The Nature Conservancy will soon be using storm water to create new wetlands off the shores of the Great Salt Lake. —Mike Anderson, KSL-TV
The Nature Conservancy will soon be using storm water to create new wetlands off the shores of the Great Salt Lake. —Mike Anderson, KSL-TV

SALT LAKE CITY — The Nature Conservancy will soon be using stormwater to create new wetlands off the shores of the Great Salt Lake.

The project is under construction right now. The end result will be similar to what you can see now at the Great Salt Lake Shorelands Preserve.

The Conservancy is catching that dirty stormwater as it comes downstream and making it safe for wildlife.

"We have this area where we have the ability to do something," Chris Brown said. Brown is the director of stewardship for the Nature Conservancy District. "This project will actually impound about 40 to 50 acres of wetlands behind this levee that we're sitting on now."

He said the Nature Conservancy is seizing an opportunity. "It's a drain that drains the Freeport Center and some parts of Layton and Clearfield City."

A water-control station will take in that dirty stormwater. Brown said. "Always full of garbage, has a lot of silt and debris in it."

It will be filtered to create about 40 new wetlands.

"The water will come out of the main water control structure and go into a holding cell," said W. Chris Christiansen with Equinox Engineering. That will allow the conservancy to meter water use depending on how much it needs and how much falls from the sky.

"The things they're doing and the projects they're undertaking are not only good for the environment, but they're good for the Great Salt Lake and things that help to promote better water management out there," Christiansen said.

It's a small patch when you consider the 80,000 acres at the Migratory Bird Refuge to the north, but it's better than simply watching it all shrink.

"If they don't do it, nobody else will," Christiansen added.

With the declining shorelines and the hundreds of bird species that come here, we need all the help we can get.

"That's the scary part is some of these populations are going to potentially collapse," Brown said.

That whole project costs about $350,000 and could be completed by early November, giving them the chance to start filling those wetlands next spring.

KSL TV Multimedia Journalist
Mike Anderson often doubles as his own photographer, shooting and editing most of his stories. He came to KSL in April 2011 after working for several years at KUTV. The son of a retired newspaper editor and reporter, Mike grew up around news. He studied broadcast journalism at BYU Idaho, eventually graduating from Southern Utah University in 1999. From there, both he and his wife worked as reporters and anchors at KOTA, the ABC station in Rapid City, South Dakota. Before bringing his family back to Utah, Mike spent several years in Florida, working for stations in Jacksonville and Orlando. While reporting at WOFL, the FOX affiliate in Orlando, Mike served as the station’s Space Reporter. He regularly covered shuttle and rocket launches at Kennedy Space Center, in Cape Canaveral. Originally from Southern California, Mike now considers Utah home. His wife grew up in North Ogden, which means the two of them and their four kids enjoy having plenty of family nearby.
 

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