Hayden Lake Watershed Improvement District

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      • Improvement District vs. Association – What’s the Difference?
      • Privacy Policy
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    • Communication and Public Outreach
    • Monthly Meetings
  • The Watershed
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      • Improvement District vs. Association – What’s the Difference?
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      • Curly-Leaf Pondweed
      • Eurasian Watermilfoil
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      • Lake Water Quality Studies
      • Hayden Lake Water Quality
      • Idaho Water Quality Standards & Hayden Lake
      • The Eutrophication of Hayden Lake
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      • Hayden Lake Watershed
      • Honey Badger Project
      • English Point – a Cherished Resource
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News from the 'Shed

the most important NEWS of the day in the HAYDEN LAKE WATERSHED

Stakeholder Engagement Thought Experiment

Communication Signup

Invasive Species Found in Hayden Lake

This is blue-green algae or cyanobacteria on the surface of the water.

Cyanobacteria-HAB Advisory Continues – Watch Out!

This is blue-green algae or cyanobacteria on the surface of the water.

Harmful Algal (Cyanobacteria) Bloom: July 27-?

Treatment Map segment shows notification areas around treatment polygons.

2024 Hayden Lake Aquatic Weed Update – Treatment – Restrictions Lifted

  • Lake Debris, Living on Hayden Lake
  • April 16, 2024
  • Lake Debris, Living on Hayden Lake
  • April 16, 2024

Lake Junk Problem

Lake junk piled up on shore vs the same shore after cleanup.
Steve Meyer, Hayden Lake Watershed Improvement District Board Chairman, raises the difficult issue of abuse of the Lake Debris Removal Program and asks for your ideas to improve the program.

Spring showers bring more than flowers.

Each spring brings a new crop of lake junk – the flotsam and jetsam from windfall, ice, and winter storms, set afloat when the water starts to rise. Our prevailing wind is almost always from the southwest, so the debris gradually makes its way to the north shore, and much of it funnels into the north arm. Submerged logs are the most frightening. They are hard to see and pose dangerous crash potential.

Past cleanup days cleared the lake. The Debris Removal Program has kept it that way.

Massive lake cleanup days established a clean baseline in the late 1990s and early 2000s. In the mid-2010s, your Watershed Improvement District began to fund the annual Debris Removal Program. Through this program, citizens have been invited to tow and secure floating logs and marooned parts of broken docks to a collection site at the back of Mokins Slough. Late each spring, the Improvement District’s contractor removed and hauled the debris to an abandoned log deck on Camp Mivoden’s property. Over the years, this has been a successful project for keeping our lake free of floating hazards.

Abuse by a few jeopardizes the Program.

A new problem has emerged. In the last couple of years, people have disposed of entire docks as they update their own. Subsidizing private dock replacement has never been the intention of this program. When it is time to replace, your dock contractor should include the removal and disposal of your old dock in your contract. When, instead, someone releases their old dock onto the lake, they effectively transfer the associated costs to the Watershed Improvement District – to be paid by all taxpayers.

Because of abuse by a few people, the Improvement District Board is considering options:

  1. Suspend the project or discontinue it altogether.
  2. Search HLWID’s full-shoreline video footage to identify the owners of docks left at the debris removal site. Then, invite the owner to retrieve it or pay for its disposal.
  3. Create a dock registry for permanent traceability to owners.

We need your ideas.

We need more ideas to help develop a policy that is fair to all. Ideally, our new process would not be time-consuming or labor-intensive and would not invite new ways to cheat.

Do you have an idea to develop a system that will allow the safe removal of true lake junk but stop the abuse of our system by dock owners or contractors who are dumping old docks into the system? Please respond to [email protected]

Thanks for your help.

Steve Meyer
HLWID chairman

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This is blue-green algae or cyanobacteria on the surface of the water.

Cyanobacteria-HAB Advisory Continues – Watch Out!

This is blue-green algae or cyanobacteria on the surface of the water.

Harmful Algal (Cyanobacteria) Bloom: July 27-?

Treatment Map segment shows notification areas around treatment polygons.

2024 Hayden Lake Aquatic Weed Update – Treatment – Restrictions Lifted

Stakeholder Engagement Thought Experiment

Communication Signup

Invasive Species Found in Hayden Lake

Stakeholder Engagement Thought Experiment

Communication Signup

Invasive Species Found in Hayden Lake

  • Related Content: Lake Debris, Living on Hayden Lake
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About HLWID

The mission of the Hayden Lake Watershed Improvement District is to protect and enhance the water quality and the environmental quality within the watershed.

News from the 'Shed

Recent Posts
  • Hayden Creek Area Closed to Shooting Oct. 21-27 ’24
  • Cyanobacteria-HAB Advisory Continues – Watch Out!
  • Harmful Algal (Cyanobacteria) Bloom: July 27-?
  • 2024 Hayden Lake Aquatic Weed Update – Treatment – Restrictions Lifted
  • HLWID at the Wooden Boat Show

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Categories
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  • Citizen Science
  • HLWID
  • Invasive & Noxious Weeds
  • Lake Debris
  • Living on Hayden Lake
  • Recreation
  • The Watershed
  • Water Quality

Home

News From the 'Shed

Hayden Creek Area Closed to Shooting Oct. 21-27 ’24

Cyanobacteria-HAB Advisory Continues – Watch Out!

Harmful Algal (Cyanobacteria) Bloom: July 27-?

More news ...

The District

  • About the HLWID
  • HLWID – District Matters
  • Board of Directors
  • Lake Managers
  • Communication and Public Outreach
  • Monthly Meetings
  • About the HLWID
  • HLWID – District Matters
  • Board of Directors
  • Lake Managers
  • Communication and Public Outreach
  • Monthly Meetings

The Watershed

  • Blue-Green Algae
  • Citizen Science
  • HLWID
  • Lake Debris
  • Living on Hayden Lake
    • Rights, Permits, Questions, Concerns: Who to Contact
      • Invasive & Noxious Weeds
  • Recreation
  • The Watershed
  • Water Quality
  • Blue-Green Algae
  • Citizen Science
  • HLWID
  • Lake Debris
  • Living on Hayden Lake
    • Rights, Permits, Questions, Concerns: Who to Contact
      • Invasive & Noxious Weeds
  • Recreation
  • The Watershed
  • Water Quality

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Monday 4/16, 7:00 p.m.

HLWID Monthly Meeting

HLWID's Monthly Meetings will move to teleconferencing in order to ensure the health and safety of our constituents. For 4/16's meeting, dial 641-715-0861 and enter code 398963# at the prompt. This is a public meeting; all are welcome.