HELP your neighbors oppose the Logan River Watershed Project:
PLEASE submit YOUR comments in opposition to the Logan River Watershed Project
by emailing Ammon.Boswell@USDA.gov by June 22 at 5 pm.
This might take a little as 10 minutes.
FIND detailed information in a video of a 30 minute-long talk. Suggested topics for your comments below tie back to this video.
Watch this 30 minute video about the impacts of the LRWP for for ideas for your comments.
There is more written information here.
This page presents summary concepts you could use in your emailed comments to Ammon.Boswell@USDA.gov
Explain your experience with the Little Logan River and how you would be upset if there was no water during extreme drought (~25% of time in recent past). Your family may have used the river-side parks and Logan High School's access to the river for decades.
You could discuss the great EXPENSE of the project. Watch the video around minute 22:15 and also minute 8:45.
You could discuss the DAMAGE that Cache Valley would endure if the Little Logan River had zero water flowing in it. Mud, algae, loss of family recreation (about minute 8) and health effects are discussed after minute 6.
Are you tired of the Island area being a constant construction zone? Please comment on that issue, the disruption, the air pollution, diesel fumes, and toxins arising from this plan. See some about the issue below and around 8 minute.
You could recommend better alternatives like leasing the unused water to the Great Salt Lake. See minute xx.
Discuss your concern that a mere trickle of river water during future droughts would degrade your experience along the river corridor at Logan High, in River Hollow, Merlin Olsen, Fairgrounds, or other public spaces. Check out the video at about 11:15.
Do you use the river as a therapy pool at Logan High? Please tell Ammon.Boswell@USDA.gov how you would hate to see the river be dry, a trickle and perhaps plagued by algae. That likelihood is exposed at about 11 minutes.
Do you live along a rebuilt water feature with limited or zero water, algal scum, weeds, and/or trash, stagnant water, mosquitoes breading in the water, please inform Ammon.Boswell@USDA.gov how you would be upset to see more of this in our community. Explain possible impacts to your neighborhood. Do you find the trade offs, the expense, the construction zone over many years to be worthwhile?
Some current canals will be piped but most may be converted into open dry ditches. Are you worried that your property values might fall if there is no longer an open canal in your area? Are you concerned that large trees will die?
Are you a water user who cannot afford the expense of installing a new irrigation system? Farmers would need to install central pivots or water wheels to fully benefit from the pressured system. Explain your situation.
Do you feel that your voice has been overlooked and denigrated by the years long process? Please explain to Ammon.Boswell@USDA.gov that the public meetings did not meet your needs. See minute 15.
Are you feeling heard? Tell Ammon.Boswell@USDA.gov about this situation. Please lobby your local lawmakers and board members of the Cache Water District to scrap this project.
You could explain that the federally protected Little Logan River is in danger from this project because sponsors would "lower the crest of the Crockett structure". See minutes 15 and following.
Are you concerned that the dying trees could injure our neighbors and cause property damage?
Are your families regular users of our parks, our High School river access, the Fairgrounds? Please discuss how vital the health Little Logan River
Are you concerned that the project is abandoning spikes and dangerous metal in the landscape?
You could explain that protecting the river, our health, well being, and public spaces requires the current diversion points to be maintained. View the first few minutes of the video.
Please urge sponsors to lease the unused water right to the Great Salt Lake. That would result in a quicker funding stream, far less disruption of our cities, would protect the water right, and retain amenities along the Little Logan River for our communities. Check 18:45 for insights into the dire state of the Great Salt Lake.
OR discuss how your family budget cannot accord this extra expense. Realize that 130 million dollars come directly from our local wallets but all the federal tax money is ours too.
The Logan River Watershed Project is a Thousand Homes, Thousand blocks mega-project
Each block in Logan has about 30 lots.
1000 homes would be spread across roughly 30 city blocks- the typical spacing is typical of Logan.
Here is a map of about 30 city blocks in Logan to illustrate the astounding expense of the LRWP.



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