Delisting achieved, partners consider what’s next for Stillwater’s Lily Lake

Clean Water Fund grants from BWSR played a role in the Middle St. Croix WMO’s water-quality improvement work. Over 20 years, support came from partners including residents, the city of Stillwater, Friends of Lily Lake, and Sustainable Stillwater MN.

Practices installed around Lily Lake, seen here in August 2023, focused on the external phosphorus load. A large filtration basin installed in fall 2021 treats urban residential and industrial runoff from 15 acres. An alum treatment targeted internal phosphorus-loading. Clean Water Fund grants BWSR awarded to the Middle St. Croix WMO supported work to improve the lake’s water quality. Lily Lake’s removal from the impaired waters list in 2022 reflected 20 years’ worth of efforts involving a host of partners including the city of Stillwater and community groups. Photo Credit: Angie Hong, Washington Conservation District
Thirty-three percent of sales tax revenue from the Legacy Amendment, which Minnesota voters passed in 2008, is allocated to the Clean Water Fund. Clean Water Funds may only be spent to protect, enhance or restore water quality in lakes, rivers and streams, and to protect groundwater.

STILLWATER ­ — The water-quality improvement work didn’t stop once Lily Lake was removed from the state’s impaired waters list — an effort that took 20 years, involved a host of partners, and tapped nearly $1 million in Clean Water Funds from the Minnesota Board of Water and Soil Resources.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency approval formalized the delisting in 2022.

“We’re not done with Lily Lake,” said Matt Downing, Middle St. Croix Watershed Management Organization administrator. “Just because it’s off the list doesn’t mean it’s going to stay off the list.”

What happens next? That’s a question Downing expected to hear when he presented “Saving Lily Lake: A Neighborhood Landmark” in mid-October at the Minnesota Water Resources Conference in St. Paul. Co-presenters were Downing’s predecessor, Mike Isensee, now with the Carnelian-Marine St. Croix Watershed District; and Jay Michels of EOR Inc.

“Where do we go from here, and how do we make sure that we stay where we’re at (in terms of water quality)?” Downing said. “That’s the challenge moving forward.”

Volunteers who collect water-quality monitoring data and spend time on rain garden upkeep — along with the Stillwater city and MSCWMO staff members (assisted by Washington Conservation District staff) who handle project maintenance — help to ensure that practices installed 15 to 20 years ago remain functional. Washington Conservation District technical staff also assist the WMO with maintenance.

An angler fished from the public access at Lily Lake in summer 2019. Lily Lake has since been removed from the state impaired waters list. Friends of Lily Lake is working to build a mile-long loop trail that will connect the park and the nearby residential neighborhood. Photo Credit: Ann Wessel, BWSR

A picturesque 41-acre lake in the heart of Stillwater, bordered by a small city park with a fishing pier, Lily Lake was once so clear that it supplied St. Paul restaurants with ice harvested in blocks and stored nearby. Thirty to 50 years ago, it was a city focal point.

“Just about everybody who’s grown up in Stillwater has spent some time in and around Lily Lake,” said Mike Lyner, Friends of Lily Lake’s president and chairman. “A lot of people would play in Lily Lake. They would fish in Lily Lake.”

Over the years, growth brought urban development and parking lots that sent untreated runoff into the lake. Water clarity decreased to about 4 feet. Thick mats of weeds prevented boating.

The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency listed Lily Lake as impaired for aquatic recreation in 2002. The WMO and city started work on water quality improvements six years later.

Lily Lake achieved the phosphorus reductions necessary for delisting after a regional filtration basin was installed in fall 2021 and after an alum treatment was completed the following spring. Those MSCWMO projects drew from a $513,500 Clean Water Fund grant — the most recent of five Clean Water Fund grants BWSR awarded to the WMO since 2011 for work related to Lily Lake.

“That was kind of the capstone to push it solidly into the clear-water, high-quality state,” Downing said. “After the alum treatment and the basin coming online, the clarity was off the charts.”

Clean Water Fund grants BWSR awarded to the Middle St. Croix WMO since 2011 for work within the Lily Lake sub-watershed supported an alum treatment, seen here in spring 2022, as well as an irrigation reuse project, one large gully stabilization, three regional filtration basins and 19 curb-cut rain gardens. Alum treatment removes phosphorus from the water column. Photo Credit: Angie Hong, Washington Conservation District

Immediately after the spring 2022 alum treatment, Secchi disk readings measured water clarity at 34 feet. In 2022, clarity averaged about 16.5 feet, compared with just over 6.5 feet in 2021.

“Hopefully the city can maintain the water-quality status and improve it or keep it delisted and bring back the prominence of Lily Lake back to the community,” said Stillwater City Engineer and Public Works Director Shawn Sanders.

The city of Stillwater worked closely with the MSCWMO on Clean Water Fund-backed projects, providing matching funds — most recently, a $70,000 match tied to the $513,500 grant — and reviewing project plans. The city owns the parkland where the large filtration basin was constructed. Previous work included commercial and residential stormwater retrofits, one large gully stabilization, an irrigation reuse project, three regional filtration basins and 19 curb-cut rain gardens.

Combined, those projects were projected to reduce annual phosphorus-loading to the lake by about 145 pounds. The filtration basin alone will keep an estimated 32 pounds of phosphorus out of the lake each year.

A rain garden designed by Washington Conservation District staff in a residential neighborhood that drains to Lily Lake is seen during a summer 2019 downpour in Stillwater. Photo Credit: Ann Wessel, BWSR

Downing’s advice to others striving for water-quality improvements:

“Don’t have unreasonable expectations, but also don’t get discouraged if you don’t see immediate results. … It took 150 years, 200 years to screw it up. It’s going to take more than two weeks to fix it.”

His predecessors dealt with five- or 10-year stretches where the efforts did not appear to be producing results.

“The message that we’ve been talking about is the wholistic approach that it took. It takes time. This effort was not one project over the course of two years. It was 20 years of work. But it was the partnership — with the watershed, the city, the community, even the private (sector). And the state with all the funding — BWSR Clean Water Funding has provided grants,” Downing said. “It takes a lot of time and investment from multiple places and people to get stuff done, and it’s not going to happen overnight or with (only) one group.”

Friends of Lily Lake and Sustainable Stillwater MN are among the groups working with the city and WMO.

Sustainable Stillwater MN has helped with education and communication. Friends of Lily Lake — established in 2013 as the Lily Lake Association — have collected Secchi disk and water temperature readings, planted plants in the filtration basin, and provided the city with a strategic vision for lakeshore and park development at Lily Lake.

A sign on the shore of Lily Lake, seen in summer 2019, acknowledged some of the yearslong effort to remove the lake from the state impaired waters list — a goal accomplished in 2022. Photo Credit: Ann Wessel, BWSR

“We were trying more creative ways to make use of the park,” Lyner said. “What can we do to make the park more special again?”

Lyner described Lily Lake Park as “not just a backwater,” but a spot with the potential to once again become the heart of the city — away from the more touristy St. Croix River. The public swimming beach closed in 2012 after a child died from a brain infection, the result of inhaling water containing the amoeba Naegleria fowleri. While there are no plans to allow swimming, the city is currently constructing a floating launch for kayaks, paddleboards and canoes.

This season, the city also resurfaced two parking lots at Lily Lake Park. A few years ago, it updated the tennis courts and installed a pickleball court. Next year it will revamp the park’s playground.

In consultation with trail-building experts and the city arborist, Friends of Lily Lake members are building a mile-long loop trail through a wooded area that will connect to neighborhoods with young children. They’ve collaborated with Sustainable Stillwater MN to replace invasive species with pollinator- and bird-friendly shrubs and plants.

One challenge the WMO faces now: Public perception of aquatic plants.

Lily Lake is seen from a fishing pier in summer 2019. Photo Credit: Ann Wessel, BWSR

As water clarity improved, aquatic plants such as water lilies became more abundant. Not everyone recognizes it as a positive sign. Lyner, who recalled snorkeling under lily pads soon after he moved to Stillwater, reminds people that Lily Lake was named for the water lilies.

Sanders considers the Lily Lake delisting part of a bigger milestone: Three of the four lakes in or near Stillwater once classified as impaired for aquatic recreation have been removed from the impaired waters list: Lake McKusick in 2012, and Lily Lake and South Twin Lake in 2022. (The MPCA cited “restoration activities” as the reason for delisting Lake McKusick and Lily Lake; it cited “unknown reasons” for South Twin Lake’s delisting.)

“So three of our four lakes have been delisted. And it’s really just been actions by the city, by the conservation district, by volunteer groups who help clean out rain gardens — it’s really been a conglomerate of effort to get these lakes delisted,” Sanders said of the additional efforts sparked by Clean Water Fund-backed work. “It just seems like it’s something special that we’ve had that happen in our community.”

Details

RELATED PROJECTS: Community and city involvement resulted in additional projects that augment the Clean Water Fund-backed work. Together, private landowners and the city of Stillwater have constructed 336 rain gardens and 100-plus additional projects that contribute to water quality. Volunteers have adopted 235 storm drains. Buckthorn removal is among the volunteer activities led by the Friends of Lily Lake and Sustainable Stillwater MN.

CELEBRATION: The East Metro Water blog detailed achievements leading to Lily Lake’s delisting in a post announcing a celebration to mark the occasion.

The Minnesota Board of Water and Soil Resources’ mission is to improve and protect the state’s water and soil resources by working in partnership with local organizations and private landowners.
www.bwsr.state.mn.us

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Minnesota Board of Water and Soil Resources

Our mission is to improve and protect Minnesota’s water and soil resources by working in partnership with local organizations and private landowners.