In a last-minute move, the Lessard-Sams Outdoor Heritage Council voted Tuesday to give out $12 million toward developing a deterrent to reduce the advancement of invasive carp on the Mississippi River, north of Winona.
The work on what the deterrent project becomes and how it is maintained would fall to multiple agencies, led by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS). It could need additional funding from another source down the line, too. The DNR and FWS put forward an outline of a plan this week. Council chairman David Hartwell said the council had arrived at a singular “historic” point where it could assist.
The council (LSOHC), a state-formed group of eight citizens and four legislators, recommends expenditures annually from dedicated state tax revenue and, after an adjusted February budget forecast, found itself with an additional $12 million to allocate. The deterrent recommendation will get amended to its list of other conservation projects, totaling $181 million, currently working through the Legislature.
Said Hartwell during the hearing: “There is a difference of opinion on the effectiveness of a barrier and work to be done on a barrier to even know what the effectiveness might be. …
“We know doing nothing is going to lead to carp getting upstream at some point. So it’s kind of a terrible choice if you want to know the truth, but at least we are seeing an interest in doing something at this point.”
Regarding the draft proposal, Katie Smith, the DNR’s director of Ecological and Water Resources, said FWS has expressed interest in partnering on a project at Lock and Dam No. 5. The Army Corps of Engineers and U.S. Geological Survey would be involved, too. She also emphasized that myriad questions remain about the project, from its scope to permitting and installation.
The deterrent could be like those getting tested elsewhere, using sound within what’s described as a “bubble curtain” to deter invasive carp.
“There are many engineering, evaluation and research pieces that must first be explored,” said Smith, who emphasized that a deterrent project must be combined with other strategies the DNR employs like tracking, monitoring and removing the likes of bighead, silver and grass carp.