• Home
    • Watersheds
  • About Us
    • LWV UMRR Board
    • Background
    • Contact Us
  • Blog
  • Annual Meeting 2025
  • Upcoming Events
    • LWV UMRR Calendar
    • Past Meeting Materials
  • Membership
  • Donate
  • Past Program Videos
  LWV Upper Mississippi River Region

UMRR blog

A View from Illinois, Minnesota and Wisconson on SaltWise and SaltSmart Practices

7/18/2024

 
This program was held on August 15, 2024, and recorded from Zoom.  The recording is at the right.  

Our speakers were Hannah Miller, Watershed Program Manager with The Conservation Foundation in Illinois; Allison Madison, Manager of the Wisconsin Salt Wise Program; and Brooke Aslesen, Watershed Specialist with the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. 
Below is the original blog post used to advertise this program.  ​

Salt is a big problem for streams, lakes and rivers in the Upper Mississippi Basin.  Salt - sodium chloride - breaks down into sodium, which is absorbed on soils, and chloride, which moves freely through soil and builds up in water bodies.  (Read more about trends in chloride in this post!)  

Once salt goes down on roads or sidewalks, it doesn't go away. Salt levels are rising in lakes, streams, and rivers in Illinois. Overuse of salt during the winter can damage our built and natural environments. We can protect our natural resources and reduce road salt without sacrificing safety. Working towards better practices is a multi-faceted endeavor. Programs like the Salt Smart Collaborative, a program of The Conservation Foundation, encourage the use of Salt Smart practices in winter maintenance operations. Salt Smart practices are the best practices for winter maintenance operations that reduce salt use and provide safe surfaces. Resources (like workshops and trainings, the Salt Smart Certified program, and targeted outreach materials) are made available through the Salt Smart Collaborative to transportation agencies, municipalities, park districts, and private contractors to encourage and support the adoption of the best practices for salt use. 

This event on August 15 will help us to build our understanding on this important topic in water quality!  
Picture
This graphic from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency shows the sources of salt (chloride) in the environment.  States like Minnesota, Wisconsin and Illinois have programs to address chloride, and in our upcoming program on August 15, we will hear about these programs.  

Our speakers will be Hannah Miller, Watershed Program Manager with The Conservation Foundation in Illinois; 
Allison Madison, Manager of the Wisconsin Salt Wise Program; and Brooke Aslesen, Watershed Specialist with the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.   This panel will share information on salt managment programs in their respective states, which will provide a background for understanding this topic.

Both the Minnesota and Wisconsin legislatures had bills on salt management in the 2024 sessions.  It is important for advocates to understand the background of currrent practice as we move into the 2025 session.   The Minnesota bill (HF3565 and SF3954) died in the 2024 legislature, and Governor Evers vetoed the Wisconsin bill  (Senate File 52).     
Background and References: 
LWV Duluth Environmental Action Committee Meeting & Izaak Walton League 
January 17, 2024
"Putting Duluth on a Low (Road) Salt Diet"

Click here to view the recording of this presentation​
This recording features a panel of three speakers from New Hamshire, which has implemented a salt program which is a model for other states.  


UMBRA Report on Mississippi River Water Quality   (Upper Mississippi River Basin report)
Decades of Road Salting Is Polluting the Mississippi River  (Milwuakee Journal Sentinal)
The Impact of Road Salt on Local Waterways  (Wisconsin legislation)
SPEAKERS FOR THE AUGUST 15 EVENT: 
                     Hannah Miller, Illinois                                                                Allison Madison, Wisconsin                                           Brooke Aslesen, Minnesota         
Hannah Miller, The Conservation Foundation
Hanna Miller is a Watershed Project Manager at The Conservation Foundation working on reducing the impacts of chlorides. She is the workgroup coordinator for the Chicago Area Waterways Chloride Workgroup and the co-coordinator for the Salt Smart Collaborative. Hanna graduated from Hamilton College with a degree in Geoscience. Outside of work, Hanna can often be found cycling along one of the many waterways in the Chicago area.
Allison Madison, Wisconsin Salt Wise Program
Allison Madison is the Wisconsin Salt Wise Program Manager. Since assuming her role in June 2020, she has spearheaded collaboration around salt reduction in watersheds across the state. Her work takes her to mall parking lots, urban streams, County Highway shops, and the Capitol building. Allison has 10+ years of experience in science and sustainability education in both formal classrooms and National Parks. Allison graduated from St. Olaf College and has a joint MS in Environment and Resources and Soil Science from the University of Wisconsin. She's passionate about protecting Wisconsin's freshwater resources and celebrating their beauty by paddling, swimming, cross-country skiing, etc.
Brooke Aslesen, Minnesota Chloride Reduction Program
Brooke Aslesen has worked at the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency since 2007 where she works collaboratively with federal, state, local partners, and research institutions to protect Minnesota’s water resources. She has been working on chloride and water quality issues at the MPCA for over 16 years. The core of that work has been developing partnerships with a wide variety of experts and professionals to develop strategies that reduce chloride while supporting public needs.

Brooke now coordinates the MPCA’s Chloride Reduction Program that includes the highly successful Smart Salting training program as well as the new Chloride Reduction Grant program, the Smart Salting Tool and many other resources to help communities and organizations reduce salt use and protect Minnesota's water resources.
Brooke earned her Master’s degree in Water Resources Science from the University of Minnesota. Her undergraduate degree is in Environmental Science with a minor in Soil Science also from the University of Minnesota. Prior to attending graduate school, she worked in the Metropolitan Council’s Metro Wastewater Treatment Plant lab.



Comments are closed.

    Categories

    All
    Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness
    Climate Change
    Drinking Water
    Event
    Farm Bill
    Government Policy
    Groundwater
    LWV
    Mining
    Mississippi River Governance
    MRRRI
    Nutrient Pollution
    Outreach And Engagement
    Pipelines
    Plastics
    Salt
    Soil Health

    RSS Feed

    DONATE
  • Home
    • Watersheds
  • About Us
    • LWV UMRR Board
    • Background
    • Contact Us
  • Blog
  • Annual Meeting 2025
  • Upcoming Events
    • LWV UMRR Calendar
    • Past Meeting Materials
  • Membership
  • Donate
  • Past Program Videos