Windsor Star

Authority OKS $10M plan for restoratio­n of marsh

Conservati­on group wants to build barrier to protect biodiverse area

- BRIAN MACLEOD

The most robust option for restoratio­n of Hillman Marsh earned approval from the Essex Region Conservati­on Authority last week, but it's likely to be at least four years before the major part of the project comes to fruition.

The plan calls for a high-crested barrier of stone and sand that allows for more vegetation, which acts as a line of defence from the pounding waves of Lake Erie.

It also includes habitat islands, ponds for fish and a permanent outlet that allows for the passage of fish. Hillman Marsh, located on Leamington's east side and north of Point Pelee National Park, faces “a great deal of stress from coastal erosion processes as well as climate change ... and as a result our wetland and the associated biodiversi­ty within it is suffering,” Kevin Money, director of infrastruc­ture told the board before the vote to approve the plan.

A barrier of sand that had previously separated Lake Erie from Hillman Marsh has been eroded since 2020. Depending on wind conditions, water is either drawn out of the marsh, killing large amounts of aquatic wildlife, or lake water enters, flooding the marsh. At some point in the future, a berm that protects lower-lying farmland and hundreds of houses could be ruptured.

“The actual mouth of the Hillman Marsh where the breach occurred continues to deepen and go farther and farther into the marsh,” Money told the board. “So the lake continues to go farther into the wetland every year. “It is a significan­t breach in terms of how far it's extended.”

The marsh is “highly susceptibl­e to coastal erosion and wetland loss due to such factors as negative sediment supply, variabilit­y in ice cover, extreme water level fluctuatio­ns, and increased frequency and intensity of storm events,” a report prepared for the board says. “These factors have resulted in the loss of the barrier beach, the loss of aquatic vegetation, and increased vulnerabil­ity of sensitive marsh habitat.”

“Ice-free winters and higher lake levels due to climate change are expected to exacerbate these challenges to the overall resilience of the marsh and barrier beach.”

A striking illustrati­on in the report prepared for the board shows a simulated berm breach that leaves large swaths of farmland and almost all of Point Pelee National Park underwater.

The plan approved Thursday proposes constructi­on of a new barrier farther inland that can withstand the encroachme­nt of Lake Erie.

The Town of Leamington is responsibl­e for maintenanc­e of the berm infrastruc­ture and municipal authoritie­s have been working closely with ERCA on the plan, said Money.

Once the restoratio­n plan is complete, water quality would be improved and an increase in biodiversi­ty can be expected, the report says.

Economic damages will be avoided with a barrier to act as a buffer between the lake and the marsh, protecting hundreds of homes and businesses that currently reside below lake level.

The lands sit on territory or the Caldwell First Nation, which has yet to approve the plan. But members of the First Nation sat on the stakeholde­r committee and its leadership will be consulted, said Money.

The proposed restoratio­n plan will cost about $10 million, including up to two years of engineerin­g preparatio­n before constructi­on begins

Hillman Marsh contains habitat for many species at risk, including the common hop tree and scarlet ammannia.

Other rare, threatened or endangered species in the marsh or along the shoreline include the American lotus, king rail, large yellow pond-lily, least bittern, prothonota­ry warbler, swamp rosemallow and several turtle species, including northern map, snapping, spiny softshell, midland painted, and Blanding's turtle.

The marsh has been a “staple in Essex County for many decades,” the report says, hosting summer camps, nature tours, bird watching, educationa­l field trips, and hunting.

 ?? ?? Kevin Money
Kevin Money

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