From This Week In Texas
Are we making progress in cleaning up America’s rivers?
Apr 29, 2007
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| New York's beautiful Hudson River as seen from a tunnel under the Sawmill parkway. For years, General Electric dumped PCBs in the river. The company has now finally complied with state and federal mandates to begin removal. (Photo By Getty Images) |
When the Cuyahoga River caught fire in downtown Cleveland in June of
1969, a nation already becoming more aware of environmental problems
took note. Across the country, people were fed up with bans on swimming
and fishing due to growing pollution levels. And rampant logging was
clogging many a remote river system with soil and debris, making them
uninhabitable by the fish that had evolved there for eons.
In 1972, in response to such concerns, Congress passed the landmark
Clean Water Act, which regulates the discharge of pollution into
America’s waterways. This important law has worked well to curtail
pollution and keep development in check, but it does little to restore
already damaged river ecosystems.
Luckily, a large array of local governments, nonprofit organizations
and ad hoc citizen groups has risen to the challenge, making the United
States the world’s nexus for river restoration work. The National River
Restoration Science Synthesis Project, a 2005 survey conducted by
leading river scientists, identified 37,000 different river restoration
projects either completed or underway across the U.S.
According to the survey, American taxpayers and foundations have
invested nearly $15 billion in U.S. river restoration projects—or about
$1 billion yearly—since 1990. Projects include: reforesting riverbanks
to curb erosion; recreating natural river channels to reduce downstream
flooding; removing dams to allow fish to migrate more freely; and
restoring wetlands to better do their jobs at naturally filtering
pollution.
Some specific high profile examples include Native Americans and
farmers working together to bring wild salmon back to Oregon’s Umatilla
River, and the creation of natural habitat and buffer zones along
Texas’ San Antonio River. And General Electric finally complied with
state and federal mandates to begin removal of the PCBs they had dumped
in New York’s Hudson River for years.
“It’s no mystery why river restoration is booming,” says Andrew Fahlund
of the nonprofit American Rivers, a leading rivers advocacy group.
“Rivers in good condition more readily meet the needs of the
surrounding community than polluted and degraded rivers.”
A new House budget resolution calls for increased spending on programs
to reduce the amount of raw sewage going into American streams and to
better manage the nation’s 168 designated “wild and scenic” rivers. The
resolution also calls for allocating funds for removing obsolete dams
that could rupture and threaten nearby communities with potentially
catastrophic flash floods.
Despite the positive trends, not all rivers are doing well. American
Rivers’ annual list of “America’s Most Endangered Rivers” highlights
river ecosystems across the U.S. that are still in disrepair or under
threat. Those on the 2007 list include New Mexico’s Santa Fe, New
York’s Upper Delaware, Washington’s White Salmon, Texas’s Neches,
Wisconsin’s Kinnickinnic, North Carolina’s Neuse, Alaska’s Chuitna,
Iowa’s namesake Iowa River, Arkansas and Oklahoma’s Lee Creek, and
California’s San Mateo Creek.
CONTACTS: The National River Restoration Science Synthesis Project, nrrss.nbii.gov; American Rivers, www.americanrivers.org
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