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How Utah’s record snowpack is impacting the Great Salt Lake’s shorebirds

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How Utah’s record snowpack is impacting the Great Salt Lake’s shorebirds


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Editor’s note: This article is published through the Great Salt Lake Collaborative, a solutions journalism initiative that partners news, education and media organizations to help inform people about the plight of the Great Salt Lake — and what can be done to make a difference before it is too late.

SALT LAKE CITY — Janice Gardner vividly remembers what it was like to venture out into the Great Salt Lake’s vast wetlands as she and multiple groups of volunteers began counting shorebirds as part of the first extensive shorebird count in the area since 1995.

Most of the volunteers were biologists that morning in August 2022, so they were aware of the lake’s struggles; however, interacting with the land firsthand gave everyone a different understanding of how bad the conditions had gotten as the lake plummeted to an all-time low.

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“It was remarkable to everyone how dry it was,” said Gardner, an ecologist for the conservation nonprofit Sageland Collaborative. “People were walking like a mile and a half to 2 miles just to get to the shoreline. You think about Saltair, (and) the shoreline used to be right there by the frontage road off I-80. And then, you had to walk miles to get to the shoreline to see the birds.”

The lake’s Great Salt Lake State Park marina location would end up going on to fall to about 4,188.2 feet in November, almost 12 feet below the lake’s average water level over the past 175 years.

That’s also about when the lake’s fortunes began to change.

Utah ended up picking up a record 30-inch snowpack with even higher snow water equivalent figures in the mountains above the Great Salt Lake Basin. The marina location entered this week with an elevation of 4,193.8 feet, gaining more than 5 feet over the last seven months as a result of the ongoing snowmelt.

While the water levels are still about 4 feet below the minimum goal outlined by experts, its gains are also temporarily repairing some of the other issues that experts saw in the fall, including dangerously high salinity levels that had put its ecosystem on the brink of a collapse.

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“We’re, like, so blessed to have this huge winter with tons of rain,” Gardner said. “There’s still quite a march to get out to the shoreline, especially in a lot of the (state-managed) wetlands … but the wetlands are just completely full of water, which is so thrilling.”

Reversing the lake’s alarming salinity levels

Water levels aren’t the only issue when it comes to the Great Salt Lake ecosystem and its shorebird habitat.

The lake’s salinity levels began to rise as its water levels dropped, which became a serious problem, especially in the lake’s arm south of the causeway that cuts through the lake.

Healthy salinity levels, for this side of the lake, are considered to be between 12% to 16%, less salty than the northern arm. But levels had crept to nearly 18% by the time Gardner and others rekindled a comprehensive migratory shorebird survey.

The volunteers almost immediately noticed there weren’t many brine flies, a major source of food for the millions of migratory birds that pass through the lake every year.

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“So even anecdotally, people were like, ‘Gosh, it seems like there’s a lot less bugs,’” Gardner said.

Nonbiting midges are pictured at Antelope Island on Monday. Shorebird survey volunteers noticed fewer bugs in the Great Salt Lake ecosystem during their August 2022 survey.
Nonbiting midges are pictured at Antelope Island on Monday. Shorebird survey volunteers noticed fewer bugs in the Great Salt Lake ecosystem during their August 2022 survey. (Photo: Kristin Murphy, Deseret News)

The team counted 228,146 shorebirds at several sites across the region, with phalaropes accounting for nearly three-fourths of the birds observed during the time of the count. It’s difficult to compare that to recent years, though, because it was the first count of its kind in nearly three decades.

Meanwhile, the rising salinity levels remained a problem in many experts’ minds. A team from the Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands ended up raising a berm at the causeway a month after the bird survey to help slow down the rate of the high-salinity water flowing from the north arm into the southern arm.

It worked, but salinity levels still ended up near 19% by November. On top of that, the low water levels exposed more and more microbialites, which are lake deposits that provide a “vital habitat” for brine flies, as noted by the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources. Both of these factors helped wiped out many of the brine flies in the ecosystem.


There’s still quite a march to get out to the shoreline, especially in a lot of the (state-managed) wetlands … but the wetlands are just completely full of water, which is so thrilling.

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–Janice Gardner, Sageland Collaborative


However, the wet winter and strong spring snowmelt pushed the salinity level down to about 14% by May 1, according to the latest count made available by the U.S. Geological Survey. It’s within the healthy threshold for the lake again.

This is why anyone who has visited the Great Salt Lake area this spring may have noticed brine flies buzzing around in full force once again.

“(It’s) within a zone … that the brine shrimp and the brine flies are happy, so to speak,” Gardner added. “The food they need can grow, and so they’re happy.”

What this means for the shorebirds

Ben Abbott, an assistant professor of ecosystem ecology at Brigham Young University, calls the return of bugs an important indicator of the lake’s health and the ecosystem. He refers to the lake’s current water levels — and salinity levels — as “night and day” compared to last year.

It helps out all sorts of birds — great blue herons, snowy egrets and American avocets — that can be seen throughout places like Farmington Bay, a vital habitat for migratory birds. In fact, state wildlife officials say there are more than 300 bird species that use the ecosystem every year.

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“They’re on the islands. They’re on the shoreline. Some of them are up in the vegetation. Some of them are on floating rafts of organic material,” he said. “It’s a peek at what the future could hold if we commit to long-term restoration of (the) Great Salt Lake.”

A snowy egret flies through Farmington Bay with a snow-capped mountain in the background on April 30. This year's record snowpack helped bring more than 5 feet back to the Great Salt Lake.
A snowy egret flies through Farmington Bay with a snow-capped mountain in the background on April 30. This year’s record snowpack helped bring more than 5 feet back to the Great Salt Lake. (Photo: Carter Williams, KSL.com)

Gardner and the team of volunteers also returned to the Great Salt Lake and various other bodies of water in the region between April 24 and April 28 to count the birds again as part of the first spring survey since the 1990s.

The survey team counted a little less than 85,000 total shorebirds, nearly half of which were American avocet, according to the team’s preliminary report. They found about 23 different species of migratory shorebirds on the day, including some rare birds like semipalmated pectoral sandpipers and whimbrels.

It may seem like a significant dropoff from the more than 228,000 shorebirds detailed during the August survey; however, Gardner said this is likely because researchers “missed the peak” during the spring migration period. It’s possible that many of the birds, especially the ones that spend the winter in South America, waited to migrate north because of the conditions.

“That happens. We pick our peak survey windows based on the past 10 years of when the shorebirds are most likely to come through,” she said. “Luckily, we don’t think it’s because they all died or something, necessarily. It’s just because … they have this spidey sense — the birder sense — that they’re gonna stick around in Argentina a little bit longer.”

An American avocet dips its beak into the water at Farmington Bay on April 30. The species accounted for nearly half of all the shorebirds found in the ecosystem along the Great Salt Lake during a shorebird survey conducted between April 24 and April 28.
An American avocet dips its beak into the water at Farmington Bay on April 30. The species accounted for nearly half of all the shorebirds found in the ecosystem along the Great Salt Lake during a shorebird survey conducted between April 24 and April 28. (Photo: Carter Williams, KSL.com)

John Neill, a Great Salt Lake ecosystem program wildlife biologist for the Utah Division of Wildlife Recourses, adds that the strong spring runoff reduced some of the shorebird habitats because the water mudflats they prefer were flooded. This may have factored into the count, too.

That said, he points out shorebirds are typically good at adjusting — “how they use the lake as their habitats shift through time.”

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It’s worth noting that the April survey is also a baseline number for the spring count. Researchers plan to return to the lake and count shorebirds every August and spring for at least the next three years as they track how shorebirds are reacting to changes within the Great Salt Lake ecosystem.

Meanwhile, Abbott maintains that lake levels are not where they need to be just yet. If lake levels rise another 5 feet, he predicts there would be a much larger increase in wildlife habitat.

Its increases this year are a step in the right direction, though.

“We’re able to see the short-term recovery of the ecosystem because of weather variability, and also that the public and our policymakers are staying so focused on conservation,” he said. “I think (it is) a really positive sign.”

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Utah

Here’s what Utahns need to make to afford a modest two-bedroom apartment

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Here’s what Utahns need to make to afford a modest two-bedroom apartment


This story is part of The Salt Lake Tribune’s ongoing commitment to identify solutions to Utah’s biggest challenges through the work of the Innovation Lab. [Subscribe to our newsletter here.]

Renters in most Utah counties likely don’t make enough to afford a modest, two-bedroom apartment, according to new data.

The “Out of Reach 2024″ report was released recently the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the National Low Income Housing Coalition. The report uses HUD’s fair-market rent calculations to determine the housing wage — how much a full-time worker must earn to afford a modest rental home without spending more than 30% of their income on housing — for states, counties and metropolitan areas across the country.

The report found that “more renters than ever before are paying more than they can afford on rent,” and risk homelessness, said Diane Yentel, who heads the coalition.

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That includes Utah, where the mean wage for renters was lower than the housing wage in all but four counties, and was within 50 cents of it in another two. All six are rural counties.

Renters in Utah can’t afford to buy a home in all but one county, according to a recent analysis by The Salt Lake Tribune of U.S. Census Bureau and real-estate industry data. And based on a Tribune analysis of the new report, they can’t afford to rent in most counties, either.

The coalition’s analysis found Utah’s statewide housing wage — what a person would have to earn to be able to afford a two-bedroom apartment at fair-market rent — is $26.89 an hour.

That cost varies from $17.40 an hour in several rural counties to $30.88 in Salt Lake County, and a maximum of $34.75 in Summit County. There is data available for every county in Utah except Daggett County.

Meanwhile, the mean renter wage is lower statewide and in nearly every county than the housing wage — sometimes by double-digit numbers.

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It’s only higher in Duchesne, Garfield, San Juan and Wayne counties, all rural counties in eastern or southeastern Utah.

Mean renter wages also are lower but within 50 cents an hour in two other counties — Box Elder County in the northwestern part of the state and Uintah County in eastern Utah. That gap is small enough that the NLIHC determined a renter could work one job and still afford a modest, two-bedroom apartment.

In other counties, the gap between the typical renter and housing wages varies from 87 cents in Beaver County to $15.64 in Kane County and averages about $7 an hour (more than $14,500 a year).

There is more affordability for one-bedroom apartments, but the mean renter wage is still short in 18 counties, including Cache, Davis, Grand, Iron, Kane, Salt Lake, Tooele, Washington and Weber.

The gap matters because even in “an improving economic landscape,” renters continue to struggle, Yentel said, and that leads to more evictions and higher rates of homelessness.

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There is, however, some good news for Utah renters.

For one, the state’s housing wage is about in the middle compared to other states.

Utah’s housing wage also is lower than neighboring Arizona, Colorado and Nevada, as well as other western states like California, Oregon and Washington. Utah’s northern neighbors have housing wages somewhat lower than Utah’s — Idaho’s is about $4 lower, and Wyoming’s is about $8 lower.

And though there are new and luxury rentals across the state that cost much more than the fair-market rent HUD set, one analysis found typical rents for one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments are lower.

Median rent along the Wasatch Front is between $77 and $166 a month less than fair-market rent for two-bedroom apartments, according to data from ApartmentList.com.

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And median rent is only higher than fair-market in Davis County by $8, the ApartmentList data shows — it is lower in Salt Lake, Utah and Weber counties by at least $80.

Utah has focused on ways to improve the state’s housing crisis, but most have focused on homeownership.

As part of the Out of Reach report, the coalition suggested solutions for the rental side, though they are actions the federal government is advised to take. The coalition has recommended:

  • Long-term federal investments in affordable housing, including rental assistance.

  • Construction of deeply affordable housing.

  • Preservation of existing affordable housing.

  • Stronger renter protections.

Megan Banta is The Salt Lake Tribune’s data enterprise reporter, a philanthropically supported position. The Tribune retains control over all editorial decisions.



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Utah

Utah Made: Multi-generational ladder company still going strong

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Utah Made: Multi-generational ladder company still going strong


SPRINGVILLE, Utah — Art Wing still fondly remembers when his late dad Hal Wing, the founder of Little Giant Ladders, said: “If you concentrate on building the company and not the person, you will fail. If you concentrate on building the person, the company will take care of itself.”

That motto is still at Little Giant’s core today.

In the early 1970s, Hal was a salesman living in Germany, forging a friendship with an inventor who created a ladder that Hal thought was a technological marvel. He took the idea back to the United States, perfecting it and pattening it before heading out on the road.

“He bought a pinto station wagon and he loaded it with ladders, and he went on the road upwards of 250 days a year just selling them out of that thing,” Art recalled.

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Art says the roadshow worked, and people quickly took note of their sturdy ladders and all they could do.

In 2002, Little Giant Ladders climbed to new heights by hitting television screens all over the country with an infomercial that often ran late at night and on weekend afternoons. It was a catchy ad that ran for 16 years and racked up sales of over a billion dollars in ladders sold.

Today, the Little Giant brand continues where it started, calling Utah home.

Company president and CEO Ryan Moss says the Beehive State is headquarters for good reason.

“We have great people here in the state of Utah. Honestly, that is one of the best blessings about Little Giant, is the wonderful people that we get to work with every single day,” Moss said. “They’re hardworking, they’re smart, they’re creative.” 

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While Utah is the Little Giant premier factory, the company has facilities and warehouses all over the world, working to keep their standards and safety high. Globally, Little Giant employs several thousand people, together taking a small idea to a huge enterprise and stepping up the ladder of success with no end in sight





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Warning issued after harmful algal bloom found at Utah Lake marina

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Warning issued after harmful algal bloom found at Utah Lake marina


SARATOGA SPRINGS, Utah — A Warning Advisory has been issued for an area along Utah Lake after a harmful algal bloom was detected Tuesday.

The City of Saratoga Springs said the bloom was found present at the Saratoga Springs, and could be producing dangerous toxins that would be harmful to humans and animals.

The Utah County Health Department issued the warning, advising people to do the following when in the vicinity of the marina:

  • Do not swim or water ski
  • Avoid areas of algae when boating
  • Clean fish well and discard guts
  • Keep animals away
  • Don’t drink the water

Algal blooms can cause skin, nerve and liver damage,





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