The LMLSG was formed in 2002 to steward and monitor the health of Last Mountain Lake water while sustaining the resources for the communities that depend on them.
2. What are your principal activities and why do you believe they’re important?
Our goal is to work with others to implement long-term solutions for the Quill Lakes high water levels that will benefit all stakeholders and protect the environment. We focus on educating the public and stakeholders, creating a conversation, and advocating for sustainable water management and conservation.
Our activities are important because people do not understand the importance of wetlands. Wetlands provide all kinds of benefits from flood and drought protection, to filtering contaminants and nutrients from our water, to providing habitat for fish and wildlife including pollinators, to fighting climate change.
Our education and communication activities include:
- Hosting public meetings within our communities to inform residents of how wetland drainage contributes to the pollution of our lakes and rivers.
- Producing monthly newsletters that keeps residents up to date on our progress and current news.
- Promoting the development of a round table made up of all stakeholders, including scientists, to develop solutions for the Quill Lakes flooding. The Water Security Agency declined to establish one.
- Organizing meetings with the Water Security Agency and its Minister to present solutions and discuss WSA’s proposed plans on regulating agricultural drainage.
- Contacting provincial government officials and stakeholders requesting they develop a wetland policy for this province.
- Producing media releases and responding to interviews.
- Creating a SAWS website that provides a history of our communication documents and events.
- Maintaining a Facebook page to increase awareness that allows for public discussion. Posts include valuable facts and initiatives on how we can improve water quality, conserve wetlands and our natural environment, show the benefits of wetland protection, and provide news and invitations to webinars and other current events.
- Connecting with universities, scientists, and other non-profit groups.
- Attending and helping the Citizens Environmental Alliance organize its annual farmland drainage conferences and workshops.

3. What have been your success to date?
We have created a positive presence in our communities and have gained their interest and support in efforts to protect water and the environment. Our success is due to our grassroots approach of meeting with the communities, providing science from Saskatchewan universities, and being open and transparent about the process.
4. What would you like to achieve in future?
Saskatchewan is the only province in Canada that does not have a wetland conservation policy. This lack of regulation is negatively impacting our economy, our communities, and the environment. We would like to see a wetland conservation policy similar to Alberta or Manitoba’s adopted by summer 2022 that provides adequate mitigation when drainage occurs with negative impacts such as downstream flooding, nutrient loading that leads to algae blooms in our lakes, loss of habitat, and the loss of climate change resiliency.
We would also like to see the Water Security Agency become much more transparent, notifying the public when and where they are licensing drainage projects and providing quality information and alerts for our lakes in an easy-to-use online format.

5. If you could have 3 wishes for improving your community, what would they be?
#1 Working together is our only hope for a sustainable future. Partnership is #17 of the United Nations’ goals of sustainable development.
#2 A Saskatchewan Wetland Conservation Policy building the protection of wetlands into all developments including agriculture, municipalities, recreation, and industry will benefit all Saskatchewan residents. We need natural infrastructure like wetlands to build adaptation and resiliency and to ensure business and environmental success for this province (UN goal #13).
#3 We need leadership from the Federal and Provincial governments on water management that is based on science and climate change data rather than politics.
6. Are there volunteer opportunities with your organization? If so, please describe them and indicate how people can contact you.
Photo credits: LMLSG (water sampling on Last Mountain Lake), SAWS (boy playing), CLEM (PowWow Parade)
Edited to correct full title of SAWS and a few other details – late afternoon, November 18, 2021
See Also
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