held (I have had many, but who really cares about those?) So, in the words of the late Admiral James Stockwell, “Who am I? Why am I here?” I’m well into my seventh decade on this blue planet we call home. I’m a pretty successful husband, father, and grandfather, at least in my humble opinion. My progeny may disagree. We have four children and five grandchildren. I spent most of my professional life in the freight business. At the tender age of 40, early retirement beckoned and we moved to Grand Marais. A year after we got here, we bought and operated the Cook County News Herald, a weekly newspaper in Grand Marais. A sharp learning curve for a dumb freight broker to become a newspaper editor and publisher. By 1999 the News Herald was an acquisition target for a rapidly consolidating media market. We sold our businesses and “retired” again, buying a winter retreat in Nevada. In the fall of 2016, we returned to Grand Marais and bought a house from old friends of ours on the ridge overlooking Lake Superior. They were able to move closer to family and their Mexico winter home. And we came home to what we say is our last house. I’m a strong believer in the value of local newspapers--both online and those you can wrap a fish in. I write a weekly column and a couple of feature stories for the Northshore Journal. I’m most interested in writing about the everyday lives of local people and reporting on issues of importance to them.
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