Healthy Legacy II: Water Urban Water and Land Use April 6, 2010 7:00 - 9:00 PM
(Registration and Exhibits at 6:30 PM) Lake Harriet United Methodist Church 49th and Chowen Ave. S. Minneapolis
Special Guests: Lois Eberhart, City of Minneapolis, water quality issues Jean Wagenius, Minnesota State Representative Performance Danza Mexica Cuauhtemoc of MN
Come and learn about:
Where water goes when it leaves your yard
What pollutes our lakes and streams
If the Clean Water Act is working
Urban land use and water quality
The evening will open with a ceremony and celebration of water by Danza
Mexica Cuauhtemoc of Minnesota (http://www.chalchiutlicue.org/) to remind us of water’s importance to
our lives and to the health of our environment. Lois Eberhart, City of
Minneapolis Water Resources Director, will describe the City’s land use
and management programs to protect water resources. Representative Jean
Wagenius (62B) will discuss the elements of the Clean Water Legacy
Amendment and help us evaluate the effectiveness of state laws designed
to protect our precious water resources. Questions and discussion will
follow.
The seven-county Twin Cities Metropolitan Area is less than
3.5% of the state’s land area, but supports 54% of the state’s population and
is projected to grow to 3.3 million by 2020, continuing a trend of being one of
the fastest growing metro areas in the country. At the present growth rate
statewide, Minnesota will double its current area of developed land in less
than 40 years.
Expanding suburban areas cause an increase in impervious
surfaces through the conversion of farmland and wildlife habitat and the paving
of groundwater recharge areas. Stormwater runoff carries soil, fertilizers,
animal waste, pesticides, salt applied to roads and walkways, oil, gasoline,
antifreeze and metals from tires to lakes and streams. The EPA lists urban
stormwater runoff as one of the leading sources of pollutants to Minnesota
lakes and streams.
Road salt use in urban areas is also a growing concern for
water quality. New research by a team of University of Minnesota researchers,
provides important confirmation that road salt is the cause of chloride
contamination found in Twin City lakes by documenting seasonal trends that show
chloride increasing in lakes during and after the snowplowing season. The
researchers also found evidence that some of the salt applied each winter
remains in lake and produces chloride concentrations that have been increasing
since road salt came into heavy use in the 1960s. Lowering the use of residential
salt use and using alternatives can help protect lakes and streams from salt
pollution.
Topics to be covered include: landscaping and lawn, winter
snow removal, urban agriculture, food choices
The League of Women Voters Minneapolis along with many partners
including the Freshwater Society, Healthy Legacy Coalition, Clean Water
Action and the Women's Environmental Institute are sponsoring a series
of symposia on water in March, April and May 2010. The forums are being
held in Minneapolis and will be free and open to the public. The forums
will be solutions based, giving citizens information about how and why
they should take action to protect water resources.