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  • 'we have more fun' FishingMN Creators
Posted

By Tom Landwehr

Let’s imagine if you didn’t do routine maintenance on your house.

The furnace tune up you missed turns into a broken heating system. The damp spot in your basement becomes a moldy, unhealthy mess. The small leak in your roof becomes a larger leak, ruining your furniture and your belongings inside. 

The Department of Natural Resources faces these maintenance issues daily – some small, some very large. All across the state, we have to do maintenance on buildings, forest roads and bridges, state trails, restrooms, boat accesses, and sewer systems. These are buildings and facilities used by thousands of Minnesotans, out-of-state visitors, and our staff – every day.  Last year more than 10 million people visited a Minnesota state park.

Unfortunately, due to lack of funding, the DNR’s maintenance program is far behind in keeping up with this maintenance, which jeopardizes your outdoor experiences and those visitors who rely on Minnesota for a world-class experience.

Unfortunately, too, the Minnesota Legislature is woefully behind in funding the DNR’s maintenance needs and hasn’t heeded Gov. Mark Dayton’s pleas to fix what we have.  As part of his 2018 Public Works bill, Dayton is asking the Legislature to invest $130 million in urgently needed improvements to the DNR’s buildings and other infrastructure. The House of Representatives this session has proposed $30 million for the DNR’s natural resources asset preservation; the Senate has not released its bonding proposal.

The DNR has been working – and talking publicly – about these issues for some time. You may have read about it in the media. The DNR has issued several plans for fixing its infrastructure, and according to a recently completed facility assessment, the agency has more than $35 million of building components that are in unacceptable or poor condition.

The DNR also has hundreds of millions of dollars of other investments needed over the next decade to prevent asset failures like the broken water line at Jay Cooke State Park near Duluth, one of the many urgent maintenance needs the agency faces.

Repair costs increase about 8 percent annually, so addressing these problems now saves the state money over the long term.

The 10-year capital needs report shows 192 of the agency’s inventory of 2,700 buildings are in crisis or unacceptable condition, and 520 are in poor condition. Some DNR forest road or trail bridges are weight restricted due to structural deterioration over time – meaning logging trucks and grooming vehicles can’t use them.

Other types of infrastructure needed to support DNR recreation programs also require repair. The DNR needs to make critical repairs to its fish hatcheries, including one near Lanesboro that supplies thousands of trout for anglers. Many water control structures – used at wildlife management areas to maintain water levels for waterfowl – are more than four decades old and need to be fixed.

More than 100 miles of state trails are in need of repairs; some are in such poor condition that bicyclists avoid crumbling and rutted sections entirely.  The agency is hoping to secure bonding funds for resurfacing, culvert and bridge replacements, and accessibility improvements for the Sakatah, Root River, Gateway, Willard Munger, and Blufflands state trails.

As I’ve said before, some of these fixes are for basic services for people—access to clean drinking water and functional bathrooms—that are now not being met at DNR facilities. Most people would agree that it’s unacceptable to have substandard facilities in a state whose $13 billion tourism economy is based on high-quality outdoor recreation opportunities.

Time is running out in this legislative session. Please urge your lawmakers to take action on a bonding bill that supports outdoors recreation and jobs for Minnesotans.

Landwehr is commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.

Discuss below - to view set the hook here.

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  • Your Responses - Share & Have Fun :)

    • SkunkedAgain
      If you fished with me more often, you'd never have to make this statement...   38" of ice - love it. I'm really going to have to dig around for my auger extension. I don't think that I've needed it in over a decade.   Too bad nobody has a locomotive chugging across the ice to do some logging, like the good old days.
    • LakeofthewoodsMN
      On the South Shore...  Ice fishing remains strong across the south shore of Lake of the Woods out on Big Traverse Bay.  Resorts and outfitters on some parts of the lake have ice roads extending over 16 miles staying on nice schools of walleyes and saugers.  Many fish houses are over deep mud.  Some are on structure.  It is always fishing of course, but overall, February has been very productive for most anglers.   Extensions are being used on ice augers as the ice continues to thicken.  The thick ice this year will be good for the extended ice fishing season Lake of the Woods enjoys with fish houses out through March 31st, walleyes and saugers open through April 14th and a pike season that never closes. Most fishing activity is taking place in 26-32 feet of water.  Anglers are finding a healthy mix of walleyes and saugers, with a good number of jumbo perch in the mix this year.  Some big eelpout are also showing up.  Anglers are reporting plenty of fish for fresh fish frys and usually extra fish to bring home.   The one-two punch of a jigging line and deadstick is the way to go.  On the jigging line, jigging spoons with rattles tipped with a minnow head have been consistent.  Lipless crankbaits and jigging rap style lures also doing well.     Lures with a light have been working well in the stained water.  Please remember, in MN, lures with a light or water activated light can be used as long as the battery is mercury free and the hook is attached directly to the lure and not as a dropper line.     On the deadstick, a plain hook or a small jig with a live minnow 6 inches to a foot off of the bottom.    Some days, mornings are better, other days, it's the afternoons.  There is no distinct pattern, they could come through at any time. On the Rainy River...  The start of the day and end of the day have been best for those targeting walleyes on the river. A jig and minnow or a jigging spoon tipped with a minnow head is also producing some fish. Some big sturgeon being iced by ice anglers targeting them.  It is a catch-and-release sturgeon season currently.   Although ice conditions on the river are good, they can vary significantly due to the current, so anglers should always consult local resorts or outfitters for the most up-to-date safety information and fishing advice. Up at the NW Angle...  Ice fishing has been strong in the islands area of Lake of the Woods. Resorts continue to move their fish houses around, staying on the best schools of walleyes.     Anglers are catching a nice mix of walleyes, saugers, and jumbo perch with an occasional pike or tullibee as well.     Big crappies are still being caught just over the border.  Fish houses are available, check with a NW Angle resort for info on crappie fishing.   Lake of the Woods enjoys an extended ice fishing season with fish houses on the ice through March 31st and walleye and sauger seasons open through April 14th. Perch, crappie, and pike seasons remain open year-round.    
    • leech~~
      Maybe you should put rattle wheels down, if your going to sleep for 6hrs! 🤭 😆
    • JerkinLips
      Monday was my worst day of winter fishing on Vermilion in the last 4 years.  Caught only one 14" walleye in nearly 8 hours of fishing.  Missed two other bites and was marking very few fish.  Maybe the fish were taking Monday off after a big weekend.   No more water came up on the ice under my house.  Think it was because I haven't banked snow around it for a couple of weeks so the bare ice around the house is getting very thick.  I measured 38" of ice under my house and the Ion barely made it through even with the extension installed.  Needless to say I banked around the house this time.  Another lesson I learned today is don't drill holes if ice is frozen on your blades.  I did that on one hole and it didn't center properly and drilled at an angle on the edge of the opening.  Hope I can correct the location and angle on my next trip up.   Not much change in the surface lake surface conditions.  The drifts may be a little higher and are definitely harder.  There are still a few bare ice spots on the lake.  Very little activity on the lake today.  There are about 3 dozen houses from McKinley Park out to Birch Island.  Another person pulled there house off today, and I am sure many more will pull theirs off this coming weekend.  Only 13 days left of walleye season.    
    • leech~~
      A good start for never picking up a bow!   IMG_1910.mp4
    • leech~~
      Um, #metoo   leech~~ Author 'we have more fun' FishingMN Builders Posted January 26 My whole goal for the rest of this season.  Is to watch KC lose and Taylor cry!  🥳
    • smurfy
    • Wanderer
      Smurfy is happy.
    • Dash 1
      Great looking food. So far not much of a game and I thought the halftime show was worse I've seen. 
    • leech~~
      Oh is there a Superbowl game? 😋😋
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