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Posts Tagged ‘Susquehanna River’

Celebrating Improvements to West Branch Susquehanna River, Restoration of Water Quality, Fish Population

May 12th, 2010

Harrisburg, PA–(May 6, 2010)

Contact Tom Rathbun, PADEP at 717-787-1323

Twenty years of coordinated efforts to restore life to the West Branch Susquehanna River in north-central Pennsylvania have led to marked improvements in water quality, as well increases in fish populations and diversity that are detailed in a benchmark study released by Trout Unlimited, in cooperation with PADEP, the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission, the Susquehanna River Basin Commission, and an alliance of approximately 30 watershed associations, conservation districts, and local businesses comprising the West Branch Susquehanna Restoration Coalition.  Final results of the benchmark study will be released in the fall.

The West Branch Susquehanna River is the centerpiece of the Pennsylvania Wilds, yet more than 1,000 miles of this majestic river and its tributaries are sterile or badly degraded from mine drainage and pollution from thousands of acres of abandoned mine sites. However, a renaissance has begun, and we are seeing measurable results that are leading to recreational and economic opportunities that will benefit the entire state.

–J. Scott Roberts, DEP’s deputy secretary for Mineral Resources Management

The study compares chemical and biological conditions of the Susquehanna from the mid-1980s to 2009, finding dramatic improvements in water quality with a 72 percent reduction in iron and an 87 percent reduction in aluminum in Clearfield County.  Alkaline treatment of mine discharges has significantly reduced acidity levels in the river, while pH has steadily increased from 3.9 in 1984 — a toxic level for most aquatic life — to 6.4 last year.

A 1998 fishery survey in Clinton County found only three species in the West Branch, contrasted with surveys from 2009 that found 16 species at this location and a 3,000 percent increase in catch rates.  Overall, researchers assessed water quality and habitat data at 11 sites on the river and at the mouth of 69 mine-drainage-impaired tributaries.  Fish populations were assessed at nine sites.

This remarkable progress is the direct result of cooperation among government, the mining industry and the environmental community to seek out innovative and cost-effective ways to reclaim old mine sites and treat historic mine discharges. Under Governor Rendell’s leadership, we have created the Mine Drainage Trust Fund to finance systems that will treat some of the most significant mine discharges in the watershed and restore water quality in the headwater of the West Branch, as well as Clearfield Creek and the Bennett Branch of Sinnemahoning Creek.

–J. Scott Roberts, DEP’s deputy secretary for Mineral Resources Management

PADEP has committed significant resources to restoring the West Branch Susquehanna River, including:

  • $73 million in Growing Greener grants to watershed groups and local governments for 620 projects;
  • $14 million through 63 bond-forfeiture projects that have reclaimed 1,131 acres of abandoned mines;
  • More than $50 million in Abandoned Mine Reclamation contracts to reclaim 2,357 acres; and
  • $2.1 million to plug 115 abandoned natural gas wells in four counties in the watershed.

For more information, visit  www.wbsrc.org.


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Chesapeake Bay From Space After Heavy Rain: “Big Brown Stain of Chocolate Milk”

February 19th, 2010

A satellite image taken by NASA after heavy rain shows “a big brown stain of chocolate milk spewing from the Susquehanna River, in the far north, and spreading more than 50 miles south, past Annapolis,” writes Tom Pelton in the Chesapeake Bay Foundation’s Bay Daily blog. “Similar smudges ooze down the Potomac and James rivers. It ain’t chocolate Wonka fans…”

Chesapeake Bay from Space

Read the complete post.

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EPA Announces New Region 3 Administrator, SRBC Seeks Water Quality Monitoring Partners

November 12th, 2009

EPA News

On Thursday, November 5th the US EPA announced that Shawn M. Garvin will be the agency’s new Regional Administrator for the EPA’s mid-Atlantic region (Region 3).  Garvin previously worked for EPA Region 3 as EPA Region 3’s Senior State and Congressional Liaison.  He joined EPA in 1997, and is a graduate from the University of Delaware.  For the full announcement, go to the EPA Newsroom.

Susquehanna River Basin Commission (SRBC) Seeks Partners for Proposed Real-Time Water Quality Monitoring Networks for Small Streams

The water quality monitoring network will record water quality data for several small rivers and streams in the northern tier of PA and southern tier NY.  The data would be received in real-time by state and federal water management officials and other participating watershed groups.  The monitoring will help to determine whether streams are being impacted by development including activities associated with the natural gas industry. Read DEP’s news release, or go to SRBC’s website for more information.

Call for presenters…

The Delaware County Environmental Network (DCEN) would like to hold an Environmental Summit in March of 2010 and is interested in learning from anyone wishing to present a topic. Anyone wishing to submit a proposal please send them to Ed Magargee - Delaware County Conservation District, Rose Tree Park - Hunt Club, 1521 N. Providence Road, Media, PA 19063.  Email address : MagargeeE@co.delaware.pa.us

R.S.V.P. by December 15, 2009.

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