Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

214 acres added to Milwaukee area flood-control efforts

Land acquisitio­n costs nearly $800,000

- Don Behm

Nearly 214 acres of forested swamp and lowland woods in the Milwaukee River watershed were added to the Milwaukee Metropolit­an Sewerage District’s Greenseams flood management inventory in 2017.

The purchases came at a cost of $799,272.

MMSD contribute­d $417,173 of the cost for the acquisitio­n of three wooded wetland properties in Washington and Ozaukee counties to preserve their water-absorbing capability, said Stephen McCarthy, MMSD landscape architect.

Dark-colored soils topped with a thick organic layer of decaying vegetation are the sponges on these landscapes. The soils store stormwater until it seeps into the ground.

Since 2000, Greenseams has protected 3,647 acres in the four-county metropolit­an area for the purpose of reducing the risk of downstream flooding, McCarthy said. The list includes 108 properties in Milwaukee, Waukesha, Washington and Ozaukee counties.

One of the properties purchased this year is a 78.37-acre block of hardwood swamp and lowland woods south of Jay Road in the Town of Farmington in Washington County.

Tall, mature trees — black ash, red and silver maple — stand in the swamp a short distance from the road.

A few hundred feet farther south, an unnamed creek meanders on a ribbonlike course as it flows west through the wetland.

The $227,272 acquisitio­n of the former Saiia family property on the north shore of Lake 12 filled a gap between two previous Greenseams property purchases south of Jay Road, between Camp Awana and Fillmore roads, said David Grusznski, program director for the Milwaukee office of The Conservati­on Fund.

The district hired the organizati­on in 2001 to manage property acquisitio­ns for Greenseams.

The Lake 12 properties owned by MMSD form a 255.37-acre protected corridor that includes the headwaters of the unnamed creek, a tributary of the North Branch Milwaukee River. The properties are open to the public. Parking is available on the shoulders of the three town roads.

MMSD paid $108,173 of the purchase price for the Saiia property and a state Stewardshi­p fund grant paid the remaining $119,099, Grusznski said.

The Ozaukee Washington Land Trust was a conservati­on partner in the acquisitio­n this year of the other two properties added to the Greenseams inventory, Grusznski said.

The 75-acre Kinnamon property and the 60.4-acre Beimborn property are located within the Kinnamon Conifer Swamp in the Town of Saukville in Ozaukee County. The swamp encompasse­s stands of white cedar as well as black ash.

The Southeaste­rn Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission designated this largely undisturbe­d wetland, a few miles south of Newburg, as a natural area of regional importance.

The land trust bought the Kinnamon parcel for $277,000. Greenseams contribute­d $138,500, or half the purchase price, and the state Stewardshi­p fund paid the other half.

The land trust paid $295,000 for the Beimborn parcel. Greenseams contribute­d $170,500 and Stewardshi­p paid the remaining cost.

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