Statewide water conference spotlights river protection victories

This year’s Lakes and Rivers Convention in Stevens Point April 15-17 includes a stream of River Talks we think will inspire and inform river and clean water advocates.

The Lakes and Rivers Convention is ideal for folks who do conservation work, who are vocal advocates for waterways, who are involved in restoration efforts and local groups. The conference is a time to learn about the big picture of conservation, to connect with government/industry leaders and boots-on-the-ground conservation efforts, and who are leaders of lake districts.

River Alliance is involved because all waters are connected. Understanding the interconnections of the work of lake districts, river groups, the DNR, and clean water researchers is fundamental to making progress in conservation, balancing water use needs, fighting invasive species and pollution, and forming solid relationships with each other.

River Talks on Thursday

The conference has a very deep bench of fantastic experts sharing their knowledge. Explore the full agenda on the Water Week website. One track of topics will be River Talks that focus on the art, science and history of protecting rivers. These highlights will also be a part of the convention’s virtual program. 

Photo of John BatesWriters on Rivers: A Sharing of Some of the Best Essays from Rivers as Large as the Mississippi to as Small as Childhood Creeks

Speaker: John Bates, author

From Mark Twain and Henry David Thoreau to Aldo Leopold to Ann Zwinger, Terry Tempest Williams, and Barry Lopez, writers have waxed eloquent about their love of rivers. Come sit back and let your imagination flow along the waters our finest writers have so brilliantly written about.

Bob Martini photoRegulation Works ; 50 years of water quality progress in the Wisconsin River Watershed

Speaker: Bob Martini, retired Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources

Beginning in 1976, we identified and addressed the main water quality problems in the Wis River Basin, including pollution from paper mills and cities, acid rain impacts on lakes, groundwater pollution in the Central Sands, and the impacts of dams on the “Hardest Working River in America”. We learned that properly designed regulation restores the environment, protects the public interest, AND can actually enhance local economies while avoiding the myth of economic disaster caused by environmental regulation.

Integrating Multi-Benefit Floodplain Restoration and Nutrient Management: A Decision-Support Framework for River Systems

Floodplain restoration offers a nature-based solution to address biodiversity loss, flood risk, and water quality degradation in Wisconsin’s river systems. This work presents an integrated framework using EcoFIP and NutriSink tools to identify and prioritize multi-benefit rehabilitation projects. Case studies from the Wabash River demonstrate that optimal restoration sites are not always downstream, emphasizing the need for spatially nuanced planning. Together, these tools provide a scalable approach for watershed managers in Wisconsin to target interventions that maximize ecological and water quality benefits, supporting efforts to mitigate nutrient pollution and restore riverine function.

Timothy Bauer photoWhat Is a River?

Speaker: Timothy Bauer of Miles Paddled
Most of us know what rivers do — they flow from one place to another, transporting sediment and reshaping landscapes along the way. They provide fresh drinking water and power dams to generate electricity. Historically, rivers allowed for navigational travel, commercial trade, and borders to boundaries. But what is a river? Are rivers natural resources to serve our convenience and contrivances, or do rivers have sovereignty? Like lakes, rivers are living systems, but are they alive like butterflies and grizzly bears — are they alive like you and me? Come join author and paddler, Timothy Bauer, on a playful but provocative exploration of the metaphysics and mischief of what a river is, and maybe offer your own observation, favorite song, or metaphor along the way!

Marcy WestProtecting Paradise in the Driftless: How the Kickapoo Valley Reserve Came to Be

Speaker: Marcy West, author and Director of the Kickapoo Valley Reserve

In the heart of Wisconsin’s beautiful Driftless Area lies an 8,600-acre National Natural Landmark—The Kickapoo Valley Reserve. Its steep ravines, rich forests, and crooked river are enjoyed by thousands of outdoor enthusiasts each year. “Protecting Paradise in the Driftless: How the Kickapoo Valley Reserve Came to Be”, published in 2024, chronicles why the Kickapoo River still runs free through the Driftless. Author Marcy West will highlight key components from the story, including the innovative preservation and ecological journey from grassroots activism to a unique Memorandum of Understanding between the State of Wisconsin and the Ho-Chunk Nation. West will offer your audience an insider’s perspective on the Reserve’s founding, entertain with anecdotes as an unconventional bureaucrat, and provide real world examples of how to earn community support for whichever lake or river conference attendees consider their piece of Paradise.

 

Other river-centered highlights

Wednesday

Getting to Know Your Dam: The Who, What, When and How about Dams and Their Waterway Interests

Speakers: Uriah Monday, WDNR; Ellen Voss, River Alliance of Wisconsin; Peter Jensen, Eagle Spring Lake Management District; Keifer Sroka, Adams County Land & Water Department

This workshop is designed for dam owners/operators and those with riparian interests/stakeholders on waterways controlled or impounded by a dam. Key topics discussed will include the responsibilities and liabilities of owning or operating a dam; understanding the basic laws and regulations involving water control structures; and a review of reference tools and training relating to dams.

Thursday

Introduction to Lake River and Watershed Associations

Speakers: Sara Windjue, Extension Lakes, UW-Stevens Point; Laura MacFarland, WI Department of Natural Resources; Johnson Bridgwater, River Alliance of Wisconsin; and Dave Quady, Sand Lake Association

Are you a new board member of a lake, river or watershed association? Do you have questions about what it means to be a qualified lake association? Join us for an introduction to non-profit associations and learn about board structure, voting, membership, Articles of Incorporation, bylaws, and advocacy.

Friday

Luke Zahm photoConfluence luncheon

Speaker: Luke Zahm

Luke Zahm, host of the PBS Emmy® Award-winning TV series, Wisconsin Foodie, and co-owner and chef at Viroqua’s Driftless Cafe will lead this full-group session and help us think about how our food and water resources are connected. Just like a home-cooked meal, this session is a time to slow down, share experiences, and find commonality. ***virtual access available

 

The 2026 Lakes & Rivers Convention is made possible by the statewide Wisconsin Lakes and Rivers Partnership which joins science, education, and citizens to empower people to work together to care for our waters. Since its genesis in the early 1970s, this partnership has been recognized as a national model of collaboration. Explore the Water Week website

 

This message is made possible by generous donors who believe people have the power to protect and restore water. Subscribe to our Word on the Stream email newsletter to receive stories, action alerts and event invitations in your inbox.  Support our work with your contribution today.

The post Statewide water conference spotlights river protection victories appeared first on River Alliance of WI.

Original Article

Blog - River Alliance of WI

Blog - River Alliance of WI

https://wisconsinrivers.org/lakes-and-rivers-convention-2026/

Allison Werner

After the flood: your support helps us advocate for free-flowing rivers

Support River Alliance of Wisconsin with a special year-end gift that will sustain our work to unite water advocates across the state to protect and restore Wisconsin’s waters. Your generous contribution – and impact for Wisconsin’s waters – will be matched dollar for dollar up to $18,000.

 


Manawa, Wisconsin faces decisions after a flood

Early in the morning of July 5, 2024, a storm cell moved over central Wisconsin. In just two hours, four inches of rain had been dumped across the Little Wolf River watershed, which had already been hit with heavy rainfall in the preceding weeks.

In Appleton, streets became impassible. Flash flood warnings were issued in Calumet, Manitowoc, Outagamie and Brown counties. But the Waupaca County town of Manawa was hit the hardest.

Four hours after the storm began, downed trees and debris from the surging Little Wolf were pushed through Manawa’s 180-acre millpond and into the aging dam. The waters overwhelmed the dam, and the earthen berm to the north gave way.

The library nearby was forced to evacuate; the water treatment facility was flooded; the Mid-West Rodeo, the town’s largest annual event that brings hundreds of thousands of dollars into the community, was cancelled; and more than 100 people had to vacate their homes until the waters subsided.


How we help: when dam removal is necessary

Since our inception, River Alliance of Wisconsin has been a leading voice advocating for the removal of those dams that are unnecessary, unsafe, or incapable of withstanding the infrastructure demands new climate challenges will bring. This is an essential part of our mission to protect and restore Wisconsin’s waters.

Over the last few years, we’ve recommitted ourselves to dam removal advocacy, now with renewed urgency as devastating storms like the one that hit Manawa last year become more frequent, putting communities in direct conflict with the waters they were built around.

The benefits of dam removal are clear: cleaner water, improved wildlife habitat, lowered flooding risks, increased recreational opportunities, and lowered maintenance costs.

However, federal and state resources needed to remove dams and restore rivers are increasingly hard to come by.

Even in communities not faced with the threat of imminent dam failure, conversations about restoring our waters to their natural state are incredibly fraught.

At a fundamental level, these conversations are about restoring community-wide, democratic decision-making to our shared water resources. Who is allowed to reap the benefits of dammed rivers? Who will be forced to take on the consequences of extreme storms on unsafe dams or droughts on heavily impounded rivers?

For three decades, River Alliance of Wisconsin has helped water advocates navigate these complex interactions in their own communities across the state.

Wisconsinites form deep, emotional connections to our waters, so it can be hard to imagine the possibilities of a community existing in harmony with a free-flowing river when dams and their impounded waters are all that many community members have ever known.

And navigating the available options when dam removal is on the table is incredibly complex. The challenges are numerous: determining who has decision-making authority, which agency inspects and/or licenses the dam, where to find funding for removal and the accompanying habitat restoration, and how advocates can best make their voices heard.

River Alliance has become a trusted ally for people looking to restore their rivers and support climate-resilient communities because we have the experience and technical expertise to

  • help communities navigate complex conversations about dam removal and hydropower relicensing.
  • connect water advocates with resources needed to fund removal and restoration efforts.
  • be a voice for rivers when hydroelectric dam removal isn’t an option by demanding better conditions for wildlife, water quality and quantity, and recreation.
  • advocate for nature-based solutions for flood mitigation over human-built infrastructure.
  • connect Wisconsinites to our waters and wildlife through educational events and paddle trips – like our native mussel paddle on the Chippewa River in August.

What’s next for Manawa

Today the Manawa community has an incredible opportunity to imagine how a free-flowing Little Wolf, which has largely returned to its original channel, could enrich the city through fish passage, ecological health, recreation, and – critically – flood resilience.

For the Manawa dam, there are two paths forward: restore the river, or rebuild the dam for an estimated $8.4 million – 12 times the cost of restoration.

Like we have in communities across Wisconsin for the last three decades, we stand with local advocates in Manawa passionate about what a restored river could mean for their community. As climate change continues to threaten aging and sometimes unnecessary dams around the state, your support helps us work together to build a cleaner, more climate resilient Wisconsin.

Help us be an advocate for people who see a future of free-flowing rivers. Your generosity with a year-end gift helps River Alliance continue to protect and restore our waters for everyone who calls Wisconsin home.

– Ellen Voss, Climate Resilience Director

 

This message is made possible by generous donors who believe people have the power to protect and restore water. Subscribe to our Word on the Stream email newsletter to receive stories, action alerts and event invitations in your inbox. Support our work with your contribution today.

Miles Paddled visits the site of the damaged dam in Manawa

The full video is a great way to witness changes in the landscape at river level. The view of the damaged dam starts around the 13:45 mark.

The post After the flood: your support helps us advocate for free-flowing rivers appeared first on River Alliance of WI.

Original Article

Blog - River Alliance of WI

Blog - River Alliance of WI

https://wisconsinrivers.org/2025-year-end-donations/

Allison Werner

Local health group seeks Northeast Ohio climate resilience solutions from those most at risk

By Zaria Johnson, Ideastream Public Media

This story was originally published by Ideastream.

The Northeast Ohio Black Health Coalition is exploring the climate resilience of Northeast Ohio by identifying those most at risk and provide possible solutions.

The coalition, through a partnership with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and Ohio State University’s Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Evaluation Studies, has hosted Reimagining Communities Conversations in Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Lake and Mahoning counties so far to see how prepared residents feel in the face of severe weather made worse by climate change.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2025/07/local-health-group-seeks-northeast-ohio-climate-resilience-solutions-from-those-most-at-risk/

Ideastream Public Media