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The Montana Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) hosted a meeting in Big Sky this week to provide updates on the Gallatin River’s impairment for excess algae. The intent of the meeting was to share information with the community and to allow questions and discussion around what exactly that impairment listing means, what’s next, and how the community’s involvement is paramount to a healthier Gallatin down the road. The meeting also came with a positive message: that with a designation that otherwise seems very unsettling, there is hope in the ability to provide necessary resources and attention to the problem, and find the right answers.

Understandably, the DEQ’s announcement last year that the EPA had approved the listing of the Gallatin River as impaired raised a host of concerns and questions. We walked away Monday evening with a better understanding that with impairment comes opportunities for improvement, including additional resources to study and solve the problem. These improvements will not happen overnight, however; it takes time, often years.

In the case of the Gallatin, the path that led to listing the 39-mile middle section — from the Yellowstone National Park boundary to the confluence with Spanish Creek — as impaired for excess algae growth was the result of more than a decade’s-worth of monitoring by the Gallatin River Task Force (Task Force), and photos from the Task Force and Upper Missouri Waterkeeper. Now, the Task Force, along with state and local agencies, have significantly expanded and coordinated monitoring efforts to identify exactly what conditions are contributing to recurring algal blooms.

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Kristin Gardner is the Chief Executive and Science Officer for the Gallatin River Task Force in Big Sky, a position she has held for nearly two decades.

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