Upper Jefferson TMDL Project Home Page
Project Outreach Completed & Future TMDL Projects
Page Contents
The Jefferson River TMDL Project Area encompasses the entire Jefferson River watershed and lies in west central Montana, situated mainly in Jefferson and Madison counties, with portions in Silver Bow, Gallatin, and Broadwater counties (Map 1). The Jefferson River begins near the town of Twin Bridges at the confluence of the Beaverhead, Big Hole, and Ruby rivers, and flows into the Missouri River near Three Forks, MT. The upper portion of the watershed also includes the towns of Whitehall and Cardwell.
Map 1: Jefferson River TMDL Project Area Boundary
(Click on map to enlarge)
The state of Montana monitors its waters and conducts water quality assessments to determine if waterbodies are supporting their designated uses (such as aquatic life; drinking water; and agricultural, industrial, and recreational uses). Each waterbody has a set of designated uses, and Montana has established water quality standards to protect those uses. Waters that are determined not to be supporting one or more of their designated uses are called impaired and are placed on Montana’s list of impaired waters. Impaired waterbodies and their associated probable causes and sources of impairment are published within Montana’s biennial water quality integrated report.
Montana’s state law, and the federal Clean Water Act established by Congress in 1972, requires development of total maximum daily loads (TMDLs) for all waterbodies impaired by a pollutant (e.g., metals, nutrients, salinity, sediment, temperature). A TMDL is the maximum amount of a pollutant that a waterbody can receive and still meet water quality standards (think of a TMDL as a loading rate).
TMDL development includes four main steps:
The TMDL planning process for this project incorporated a combination of water quality sampling and hydrologic modeling to further identify and quantify metals and temperature contributions from all significant sources to the streams identified in Table 1 below. The metals and temperature TMDLs are contained in separate documents, each containing information from the above four steps and also strategies and recommended land management practices for improving water quality. Additional detail about the TMDL development process can be found on the What is a TMDL page on this site. You can also download our pamphlet: Understanding the TMDL Process (580 kb).
This 2014 project included the entire Jefferson River and tributaries to the upper segment of the river (headwaters to confluence with the Jefferson Slough) (Table 1), and resulted in two separate TMDL documents (a metals document and a temperature document, both discussed below). Tributaries to the lower segment of the Jefferson River (Jefferson Slough to the confluence with the Missouri River) were not included. Project status updates and information on stakeholder and public meetings that were held for this project are still available on the Jefferson River TMDL Project Outreach page.
Map 2: Included Streams in the Jefferson Metals TMDL Project
(Click on map to enlarge)
Table 1: TMDLs Written in 2014 in the Jefferson River TMDL Project Area
Waterbody Name & Location Description |
Waterbody ID |
Metals TMDLs |
|
Big Pipestone Creek headwaters to mouth (Jefferson Slough) |
MT41G002_010 |
Arsenic |
|
Jefferson River headwaters to confluence of Jefferson Slough |
MT41G001_011 |
Iron Lead |
Temperature |
Jefferson River confluence of Jefferson Slough to mouth (Missouri River) |
MT41G001_012 |
Copper Lead |
|
Jefferson Slough Jefferson River to the mouth (Jefferson River) |
MT41G002_170 |
Arsenic Cadmium Copper Zinc |
|
Little Whitetail Creek 1 Whitetail Reservoir to mouth (Whitetail Deer Creek) |
MT41G002_140 |
Aluminum Copper Lead |
|
Whitetail Deer Creek 1 Headwaters to mouth (Jefferson Slough) |
MT41G002_141 |
Aluminum Lead |
|
1 In error, Little Whitetail Creek and Whitetail Deer Creek have swapped location descriptions in the “2012 Water Quality Integrated Report.” The 2014 integrated report will reflect the above location descriptions. |
Metals TMDLs were written for the Jefferson River, Jefferson Slough, and multiple tributaries in the upper portion of the Jefferson River watershed in 2014 (Table 1 and Map 2 above), and were published in the"Jefferson River Metals Project Area TMDLs and Water Quality Improvement Plan" document, approved by EPA in December of 2014. Copies of the document are also available at the Butte, Twin Bridges, Whitehall, and Three Forks public libraries and at the Montana State Library in Helena.
Metals Water Quality Data & Impairments
Metals water quality sampling was conducted between 2003 and 2013 on the streams listed in Table 2 below, and samples were analyzed for a full suite of metals parameters. Water quality assessments were recently performed with the data using DEQ’s Metals Assessment Method, and a TMDL was written for all determined metals impairments (fourth column of Table 2 below and Map 2 above).
Table 2: Metals Impairments & Updated Assessment Results
Waterbody Name & Location Description |
Waterbody / Assessment Unit ID |
Metals Impairments in the 2012 IR |
Updated Impairment Status / Impairments for the 2014 IR |
Big Pipestone Creek headwaters to mouth (Jefferson Slough) |
MT41G002_010 |
No metals impairments |
Arsenic |
Cherry Creek headwaters to mouth (Jefferson River) |
MT41G002_110 |
Zinc |
Not Impaired |
Jefferson River headwaters to confluence of Jefferson Slough |
MT41G001_011 |
Copper Lead |
Iron Lead |
Jefferson River confluence of Jefferson Slough to mouth (Missouri River) |
MT41G001_012 |
Copper Lead |
Copper Lead |
Jefferson Slough Jefferson River to the mouth (Jefferson River) |
MT41G002_170 |
Not Assessed |
Arsenic Cadmium Copper Zinc |
Little Whitetail Creek * Whitetail Reservoir to mouth (Whitetail Deer Creek) |
MT41G002_140 |
Not Assessed |
Dissolved Aluminum Copper Lead |
Whitetail Deer Creek * Headwaters to mouth (Jefferson Slough) |
MT41G002_141 |
Aluminum Copper Lead Silver |
Dissolved Aluminum Lead |
* In error, Little Whitetail Creek and Whitetail Deer Creek have swapped assessment unit IDs and incorrect location descriptions in the “2012 Water Quality Integrated Report” (IR). Additionally, Whitetail Deer Creek is called “Whitetail Creek” in the 2012 IR. The 2014 IR reflects the above location descriptions and assessment unit IDs. |
For complete information on each stream’s probable impairments, causes, and sources in the “2012 Water Quality Integrated Report,” see DEQ’s Clean Water Act Information Center. Click on “Search,” choose the “By Location” tab, and then select the Upper Jefferson TMDL Planning Area from the “Select a TPA” drop-down list. You may also search by the Assessment Unit IDs given in the table above.
A temperature TMDL was written for the upper segment of the Jefferson River (headwaters to the confluence of the Jefferson Slough) in 2014. This was part of a separate, but concurrent, project that also included development of a temperature TMDL for the lower segment of the Beaverhead River. The two TMDLs are contained in the "Lower Beaverhead River and Upper Jefferson River Temperature TMDLs" document that was approved by the U.S. EPA in November of 2014. Additional information can be found on the Beaverhead – Upper Jefferson Temperature TMDL Project page.
The lower segment of the Jefferson River and Big Pipestone Creek, a tributary to the upper segment of the Jefferson River, also have temperature impairments; however they will not being addressed until post 2014.
Information on water quality impairments in both the upper and lower portions of the watershed that will be addressed after 2014 can be found on the Completed and Future TMDL Projects in the Jefferson River Watershed page, as well as information on sediment TMDLs that were completed in 2009.
Role |
Contact |
|
Phone |
Project Coordinator | Christina Staten | cstaten@mt.gov | (406) 444-2836 |
Metals Project Manager |
Lou Volpe |
(406) 444-6742 |
|
Temperature Project Manager |
Kristy Fortman |
(406) 444-7425 |
Page Released: December 3, 2013
Last Updated: August 3, 2015