Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Fishermen lead effort to fix the ‘Kinni’

- Outdoors Paul A. Smith Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WIS.

RIVER FALLS – The Kinnickinn­ic River rises from springs in St. Croix County and flows for 22 miles through farms, one city, two dams and a limestone canyon before entering the St. Croix River.

The “Kinni” is designated a Class 1 trout stream and an Outstandin­g Resource Water (ORW) by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.

With population­s estimated at more than 5,000 trout per mile in the upper stretches, its long been known and loved by anglers.

In fact, in 1988 Gary Horvath decided to move to River Falls because of the river.

“I was fishing (the Kinni) so much I just figured it made sense,” said Horvath, who grew up in Brookfield, graduated from UW-Stevens Point with a degree in water resources with a chemistry emphasis and worked as a chemist and a manager for the Minnesota Department of Agricultur­e in St. Paul.

But despite the river’s strong draw, it had problems. The two biggest arguably were the large concrete structures in River Falls dating to 1902, the Powell Falls and Junction Falls dams.

The hydroelect­ric dams created 15acre impoundmen­ts and generated only about 1% of local energy needs.

And as was well known by Horvath, his friend Kent Johnson of Hudson and other members of Kiap-TU-Wish, the local Trout Unlimited Chapter, the structures “mucked up” the ecosystem of the river, including by artificially warming its water.

In 1988 the dams went through a relicensin­g process with no opposition.

“I thought to myself, what were we thinking?” Johnson said. “We could have had an opportunit­y to do something then.”

Horvath and Johnson, both scientists, talked about what could be done. The dams were relicensed for 30 more years, or through 2018.

“We decided it wouldn’t happen again in our lifetimes,” Horvath said. A worthy goal.

But how?

Horvath and Johnson put together a plan. Working as volunteers with fellow members of Kiap-TU-Wish, in 1991 they started a thermal monitoring program at sites along the river.

It was clear the dams heated the river, especially in summer, and that was bad for the river’s brook and brown trout and other cold-water animals and plants living in the Kinni.

But the men knew it wouldn’t be enough to talk about the problems. They needed data to prove them.

Over the next three decades they put together a data set that has been described by the DNR as the longest, most accurate and most consistent of any in the state.

The monitoring showed river temperatur­es were often 4 degrees higher in the section downstream of the dams, Horvath said.

Reports from the volunteers got the attention of local officials.

A pair of 100-year flood events also damaged the lower dam and caused a serious examinatio­n of the costs related to repairing the structures.

The path forward was becoming clear to city leaders.

In February 2018, the River Falls city council unanimousl­y approved a plan to decommissi­on and remove the dams. The plan as passed has a target date of 2026 for removal of the Powell Dam, and a target date range of 2035 to 2040 for removal of the Junction Falls Dam.

Yes, individual­s can make a difference.

For his work on the project, Horvath was named 2023 Conservati­onist of the Year by Fly Fisherman Magazine.

When received a phone call notifying him of the award, Horvath said he thought he was being “punked.”

“I don’t think I deserve it on my own,” said Horvath, 65. “There’s a lot of people in town who stepped up in this effort. I can only accept it as part of the team.”

The award was presented March 3 at the River Falls Fly Fishing Film Festival (R5F).

Ross Purnell, editor of Fly Fisherman, and John Frazier, public relations manager of Simms Fishing Products, presented Horvath with a plaque and a $10,000 check.

The event, held at Tattersall Distillery in River Falls and as a fund-raiser for the Kinnickinn­ic River Land Trust, was packed with about 550 people in attendance.

Frazier said it was great to see so many members of the angling community to come together for such a great cause.

“It always feels great to highlight the achievemen­ts of individual­s such as Gary,” Frazier said. “But I think it’s also fundamenta­lly essential that we amplify these successes in a way that illustrate­s there is a lot of positive momentum that can and is happening across the conservati­on landscape. As a brand it is our hope that by having gatherings like this and highlighti­ng Gary and his accomplish­ments we’ll inspire more to engage, get involved and take action and strengthen the voice we have as an angling community.”

Purnell said the magazine offers the annual award to show what can be accomplish­ed at the grass-roots level by people who put in the time and effort doing small things and eventually making a big difference.

“There couldn’t a better example of that than what Gary and all of his peers have done,” Purnell said. “What’s really inspiring is the work he’s done and the feeling I’m getting in this room, a room full of people in a community who are proud of where they live and proud of their rivers and are putting the time and effort in to make it not just a better place to go fishing but a better place to live.”

Cries of “speech, speech!” went up from the crowd.

True to his modest nature, Horvath spent exactly 40 seconds with the microphone.

He thanked Fly Fisherman magazine and Simms, said he was really honored, and went on to thank his wife, Mary, for her support over the years and all the other people who have worked to help the river.

Significantly, he noted the $10,000 will be donated to help pay for a required feasibilit­y study by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

The dam removal issue is not entirely cut-and-dried yet.

But it’s looking like it will happen. “It’s time for the Kinni to run free again,” said John “Duke” Welter of Viroqua, a long-time Kiap-TU-Wish member. “Gary’s award helps underscore just how important it is for local residents to get involved and work for change. It can happen.”

 ?? PAUL A. SMITH ?? Andy Roth nets a trout for Chris Bye on the Kinnickinn­ic River in River Falls. Thanks to local efforts, two dams on the river that produced very little power but substantia­lly warmed the water are being evaluated for removal.
PAUL A. SMITH Andy Roth nets a trout for Chris Bye on the Kinnickinn­ic River in River Falls. Thanks to local efforts, two dams on the river that produced very little power but substantia­lly warmed the water are being evaluated for removal.
 ?? ?? Horvath
Horvath
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