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Yaak woman named to Western Montana Conservation Commission

by The Western News
| December 26, 2023 7:00 AM

Last month, Governor Greg Gianforte announced eight appointments to the Western Montana Conservation Commission. 

Their work began during the inaugural meeting of the WMCC on Nov. 2-3.  

“Each of you brings your own background expertise and together you’re better because of that combined knowledge and experience,” said Lieutenant Governor Kristen Juras  “Thank you for taking this commitment on and for working to preserve our Montana waters.”  

Yaak local Sandy Beder-Miller is the private industry representative for the commission. 

According to her bio, Beder-Miller has a Bachelor of Science in forestry from the University of Massachusetts (1977) and a master's degree in Statistics (1979) from North Carolina State University. She retired in August 2018 after working as a forest biometrician, computer programmer and a statistician for the U.S. EPA in Duluth, Minnesota. She came to the pulp and paper industry in 1988 for Potlatch Corporation in Cloquet, Minnesota, as a pulp mill relief supervisor. 

She later worked for Boise Cascade Pulp and Paper Mill in eastern Washington. She moved to a pulp and paper instrumentation supplier, BTG Americas Inc., in May of 2000 as a senior applications specialist. 

Beder-Miller received the Howard Rapson Memorial Award from the Pulp and Paper Technical Association of Canada in 2015 for the best chemical bleaching paper presented at a technical conference. Sandy has been married for 42 years to Larry Miller, a forest geneticist (now retired). Together they have raised three daughters. They moved to Yaak, Montana, in 2014. 

Beder-Miller has become active in local community activities, such as Lincoln County WINGS, and is on the planning committee for the Yaak WINGS Annual Auction event. She also serves as a trustee on the Yaak Elementary School Board.

The following individuals were appointed to serve on the commission: 

- Electric Cooperative Representative: Duane Braaten – Flathead Electric Co-op Trustee 

- Flathead River Basin Representative: Mike Koopal - Executive Director, Whitefish Lake Institute 

- Private Citizen At Large: Phil Matson – Research Coordinator, Flathead Lake Biological Station 

- Kootenai River Basin Representative: Lech Naumovich – Director and Ecologist, Greater Than Image, LLC 

- Private Landowner: Matt Peterson – Civil Engineer, NewFields 

- Hydropower Utility Industry Representative: Arthur Potts – Terrestrial Program Manager, Avista 

- Upper Clark Fork River Basin & Blackfoot River Basin: Onno Wieringa – Recreation Business Owner and Manager 

- Lower Clark Fork River Basin & Bitterroot River Basin: not filled 

Mike Koopal, Executive Director of the Whitefish Lake Institute, was appointed to chair the commission with Onno Wieringa as vice chair. Koopal previously served on the Flathead Basin Commission (FBC) Executive Committee and on the Upper Columbia Conservation Commission (UC3) Early Detection and Monitoring Committee.  

“We have an opportunity and responsibility to expand the successes of Flathead Basin Commission’s long 40-year history across western Montana. Coupled with the Upper Columbia Conservation Commission’s five-year history of successes in AIS monitoring and outreach efforts across the region, WMCC can engage with more groups and communities to address important water quality and natural resource issues,” said Koopal. “The Governor’s Office has assembled a group of talented individuals to serve as commissioners and I look forward to working with them to protect our connected waters and our connected economy.”  

Together with the governor-appointed voting members, WMCC’s membership consists of seven additional voting members representing county commissions, conservation districts, wastewater or storm water utilities, and the Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes (CSKT) natural resource department. The remaining eighteen members of the commission are nonvoting and advisory, along with representatives from state and federal agencies.  

Senate Bill 83 combined the roles and jurisdiction of the FBC and the UC3 effectively creating WMCC on July 1, 2023. 

The November 2 and 3 meeting focused on commission foundations including: introductions, an overview of the history of FBC and UC3, duties and responsibilities, financials, by-laws, committees, and future work directions. In adherence to the statutory duties of the commission, potential and past projects include community education and outreach, supporting a comprehensive aquatic invasive species prevention program, and monitoring and preventing point and nonpoint source pollution. 

“Since WMCC was established in July, we have been busy building upon the incredible foundations of FBC and UC3 to create a new organization. We’ve been meeting with new partners, continuing the work in our communities, sharing success at conferences across the US, and working with the Governor’s office to establish a diverse commission,” said WMCC Executive Director Casey Lewis. “I am impressed by the engaging energy of our new commission members as we begin this next chapter together to protect Montana waters.” 

The next WMCC meeting will be held in early 2024. For more information and to sign up for the WMCC newsletter, visit WesternMTWaters.com or contact Executive Director Casey Lewis at casey.lewis@mt.gov.