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Note:  Meetings of the GSWA executive, board and general membership have taken place virtually during the pandemic .. in the future both “live” and Zoom meetings will take place as determined.

How to identify aquatic plants: SLELO-Gude-to-Aquatic-Plants-Final-VersionSLELO-Gude-to-Aquatic-Plants-Final-Version

Particular Invasive Plants of Concern – Links below:

http://www.invadingspecies.com/invaders/plants/garlic-mustard/

http://www.invadingspecies.com/invaders/plants/himalayan-balsam/

http://www.invadingspecies.com/invaders/plants/japanese-knotweed/

Recorded meeting on new shoreline restrictions:     https://youtu.be/UKd__wFv1Ws?t=2

Subwatershed Studies are available on the City Website for Junction Creek and Lake Ramsey. https://www.greatersudbury.ca/live/environment-and-sustainability1/lake-health/watershed-study/   Comments to the Ramsey Subwatershed study can be accessed through this link: http://gswa.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Ramsey-Watershed-Study-Submissions.pdf

Comments on the Junction Creek Subwatershed Study and Stormwater Master Plan by the Junction Creek Stewardship Committee, The Greater Sudbury Watershed Alliance and The Coalition for a Livable Sudbury can be accessed by clicking this link:http://gswa.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Comments-Junction-Creek-Sudy.pdf

Annual report by Junction Creek Stewardship:  2021 Annual Report_JCSC_compressed

Water Routes:  Many do not know how our sewer systems work.  This video gives a good review:  https://youtu.be/2Mquv9Qdz5o

Salt Levels in Ramsey Lake:  Video Interview with GSWA past Chair Richard Whitham on issue of salt levels in Ramsey Lake referenced in Community Release provided below: https://northernontario.ctvnews.ca/video?clipId=1905865&binId=1.1142313&playlistPageNum=1

Road Salt Problem:  Road Salt Threats – Report

Community Ramsey Salt Release http://gswa.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Community-Information-Release-Salt-in-Drinking-Water-Feb.-2020.pdf

Letter (Motion) to City Council re Road Development in Ramsey Lake Watershed – 2023:  GSWA resolution – Concerns re roads – water supply – to City Council

AGM 2019 http://gswa.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/GSWA-AGM-2019-Minutes-1.pdf

AGM 2020 GSWA AGM 2020 Minutes

GSWA General Meeting Minutes Nov 22-2021 GSWA General Meeting Minutes Nov 22-2021

GSWA General Mtg MINUTES Jan. 11th 2021: GSWA General Mtg MINUTES Jan 11-2021

GSWA General Meeting Minutes March 26th 2024: GSWA AGM 2024

We are blessed to have many sources of water in our area, but it must be preserved and protected.  All water flows eventually to the Great Lakes as shown in the map below:  Not only must we protect our local water but respect where it flows.

Map of Watersheds to Lake Huron from Northeastern Ontario

Link below to address to United Nations by Autumn Peltier of Manitoulin Island speaking on the importance of protecting our waters.

https://youtu.be/OusN4mWmDKQ

Winter:  Fun for many, but not for drivers and pedestrians.  Keeping walkways clear can be a challenges.  What are the best products to use.  The GWSA has conducted research locally to determine to the extent possible all that are available and the results are shown below and also can be accessed in pdf printable form for distribution here. GSWA Jan 2021 Decision Aid to Ice Melts and Traction Aids

Past Events:  

Many thanks to all those who attended our special “funraising” event on April 16th 2019 at the Sudbury Theatre Centre to see the comedy “The Birds and the Bees” together with complementary drink and treats – door prizes and silent auction -see the full house picture below – the one vacant seat you see was that of the photographer – all had a good time.  It was a “fun” night out and all money raised will go to further the work of the Alliance. 

Photo below of a General Meeting of the GSWA

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2012 City of Greater Sudbury Milfoil Solution Progress Report

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2012-10-15 – Minutes of General Meeting

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2012-08-20 – Minutes of General Meeting

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2012-05-28 – Minutes of General Meeting

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2012-03-19 – GSWA Annual General Meeting

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Official Plan Review input – Greater Sudbury Watershed Alliance

When a large development in the watershed is proposed that information be provided on the potential negative impacts of the stormwater on the water quality of the receiving waters in terms of, but not limited, water temperature, nutrients, salt, phosphorus, base flow, wildlife and fisheries habitat, including recommendations on how any potential impacts will be mitigated.

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2011-10-24 – Minutes of General Meeting

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Sudbury first to adopt phosphorus ban

By Bloomberg News, Sudbury Star wire service

The City of Greater Sudbury is the first community in Ontario to ban commercial fertilizers containing phosphorus.

Following a 90-minute discussion, council unanimously supported a bylaw brought to the city by the Greater Sudbury Watershed Alliance.

When in effect in April 2012, the bylaw will ban outright the application of any fertilizer containing phosphorus, except for agricultural use, golf courses and newly laid grass seed or sod.

The bylaw will also restrict all commercial fertilizer use, whether they contain phosphorus or not. For example, applying fertilizers on frozen ground, during or just prior to rain or on driveways and pavement would be forbidden.

“These are common-sense restrictions,” Stephen Monet, the city’s director of environmental planning, said. “These fertilizers don’t need to be there and they are not to be used in this way.”

In introducing the bylaw, Monet made clear chemical lawn fertilizers are not the primary source of phosphorus loading in area lakes and the ban is but a small piece of a large and complex puzzle.

Indeed, in grudgingly recommending the bylaw, he predicted it would not help reduce phosphorus loading in area lakes. It would be virtually unenforcable, anyway. But it would signal the city’s intent to protect lake water quality and send a message that it’s a community- wide responsibility that doesn’t end with restricting fertilizer use.

Monet reiterated this is a grassroots issue, not a corporate or legal one. Fighting bluegreen algae and other threats to area lakes is the responsibility of citizens and homeowners and the decisions they make daily.

Monet pointed to a number of other pieces to the water-quality puzzle not addressed in the proposed bylaw:

  • Research shows the benefits of a 15-metre shoreline buffer for all waterfront properties, where there is no landscaping or chemical treatments at all. If it’s already grass, it should just be left to grow and allow other species to invade, Monet said.
  • Septic systems in watersheds need to be maintained to exacting standards. No one knows how many older septic systems aren’t performing to acceptible standards.
  • Research shows construction sites are the largest contributor of chemicals loaded into lakes. These sites need to be monitored and studied.

Councillors agreed with the ideas and added their own.

Ward 12 Coun. Joscelyne Landry-Altmann said the city should do everything possible to encourage residents to get their soil tested to see if fertilizers are even needed. It would cost about $35, plus the cost of shipping the sample to Guelph.

Possibilities include offering subsidies, running clinics and partnering with other groups, such as Laurentian University’s Living With Lakes Centre, to educate residents on the use of fertilizers.

Before approving a bylaw, councillors first voted to ensure it is widely publicized in Ontario and eliminated a provision for staff to retain outside legal counsel to investigate jurisdictional issues.

Effective or not, the bylaw signals a positive change in attitudes and behaviours in the community, Ward 2 Coun. Jacques Barbeau said.

“When people manicured their lawns right down to the lake, no one knew any better,” he said.

“But today, we do and this issue has brought all this information forward.”

mwhitehouse@thesudburystar.com

Bylaw banning phosphates in fertilizer can only help – Point of View

By Pastor Rob Weatherby, Sudbury Star

The politics of enacting a bylaw banning the use of phosphates in lawn fertilizer in Greater Sudbury is becoming confrontational. It’s important that all sides –municipal officials and lake stewardship organizations — work together to tackle what is becoming a serious threat to our lakes.

Sometimes, a bylaw’s message is not so much the threat of punishment, but a signal of how seriously the city approaches a problem. There isn’t a compelling reason why Greater Sudbury should not take this route.

Phosphates exist naturally in the environment, and indeed are required for plant growth. But runoff of lawn pesticides — which end up in rivers and lakes –creates an oversupply, which can result in plumes of blue-green algae in lakes.

These algae plumes –pond scum, to the casual observer –are ugly business. Once they form in a lake, it’s almost impossible to get rid of them. The Sudbury and District Health Unit issues a warning that is never rescinded.

You can’t drink or swim in the water near a blue-green algae plume. You can’t cook in water that contains blue-green algae. You can’t boil the water because that could make it more toxic. You shouldn’t eat fish that swim in it. You can’t treat the water with disinfectant because that may make it more toxic, as well.

The appearance of blue-green algae in a lake will change the lifestyle of people who live nearby, and of those who use it for recreation.

And that is what we do in the North, we live by, and play in, our lakes.

The Greater Sudbury Watershed Alliance, noting that blue-green algae has appeared in 12 area lakes — including in Ramsey Lake, a source of drinking water –wants such a ban, which would be the first in Ontario.

But city staff prefer an education campaign and an initiative to work with retailers to stop selling products that contain phosphates. There isn’t much enthusiasm for compromise on either side.

A report by city staff says 95% of the volume of products sold as lawn fertilizer in Greater Sudbury no longer contain phosphates, so a ban is not needed. Retailers are open to the idea of getting rid of phosphate products, and public education campaigns have shown to be effective, the report says. A ban would increase the workload on an already taxed staff, and it would be almost impossible to enforce, the report says. As well, staff say it’s not clear that municipalities in Ontario even have the power to enact such a bylaw, given provincial and federal oversight.

Besides, the report says, municipalities that do have bylaws in place — mostly in the U.S. — enacted them in the early 2000s. Since then, the industry has had a “profound market shift” and is now working to reduce the use of phosphates. But Stephen Butcher, chair of the Long Lake Stewardship committee and co-chair of the Greater Sudbury Watershed Alliance, says companies only cut phosphates because laws made them do so, and that municipalities have the right to ban phosphates.

City council is expected to consider a proposal for a bylaw today that would ban the use of fertilizers that contain phosphates, although another option presented by staff is to avoid the bylaw and press ahead with a public education campaign.

No one disputes the presence of excessive phosphates due to runoff is bad, so let’s get the politics out of the way. There’s nothing to say a public education campaign can’t work hand-in-hand with a bylaw.

Together, the message given by the municipality known as the City of Lakes would be unequivocal.

Twitter: MacLeodSudbury

June 2011 News Update

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