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Welcome to the event schedule and directory for the 16th Annual Salt Lake County Watershed Symposium, November 16-17, 2022. Free and open to all, the Symposium encourages a comprehensive review of the current state of our watershed.
Company: Water Quality clear filter
Sunday, November 16
 

9:10am MST

Keynote | Rethinking Resiliency: People, Institutions, Resources
Sunday November 16, 2025 9:10am - 9:35am MST
Managing resilient watersheds and water resources, especially during a time of rapid change and unprecedented challenge, requires institutions and governance structures that are also resilient, robust, and nimble. Effective and adaptive institutions emerge when we invest in the people that are at their core and ground them in thoughtful governance structures. Utah has excellent examples of how the linkages between people, institutions, and water resources have resulted in innovative and collaborative solutions to some of our biggest challenges. There are other examples of governance structures that may need to be redesigned to effectively manage the complexity, magnitude, and urgency currently facing western water managers. As a community of water professionals, working together to solve some of the most challenging water resources issues in decades, we must also ensure that we have the governance frameworks and institutional capacity to be successful. 
Speakers
avatar for Erica Gaddis

Erica Gaddis

Senior Policy Advisor, Western States Water Council
Erica Brown Gaddis, PhD, is a Senior Policy Advisor for the Western States Water Council where she assists states with developing and analyzing water policies including those related to EPA rulemakings, infrastructure funding, and abandoned mine land remediation. Erica also teaches... Read More →
Sunday November 16, 2025 9:10am - 9:35am MST
Great Hall

11:20am MST

Balancing Water Supply, Drought and Conservation in West Valley
Sunday November 16, 2025 11:20am - 12:00pm MST
Granger-Hunter Improvement District, in times of extreme drought, may find it’s water supply cut. The District’s customers have responded with significant water use reductions, but in order to have a resilient supply, groundwater sources with higher levels of manganese and iron will need to be developed.

Granger-Hunter Improvement District serves West Valley City, the second largest city in Utah. Most of the District’s water comes from the Wasatch Mountains, and with Utah in a prolonged drought, surface water supplies are being impacted. District customers have conserved incredible amounts of water, mostly by reducing outdoor irrigation, but with future supplies of surface water at risk, the District has embarked on a multi-year program to develop and improve groundwater in the Salt Lake Valley. The District relies on a water wholesaler for approximately 75% of its water supply. In times of extreme drought, it is possible that supply could be cut by as much as 30%, leading to potential shortages. While District customers have reduced consumption by over 15% in the last couple of years, higher-density future growth will require a drought-resistant high-quality supply. Additional challenges include revenue shortfalls due to increased conservation, conservation-oriented rate design, and a shrinking Great Salt Lake that is directly impacted by increased outdoor water use and reduced snowfall. In order to develop groundwater for a drought-resistant supply, higher levels of iron and manganese must be removed. One treatment plant is under construction with two additional plants planned, but the cost of construction is substantial and additional funding sources, including SRF and WaterSMART grants, are being explored with some success. There is also risk of overdrawing groundwater surface water sources are also reduced to neighboring communities. The long-term plan is to encourage appropriate outdoor water use with tiered rates, and to develop reliable, clean groundwater sources if the drought continues. This session will discuss the Utah drought and the challenges that a reduced water supply will bring to residents of West Valley City, Utah, the second largest city in Utah. Future planning challenges include reduced consumption (and revenue) due to drought messaging, fixed wholesale water contracts, and higher-density growth. To plan for potential shortages, Granger-Hunter Improvement District has embarked on a long-term plan to develop and treat groundwater impacted by iron and manganese. The District has also pursued SRF loans and grants in order to reduce the cost burden on its customers.
Sunday November 16, 2025 11:20am - 12:00pm MST
Lower Level - Ballroom A/B

2:20pm MST

Poster Session
Sunday November 16, 2025 2:20pm - 3:20pm MST
The poster session is a forum for presenters to highlight programs and to share successful ideas with colleagues by presenting a research study, a practical problem-solving effort, or an innovative program or project. Posters are listed alphabetically by title.
==> Full Abstracts

Adaptive Management Strategies at Big Bend Habitat Restoration Area
Anders Eckert, Utah Conservation Corps & West Jordan City Parks
The Big Bend Restoration Project is located along the Jordan River and is filled with a high abundance of biodiversity. The Big Bend provides a native home for many different species offering reprieve from the Urban infrastructure found around the park. This presentation will inform Adaptive Management Strategies and plans for the Big Bend Site.

An Urban Canal and the Logan River: Bugs, Leaves, and Water Quality
Ellie Smith-Eskridge, Utah State University
For my masters research, I compared water quality, freshwater invertebrates, and leaf decomposition between an urban canal and a natural stream, the Logan River. The canal showed faster leaf decomposition relative to the Logan River, and leaf-shredding amphipods were abundant in the canal.

End-Member Mixing Analysis of the Upper Provo River
Alyssa Thompson, Brigham Young University
The Provo River is an important water source for Utah County, but little is known about the sources of water that feed into this river. This study identifies these main sources of water, what the chemistry of these sources look like, and calculates the percent contribution from each of these sources to understand how these sources change over time.

Green Infrastructure Microbial Community Response to Storm Events
Yvette Hastings, University of Utah
Have you ever wondered what stormwater green infrastructure (SGI) bioswales are? In this presentation, I will describe what these are and how soil microbial communities respond to precipitation events in experimental bioswales.

How Dry Must the Great Salt Lake Be to Produce Hazardous Dust?
Thorn Merrill, University of Utah
Airborne dust effects the air quality of the Wasatch front in Utah. One of the closest dust sources is the Great Salt Lake Playa. Surface crust and soil moisture are two main dictators of dust emission in an emissive area. Where there is broken or absent crust dust emission decreases as soil moisture increases.

Investigating Ground and Surface Interactions within Utah Lake, UT
Justin McCurry, Courtney Brown, Kyle Johnson, Daren Nelson, Utah Valley University
Our team is investigating the effectiveness of identifying groundwater and surface water interactions of cold water springs at Utah Lake, UT by integrating traditional flow analyses with thermal imaging cameras from small unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).

Jordan River Channel Improvements at Brighton North Point Diversion
Hannah Murphy, Salt Lake County Watershed Planning & Restoration
Removal of the Brighton North Point Canal diversion structure provided a seamless, navigable river system, reestablishing flood plains, improving instream habitat, and mitigating invasive weed species throughout.

LGBTQIA+ DEI Efforts of Birding & Bird Conservation Organizations
Georgie Corkery, Utah State University
The goal of this research is to develop a DEI handbook template for the birding community, with a completed section on LGBTQAI+. This will be executed via an analysis of DEI efforts of 16 birding and bird conservation organizations, interviews with queer birders, and a look into queer ecology.

Mapping Flows of Influence Across Utah's Two Largest Lakes
Shannon Lambson, Brigham Young University; Ben Abbott, Brigham Young University
An interactive look at how information and influence move between stakeholders, using the Utah Lake islands proposal as a case study. We invite input during the session from the community about how to improve coordination and communication in conservation and restoration efforts for the integrated Great Salt Lake system.

Microbial Community Analysis of Anaerobic Digesters
Maliea Holden, Brigham Young University
Caldicellulosiruptor bescii, when used as a pretreatment of waste activated sludge, increases gas production and decreases solid waste in anaerobic digestion effluent.

Microbial Community Composition to Fingerprint Dust Emission Sources
DeTiare Leifi, Brigham Young University
Particular microbial communities unique to land use and location may serve as general indicators in dust fingerprinting.

Muddy Snow and Hazardous Air: Dust Transport from Great Salt Lake
Maura Hahnenberger, Shane Schmidt, Salt Lake Community College
The decline of the Great Salt Lake has exposed large areas of shoreline that now produce hazardous dust when winds blow. Continued episodic drought and consumptive water use will make recovery of Great Salt Lake levels a challenge, posing the threat of continued hazardous dust transport into the future.

Nutrient Release from Utah Lake Wetting and Drying Cycles
Kate Scanlan, Brigham Young University
Utah Lake littoral sediments are subject to frequent drying and wetting cycles that are a result of annual variability in water levels across Utah Lake. These changing water levels result from a combination of natural and anthropogenic factors, and can lead to potentially increased nutrient release rates of N, P, and organic C.

Opportunities for Increasing Mass Transit in Suburban Utah County
Katie Lawrence, Brigham Young University
Transportation is a large source of air and stormwater pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. This pollution has only increased with suburban sprawl. Thus, we are proposing a framework for changes to Utah's mass transit infrastructure based on a local spatial analysis, and discussing the implications for air and water quality.

Seasonal Nutrient Limitations of Various Microbes in Utah Lake
Sarah Chan, Brigham Young University
Cyanobacterial and algal blooms present unique issues to be understood thoroughly. We found that the nutrient limitation of cyanobacteria, and to a lesser extent phytoplankton, was influenced by season and space.

Thermal Spring Interactions at Utah Lake via the use of UAVS
Kyle Johnson, Justin McCurry, Courtney Brown, Daren Nelson, Utah Valley University
Our team is investigating the effectiveness of utilizing thermal imaging cameras from small unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to better understand how thermal hot springs are interacting with Utah Lake and its surrounding ecosystems.

Toxic Algae in a Changing Climate: Protecting Recreational Health
Hannah Bonner, Utah Division of Water Quality
Warming water temperatures, declining reservoir levels, and increasing human disturbance all foster the growth of harmful algal blooms (HABs). The Utah Division of Water Quality (UDWQ), in partnership with local health departments, works to mitigate this risk through cooperation, communication, and proactive monitoring in Salt Lake County.

Toxin Producers or Non-Toxin Producers: What causes them to Bloom?
Shadman Kaiser, University of Utah; Ramesh Goel, University of Uta
Posters
AT

Alyssa Thompson

Graduate Student, Brigham Young University
Alyssa Thompson is a graduate student at Brigham Young University studying Geological Sciences. She also received her undergraduate degree at BYU, where she met her husband, Carson. She has worked with her supervisor Dr. Greg Carling for 4 years studying the chemistry of Provo River... Read More →
AE

Anders Eckert

Lead Habitat Restoration Member, SLC Trails & Natural Lands
University of Utah Alumni. Graduated with a BS in Environmental and Sustainability Studies with an emphasis on conservation & land management and minors in political science and geography. A list of areas I am skilled in are Volunteer Assistance, Natural Resource Management, Nonprofit... Read More →
avatar for Ben Abbott

Ben Abbott

Professor of Watershed Ecology, BYU
Ben works primarily on the permafrost climate feedback and water quality in river networks. Drawing on biogeochemistry, evolutionary biology, and social science, his research investigates how the co-evolution of landscapes and ecosystems results in broad-scale patterns of biological... Read More →
avatar for Courtney Brown

Courtney Brown

Undergraduate Research Assistant, Utah Valley University
Courtney Brown is an undergraduate student at Utah Valley University studying Environmental Science and Management. Courtney is part of a research team funded by the National Science Foundation that is investigating groundwater and surface water interactions surrounding Utah Lake... Read More →
avatar for Daren Nelson

Daren Nelson

Associate Professor, Utah Valley University
Dr. Nelson is an Associate Professor in the Department of Earth Science at Utah Valley University and specializes in Hydrology. As part of a research project funded by the National Science Foundation he is mentoring a team of undergraduate research assistants that are investigating... Read More →
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DeTiare Leifi

Graduate Student, Brigham Young University
DeTiare Leifi analyzes microbes in dust emission sources to find unique microbial communities specific to land use and location. She works at Brigham Young University for Dr. Zachary Aanderud.
avatar for Elllie Smith-Eskridge

Elllie Smith-Eskridge

Master's student, Utah State University
I'm a Master's student in the Department of Biology at Utah State University. For my research, I am studying water quality, freshwater invertebrates, and leaf decomposition in a urban canal and the Logan River in Logan, Utah.
avatar for Flore Elliott

Flore Elliott

Student Researcher, Westminster College
While her career interests lie within the world of crime science, Flore definitely got her fair share of dead fish this summer. As a senior studying chemistry at Westminster College, she has been involved in many science outreach activities with the local elementary schools and events... Read More →
GC

Georgie Corkery

Research Assistant, Utah State University
Master of science student in the Department of Environment and Society at Utah State University. Passionate environmentalist and feminist. Interested in community ecology, translational ecology, and critical ecology.
HB

Hannah Bonner

Environmental Scientist, Utah Division of Water Quality
Dr. Hannah Bonner is an Environmental Scientist for the Utah Division of Water Quality. In this capacity, Hannah manages Utah's recreational water quality programs. Her work emphasizes monitoring, analyzing, communicating, and responding to waterborne pathogens and harmful algal blooms... Read More →
avatar for Hannah Murphy

Hannah Murphy

Watershed Planner/Scientist, Salt Lake County Watershed
Hannah works as a Watershed Planner for Salt Lake County improving riparian areas of the local watershed. She is often on the Jordan River working to restore and stabilize banks and improve stream habitat. She works with local municipalities and other agencies to maintain our waterways... Read More →
JM

Justin McCurry

Undergraduate Research Assistant, Utah Valley University
Justin McCurry is an undergraduate student at Utah Valley University studying Environmental Science and Management. Justin is part of a research team funded by the National Science Foundation that is investigating groundwater and surface water interactions surrounding Utah Lake. The... Read More →
KS

Kate Scanlan

Research Assistant, Brigham Young University
Kate Scanlan is an undergraduate student studying environmental science at Brigham Young University. A student researcher, she has spent time researching waste-to-energy systems, methanogen culturing, microbial communities in desert soils, and Utah Lake sediments. When she graduates... Read More →
KL

Katie Lawrence

Research Assistant, BYU Abbott Lab of Ecosystem Ecology
Katie Lawrence is a junior undergraduate at BYU studying Environmental Science and Sustainability. They are in charge of coordinating synoptic sampling events in the Abbott Lab of Ecosystem Ecology and are heading the featured project on public transportation in Utah County. They... Read More →
KJ

Kyle Johnson

Undergraduate Research Assistant, Utah Valley University
Kyle Johnson is an undergraduate student at Utah Valley University studying Environmental Science and Management. Kyle is part of a research team funded by the National Science Foundation that is investigating groundwater and surface water interactions surrounding Utah Lake. The team... Read More →
avatar for Maliea Holden

Maliea Holden

PhD Student, Brigham Young University
I am a PhD student at BYU working to optimize anaerobic digestion. As part of this process, somedays you can find me scooping manure out of a cow's pen, and on other days, I am found in a sterile lab extracting DNA. On all days, I hope to make advances in field of waste water tre... Read More →
avatar for Maura Hahnenberger

Maura Hahnenberger

Associate Professor of Geosciences, Salt Lake Community College
Maura Hahnenberger, PhD is an Associate Professor in the Geosciences Department at Salt Lake Community College. At SLCC she teaches and advises in the Atmospheric Sciences and Geography programs in both face to face and online settings. Maura is the founder of the WaterGirls and DustKids... Read More →
RG

Ramesh Goel

Professor, University of Utah
Dr. Goel is a professor of environmental engineering at the University of Utah. He researches surface water quality and wastewater treatment. HE is the recipient of the presidential award in 2011 and the recipient of other awards. He has published more than 905 papers in the likes... Read More →
avatar for Sarah Chan

Sarah Chan

Master's Student, Brigham Young University
Sarah Chan is a master's student at Brigham Young University working with Dr. Zachary Aanderud. Her primary research is focused on the microbial populations of dust in southern Utah, including variability based on location and land-use type. She has previously published in the field... Read More →
avatar for Shadman Kaiser

Shadman Kaiser

Graduate Research Assistant, University of Utah
I am Ph.D. student working in Dr. Ramesh Goel's lab working on my second year. I have been working on Cyanobacterial bloom using genomic tools.
SS

Shane Schmidt

Research Assistant, Salt Lake Community College
Shane Schmidt is a research assistant on the Dust Across a Desert-Urban-Summit (DUST^2) project and a student in Atmospheric Sciences at Salt Lake Community College. His love of nature has led him to his work on dust storms and his career goal is to become a hydrologist in water resource... Read More →
SL

Shannon Lambson

Undergraduate Researcher, Brigham Young University
Shannon Lambson is an undergraduate at BYU studying Environmental Science and Sustainability. Her interests include wildlife conservation, improving access to women’s health in developing countries, and watching reruns of the Crocodile Hunter.
TM

Thorn Merrill

Graduate Student, University of Utah
My name is Thorn Merrill. I grew up in the green mountains of northern Vermont. I completed my undergraduate degree at Bates College in Maine with a major in geology. I then moved to Utah to pursue my outdoor hobbies including skiing, rock climbing and mountain biking. I am now at... Read More →
avatar for Yvette Hastings

Yvette Hastings

Graduate Student Research Assistant, University of Utah
I recently completed my M.Sc. in Geography at the University of Utah with an Interdisciplinary Graduate Certificate in Hydrology and Water Resources. My thesis work looked at the role of soil microbial communities and enzyme activity response in stormwater green infrastructure bioswales... Read More →
Sunday November 16, 2025 2:20pm - 3:20pm MST
Great Hall

3:20pm MST

SLCo Water Quality Data Review: What We Do and What We've Learned
Sunday November 16, 2025 3:20pm - 3:50pm MST
Salt Lake County Watershed has been collecting water quality data in streams since 2010 with an aim to learn more about the relationship between water quality and the changes happening in our valley. Over a decade later, we are still collecting data and have learned quite a few things. This presentation will give a brief overview on everything water quality-related that SLCo Watershed is currently working on, with a deeper look into how long-deploy water quality sondes can fill gaps in data and track acute stream events.
Speakers
avatar for Sam Taylor

Sam Taylor

Watershed Scientist/Planner, Salt Lake County Watershed
Sam has worked with Salt Lake County since 2015 starting in the stream gauging program and moving to the watershed section in 2017. He oversees ongoing data collection efforts and special projects related to water quality.
Sunday November 16, 2025 3:20pm - 3:50pm MST
Lower Level - Ballroom A/B
 
Monday, November 17
 

10:15am MST

Shared Stewardship and Water Security
Monday November 17, 2025 10:15am - 10:45am MST
Resilient watersheds are capable of withstanding and responding to natural disturbances, including wildfire. Collaborative, cross-boundary forest management that creates fire adapted ecosystems and communities will aid our efforts to protect vulnerable water resources and ensure long term water security.

In August of 2021, the Parleys Canyon Fire started alongside Interstate 80. Beginning with two small brush fires, by mid afternoon, the fire spread to 500 acres. Driven by winds and dry conditions, the fire forced residents of the surrounding areas to evacuate from over 5,000 homes. Multiple agencies responded to the fire and were able to fully contain the blaze after eight days. The Parleys Canyon fire presents an example of how a rapid, coordinated response to fire, and some luck, prevented a more severe fire event from destroying communities and threatening water security. Wildfire is a natural and expected occurrence in Utah’s forests, and it plays an important role in the ongoing health and resilience of Utah’s water resources. Past fire suppression practices have contributed to the increase in large, severe wildfires that cause detrimental impacts to habitats, homes, and vulnerable water resources. In the face of climate change, long-term water security is a growing concern, and the impact of catastrophic wildfires on the natural resource we depend on for drinking, irrigation, fishing, and recreation cannot be ignored. Wildfires impact air quality and may also affect available water quality and quantity, both during an active wildfire event and for years afterwards. Past fire events, including the Dollar Ridge Fire, demonstrate the disastrous impacts severe wildfires can have on Utah’s watersheds and the challenges these events present to water resource managers.

The connection between resilient, disturbance adapted forests and a sustainable supply of water is especially evident in Utah and similarly arid states. About half of the water supply in the southwestern United States comes from forests. Approximately 80% of the freshwater resources in the U.S. originate on forested land, and more than 3,400 public drinking water systems are located in watersheds on national forest lands. As we have seen an increase in the number of acres of important forested water-supply watersheds burned in the past 30 years, we have also seen an increase in flooding and erosion that can impair already vulnerable water supplies. Fire events, such as Parleys Canyon, provide homeowners and land managers with an opportunity to recognize the need for wildfire mitigation planning that protects communities and water sources along the Wasatch Front. Through shared stewardship, Utah partners with agencies, entities, and organizations to actively mitigate the impacts of catastrophic wildfire on a landscape scale, with the express purpose of protecting communities and watersheds. Central Utah Water Conservancy District (CUWCD) manages the Central Utah Project (CUP) and District network of water facilities to ensure citizens and businesses along the Wasatch Front receive clean, reliable water. Operating three water treatment facilities, two hydroelectric plants, nine reservoirs, and overseeing water supply to eight counties, CUWCD recognizes the vulnerabilities of our water infrastructure and the need for collaborative watershed management.

This presentation will highlight both the impact severe wildfires can have on water treatment facilities and the need for collaborative wildfire management to maintain Utah’s current water quality and quantity.
Speakers
avatar for Mike Rau

Mike Rau

Deputy Director, Central Utah Water Conservancy District
Central Utah Water Conservancy District (CUWCD) manages the Central Utah Project (CUP) and District network of water facilities to ensure citizens and businesses along the Wasatch Front receive clean, reliable water. Operating three water treatment facilities, two hydroelectric plants... Read More →
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Grace Patrick

Legal Counsel, Utah Shared Stewardship
Utah Shared Stewardship partners with agencies, entities, and organizations to actively mitigate the impacts of catastrophic wildfire on a landscape scale, with the express purpose of protecting communities and watersheds. Utah Water Conservancy District (CUWCD) manages the Central... Read More →
Monday November 17, 2025 10:15am - 10:45am MST
Lower Level - Ballroom A/B

11:50am MST

Beaver Dam Analogs in the Watershed: Status & Monitoring Results
Monday November 17, 2025 11:50am - 12:20pm MST
Four years into building & monitoring beaver dam analogs in the Great Salt Lake watershed and throughout Utah, we have complied several years of data. What have we learned and what opportunities do we have to improve restoration monitoring moving forward?

Streams and rivers across the American west are subject to habitat loss due in part to the extirpation of American beaver (Castor canadensis). Low-tech process-based restoration (LTPBR) has gained momentum across Utah and the region as a means to re-introduce beaver and the processes that they catalyze in river systems. We have implemented and monitored over 15 of these projects in the Great Salt Lake Watershed along with state partners and private landowners. These projects are motivated by a number of co-benefits, from riparian vegetation recruitment to floodplain reconnection, drought resilience, and extreme fire mitigation. Monitoring is a high priority, but fast and standardized protocols are often too generic to be helpful for adaptive management. The Rapid Stream-Riparian Assessment (RSRA) protocol provides metrics of overall riparian health for small to medium sized streams in this region, but not directly informative to adaptive management. In 2022, we developed a supplement to the RSRA for LTPBR projects to inform adaptive management more directly. Here, we will present the results from RSRAs on 25 restoration sites statewide before and up to 3 years post-implementation. We also share initial Amphibian Habitat Assessments from restoration sites in the elevational range of Boreal Toad (Anaxyrus boreas boreas) and an overview and initial test group feedback on the adaptive management protocol.
Speakers
avatar for Rose Smith

Rose Smith

Stream Ecologist, Sageland Collaborative
Rose Smith is a Stream Ecologist leading the Stream & Riparian Restoration program at Sageland Collaborative. Rose has a Ph.D. in geology from the University of Maryland and has previously served as a faculty member in the School of Biological Sciences and Department of Urban Planning... Read More →
Monday November 17, 2025 11:50am - 12:20pm MST
Lower Level - Ballroom A/B
 
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