Great Lakes Compact and diversions
The department seeks written public comment on its draft 2024, five-year Water Management and Water Conservation and Efficiency Program Review and Wisconsin’s Water Conservation Goals and Objectives.
All Parties to the Great Lakes Compact must submit a program review to the Great Lakes Compact Council every five years and have water conservation and water use efficiency goals and objectives.
Comments can be submitted until Nov. 15, 2024 by email to: DNRCompactProgramReview@wisconsin.gov or by U.S. mail to Shaili Pfeiffer, PO Box 7921, DG/5, Madison, WI 53707-7921
The Great Lakes Compact is a formal agreement between the Great Lakes states which details how the states will work together to manage and protect the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River Basin. A parallel agreement (the Sustainable Water Resources Agreement) includes Ontario and Québec, the two Canadian provinces that border the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence Seaway. Through these agreements, the states and provinces collectively manage Great Lakes water.
As part of the Great Lakes Compact, Wisconsin registers water withdrawals, receives and analyzes water use reports, requires water use permits, implements a conservation program and manages Great Lakes diversions. The DNR is currently drafting rules related to managing diversions and water supply service area planning.
Background
The Great Lakes Compact became effective on Dec. 8, 2008, after final consent from the U.S. Congress [PDF exit DNR]. This date began the ban on diversions of water out of the basin, with limited exceptions. To implement the compact, Wisconsin passed implementing legislation [PDF exit DNR] in 2008 and has an active management program.
Two regional organizations oversee the implementation of the compact and the parallel agreement with the provinces.
- The Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River Basin Water Resources Council (Compact Council) [exit DNR]
The Compact Council includes Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. - The Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River Basin Water Resources Regional Body [exit DNR]
The Regional Body includes the eight Great Lakes states plus Ontario and Québec.
Great Lakes diversion applications and approvals
Several landowners and public water supply systems transferred water from the Great Lakes basin to the Mississippi River basin prior to 2008 (the year the Great Lakes Compact and Agreement were ratified). The DNR issued approvals to these entities and recognize them as “pre-existing” diversions.”
However, the Great Lakes Compact and Agreement ban diversions of Great Lakes water with limited exceptions. These exceptions allow a "straddling community" or "community in a straddling county" to submit an application to the DNR to divert water (i.e., to move water out of the Great Lakes Basin).
- Straddling community - These communities straddle the Great Lakes Basin boundary. These are communities that lie partly within the Great Lakes Basin and partly outside of the Great Lakes Basin.
- Community in a straddling county - These communities are wholly outside of the Great Lakes Basin, but located in a county that straddles the Great Lakes Basin boundary. The City of Waukesha’s diversion approval is an example of a ‘community in a straddling county’ diversion.
Wisconsin’s pre-existing and existing diversion approvals are as follows:
Name of Diversion | County | Approved Diversion Volume (gallons per day) | Type of Diversion* |
---|---|---|---|
Village of Bristol | Kenosha | 1,380,000 | Pre-existing |
City of Brookfield | Waukesha | 1,944,000 | Pre-existing |
K&K Farms, Inc. | Waushara | 783,360 | Pre-existing |
City of Kenosha | Kenosha | 2,540,000 | Pre-existing |
Lepak | Portage | 123,600 | Pre-existing |
Village of Menomonee Falls | Waukesha | 3,217,200 | Pre-existing |
City of New Berlin | Waukesha | 2,142,000 | Straddling Community |
Village of Pardeeville | Columbia | 347,600 | Pre-existing |
Village of Pleasant Prairie | Kenosha | 10,690,000 | Pre-existing |
City of Portage | Columbia | 9,580,000 | Pre-existing |
City of Racine | Racine | 7,000,000 | Straddling Community |
Village of Somers | Kenosha | 1,200,000 | Straddling Community |
Southern Wisconsin Center | Racine | 836,000 | Pre-existing |
City of Waukesha | Waukesha | 8,200,000 | Community in a Straddling County |
Shanrod Farms, LLC | Racine | 4,000 | Pre-existing |
Kettle Hills Golf Course | Washington | 112,034 | Pre-existing |
* Pre-existing diversion means an interbasin transfer approved under s. 281.344(3m) and (4), Wis. Stats., of water from the Great Lakes basin into a watershed outside of the Great Lakes basin that existed prior to the ratification of the Great Lakes Compact on December 8, 2008.
This table summarizes diversion application requirements for a "straddling community" or "community in a straddling county."
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