Environment
Not enough votes from La Crosse County board for $500k dredging of Lake Neshonoc
More than half of the La Crosse County Board would like to spend more money this summer to keep dredging a popular lake.
That, however, wasn’t enough Thursday to put $500,000 more into the ongoing dredging project at Lake Neshonoc in West Salem, Wis.
The spending plan needed a two-thirds majority to pass the 29-member board. It only got a bare 15-vote majority.
Jack Pogreba was among the supporters. He said more dredging might as well be done now, while crews are already removing dirt from the lake.
Pogreba said it would cost a little more now, “but if we come back in 20 years, it’s going to cost us 50% more to do the same job that they can do right now for that little bit more.”
County experts worry that increasingly frequent rains are causing erosion, which makes the lake fill up with silt faster than it should.
Opponents on the county board argued that $500,000 should be spent on other needs, such as helping French Island residents, who have PFAS-polluted wells or to help find shelter for the homeless.
In other board business, supervisors took votes on how they might spend an expected $23 million in federal pandemic relief.
The board weighed several areas of spending where money from the American Recovery Plan Act could go.
Supervisors voted to make sustainability their top priority for the relief money. Affordable housing came in second in their vote, followed by improving child care, and promoting local tourism.