Photo courtesy of Louie Renville

‘Environmental protection is sacred to me’
U of M student Louie Renville believes everyone deserves access to clean water in their homes

If there’s one thing Louie Renville remembers about spending summers with his grandparents on the Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate Reservation in South Dakota, it’s the water.

“No one drank out of the faucet,” he says.

Renville was about 8 years old when he noticed that the water coming out of the tap was sometimes a murky brown—the result of contamination from agricultural runoff. He learned that the water in his home on St. Paul’s East Side was also tinged with what are known as “forever chemicals” from industrial waste disposal practices.

Those observations drew Renville to the University of Minnesota to study conservation and resource management and minor in water science.

“Everyone deserves clean drinking water coming from their own home,” he says.

Having grown up as a Gopher fan, watching football and basketball and touring the St. Paul side of the Twin Cities campus as a high school freshman, “it seemed like a dream school to me,” he says.

Learning the process

Renville, who is in his third year at the Twin Cities campus, has taken classes in hydrology and watershed management, environmental policy, and water-quality field methods. The latter class involves touring water facilities to see how water is treated in order to be conserved.

Last summer, he completed a 10-week internship with the water reclamation facility for the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community (SMSC). The facility treats the water that comes from the hotels and casino, cultural center, clinic, other locally owned buildings, and the homes of some 500-plus enrolled members. It uses chemical filtration to clean the water, Renville explains, which is then returned to the lakes.

“I got to see how things work in the field and be mentored by my co-workers and superiors,” he says.

Clean and restore

Renville plans to work at the facility this coming summer and pursue a master’s degree in water resources after graduating. He says receiving a scholarship from the SMSC has made his education possible.

“I wouldn’t be able to be where I am today and meet the people I have met and made the connections I have made without it,” he says.

He says he would like to work for his own community in South Dakota one day. His mission?

“Help get clean drinking water and make rules that stop the contamination. Clean the water and land, restore the wetlands,” he says. “Environmental protection is sacred to me.”

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