New worries surround the Great Salt Lake


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The Great Salt Lake continues to shrink. Today its official measurement dipped slightly to an elevation of exactly 4,194 feet. The last time it was lower was way back in the 1960s.

The lake was at precisely this same level four years ago; then and today, the lowest since record lows in the ‘60s. But this year it's a real surprise because we had a relatively wet winter.

The Great Salt Lake is now surrounded by hundreds of square miles of dried mud and salt.

The $25-million-a-year brine shrimp industry is scrambling to find usable harbors. They dredged this one at a cost of $200,000. Brine Shrimp Industry spokesman Don Leonard says, "It was a big surprise to us. I mean Lake Powell went up 30 feet, right? But the Great Salt Lake's going down."

Robert Smithson's world-famous artwork the Spiral Jetty is now hundreds of yards from the lake it was sculpted in. It still inspires artists. We encountered a man in a suit of mirrors, San Francisco based Austrian Gustav Troger, at the heart of the Spiral Jetty standing on salt instead of water.

New worries surround the Great Salt Lake

A decent winter snowfall was blunted by a hot, dry summer. Eric Millis, with the Utah Division of Water Resources, says, "With all that combined, yeah the lake has just continued to drop."

Lee Sporleder opens the gates at a remote, aging facility on the west side of the lake, a pump house built in the 1980s when the lake was flooding. The $65-million state pumps ran less than two years.

The lake is now a dozen miles away across a vast expanse of salt, but the pumps get monthly maintenance in case they're ever needed again.

New worries surround the Great Salt Lake

It would be a long way off, but we've got a big investment here, and there's no sense letting it go to waste," says Sporleder, with the Department of Water Resources.

But you know what they say in Utah. If you don't like the weather, wait, ah, a few years maybe, and it'll change. Pretty good odds, eventually the lake will make a comeback.

In the ‘60s it was 2 ½ feet lower than today. In the ‘80s it went up 20 feet. Leonard says, "Well the long-term worry is that as the population of the Wasatch Front grows that the people will drink more and more water, use more and more water, and less and less will get to the lake."

State experts disagree. Millis says, "The impacts of additional water development to meet the growing population's needs will have a minimal impact on the lake. We're calculating on the order of less than a half a foot."

The brine shrimpers worry the saltier water may hurt the shrimp. Duck hunters are afraid the ducks will fly away.

For the rest of us, it's a drama of nature, a lake that defies efforts to control it, whether it goes too high or too low.

E-mail: hollenhorst@ksl.com

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John Hollenhorst

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