Working to protect the Mississippi River and its watershed in the Twin Cities area
The Vermillion River winds across Scott and Dakota Counties on its way to the Mississippi.
Friends of the Mississippi River has identified the Vermillion River as an important tributary to the Mississippi River where thoughtful action now can make a big difference in protecting water quality. As such, it is one of two key focus areas in our Watershed Initiative.
The Vermillion River is both a marvelous and a troubled natural resource. Home to high-quality trout fishing and scenic beauty, it’s also feeling the effects of human development. Pollution from failing septic systems, stormwater runoff and agricultural pesticides and fertilizers are contributing to its impairment.
With the population of Dakota County set to double in the next thirty years, the Vermillion River Watershed needs strong protections to ensure that this vital natural resource remains a valuable source of clean water, wildlife habitat and community recreation.
The Vermillion River Watershed is the land area that drains into the tributaries and main stream of the Vermillion River before it reaches the Mississippi River downstream from Hastings. The watershed drains 372 square miles of land, rising from eastern Scott County and passing through parts of Scott, Dakota and Goodhue Counties. It includes portions of the cities of Lakeville, Burnsville, Apple Valley, Farmington, Rosemount, Inver Grove Heights, and Hastings and townships such as Castle Rock, Empire, Vermillion, Eureka, Marshan and Ravenna.
Rather than have each community in the vermillion Watershed set its own watershed planning strategy, the Vermillion Joint Powers Organization was created to design a watershed management plan that governs the whole watershed.
A three-member Joint Powers Board (consisting of two Dakota County Commissioners and one Scott County Commissioner) governs the Vermillion River JPO. The JPO Board has they final say in the Vermillion Watershed management planning process. A nine-member, citizen advisory Watershed Planning Commission supports the Joint Powers Board.
The JPO Board approved an overall Watershed Management Plan in 2005. The watershed protection standards were established in Fall 2006. Watershed Rules, due for completion in 2007, will establish enforcement and monitoring procedures for the Watershed.
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