State fines construction firm for sending muddy water into creek near Columbia Falls
CHRIS PETERSON | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 6 hours, 36 minutes AGO
Chris Peterson is the editor of the Hungry Horse News. He covers Columbia Falls, the Canyon, Glacier National Park and the Bob Marshall Wilderness. All told, about 4 million acres of the best parts of the planet. He can be reached at [email protected] or 406-892-2151. | April 24, 2026 12:00 AM
The Montana Department of Environmental Quality fined Schellinger Construction $11,750 for accidentally discharging muddied waters into a tributary of Garnier Creek last summer.
The company has since taken corrective action, so the fine amount was cut in half, the agency noted in a letter to the company in February.
Kyle Schellinger of Schellinger Construction noted the fine and subsequent letter brings the company into compliance following the incident.
The fines are in addition to a $15,000 penalty levied against the company by the Flathead Conservation District last year. In that case, the district found the company had violated the terms of what’s known as a 310 permit, which sets parameters and safeguards for working near streams.
Garnier Creek is a small trout stream adjacent to Tamarack Meadows, a subdivision at the north end of Meadow Lake Resort, which is owned by Schellinger. The muddy water went into the creek as the company was pumping water out of nearby stormwater ponds.
On Aug. 12, 2025 state officials received multiple citizen complaints that Schellinger was actively discharging water from the retention ponds on the site to Garnier Creek, the Department of Environmental Quality said in its report.
“A citizen provided photographs to DEQ that showed turbid water in Garnier Creek due to Schellinger’s dewatering activities. Later, on Aug. 12, 2025, Nathan Malmin from Schellinger called DEQ to report a discharge to Garnier Creek. Schellinger submitted a non-compliance report to DEQ for this unpermitted discharge on Aug. 13, 2025.
“On August 13, 2025, DEQ conducted a second compliance evaluation inspection (known as a CEI) at the site in response to the citizen complaints and Schellinger’s noncompliance report. During the August CEI, DEQ observed two locations where Schellinger’s dewatering activities had caused mud and sediment to discharge into a ditch, which then continued as a single flow of sediment-laden water that discharged into Garnier Creek. Sedimentation of Garnier Creek was observed over 0.35 miles downstream of the discharge point. DEQ also observed that Best Management Practices identified in a July CEI had not been implemented as required. DEQ concluded that failure to implement the Best Management Practices was a partial cause of the unpermitted discharge and the subsequent pollution of Garnier Creek resulted, in part, from failure to properly implement Best Management Practices at the site,” officials with the Department of Environmental Quality noted.
On July 18, 2025, there were similar complaints from neighbors about muddied water going into the creek from the pond work, but a state inspector did not see muddied water entering the creek despite finding other violations.
The company, however, has since taken corrective action. The ponds are part of the drainage system for the new subdivision, which has the roads and other infrastructure in. They are required by the state as part of the subdivision plat.
The subdivision was first approved by Columbia Falls in 2022, as it was formerly inside the city’s “doughnut” planning jurisdiction. The doughnut was a roughly mile to two-mile zone around the city, but outside the city limits, that the city formerly had jurisdiction over.
But the Montana Land Use Planning Act, passed by the state Legislature a few years ago, did away with the doughnut, so now the county has jurisdiction over the subdivision. The Department of Environmental Quality has jurisdiction over state waters and discharge, and the conservation district over work near streams.
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State fines construction firm for sending muddy water into creek near Columbia Falls
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