Tuesday, May 10, 2011

New data show Chesapeake streams in bad health

It is little comfort that Neabsco Creek is one of the many streams this report refers to. 

New data show Chesapeake streams in bad health

Tuesday - 5/10/2011, 4:09am  ET
    By ALEX DOMINGUEZ
    Associated Press Writer

    BALTIMORE (AP) - Most streams in the Chesapeake watershed are in poor condition, according to data released Monday by the Chesapeake Bay Program.
    The federal and state partnership that coordinates restoration efforts, also released data showing reductions in key pollutants over the past 25 years at monitoring sites along tributaries that feed the Chesapeake, but noted levels were still below restoration goals.
    The stream survey involved sampling of nearly 8,000 streams sites between 2000 and 2008 and found 54 percent were in poor or very poor condition while 27 percent were in excellent or good condition.
    Peter Tango, Chesapeake Watershed Coordinator for the U.S. Geological Survey, said the monitoring shows a clear link between land use and stream quality with those in urban, farming and mining areas faring the worst.
    Chesapeake Bay Foundation scientist Beth McGee said the findings show the fragile nature of streams, and how small amounts of development can affect them.
    Paved surfaces covering as little as 5 percent to 10 percent of an area can affect nearby streams, and urban areas such as Baltimore and Washington can often have 30 percent to 50 percent, McGee said.
    Streams are affected because paved surfaces do not allow rainwater to seep into the ground where it is filtered, but instead runs off the hardened surfaces into waterways, carrying pollutants.
    "When you keep that in context it's not surprising a majority of our streams are not in good health," said McGee, a water quality scientist for the foundation, a nonprofit bay advocacy group that was not involved in the research.
    Nitrogen and phosphorus monitoring, meanwhile, found reductions at 70 percent of monitoring sites throughout the bay watershed while cuts in sediment, which can cloud water and bury bay grasses, were noted at 40 percent of the 32 monitoring sites. The readings were adjusted to account for differences between rainier and drier years, the researchers said.
    Scott Phillips, the U.S. Geological Survey's Chesapeake Bay Coordinator, said much of the improvement can be attributed to upgrades to wastewater treatment plants, which often yield the most immediate gains because they affect a single source. Changes in farming practices and other changes that are spread over wider areas take longer to detect, but are having an impact, he said.
    The program also released its estimates for the amount of each of the three pollutants that entered the bay in the 12 months ending in September.
    Flows into the bay were about average, but heavy winter snows led to higher flows at times that washed pollutants into the Chesapeake.
    About 9 million tons of sediment, for example, entered the bay in that period, an increase of seven million tons over the prior year and one of the highest loads in the past 20 years, more than double the long-term average of four million tons.
    Meanwhile, about 278 million pounds of nitrogen reached the bay, 43 million pounds more than 2009, and about 16 million pounds of phosphorus, seven million pounds more than in 2009. The bay program's goal is about 202 million pounds of nitrogen and 13 million pounds of phosphorus. Nitrogen and phosphorus, which come from sewage, fertilizer and automobile and power plant emissions, are so-called nutrients that can cause algae blooms that rob bay water of oxygen.
    Will Baker, the president of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, which sued the federal Environmental Protection Agency over the slow pace of bay restoration, said the reductions were good news but incremental steps in the restoration process.
    "If we let down our guard now, there's no doubt in my mind the bay will revert to being even worse than it is today," Baker said.

    Monday, April 25, 2011

    Developer Filling In PW County Wetlands in violation of Clean Water Act?

    So, when I heard our Developer, MASAC, LLC (owned by Robert B. Hart) was planning another construction project on Neabsco Creek, just west of my neighborhood I had to wonder how he was permitted to fill in the wetlands to make a quick buck.  Specifically, how could he have built our neighborhood, the Wawa a block away, and now this new project while leaving the creek so damaged?

    Well, it turns out, he simply didn't ask.  Our excellent civil servants in the Department of Environment Quality did an very thorough job of filling my Freedom of Information Act request and it turns out there were NO permits issued to MASAC, Robert Hart or DR Horton (our builder) for placing fill in a wetland related to any of these projects.  Unfortunately for them, per Wikipedia (which is a lot less wordy than the text of the Clean Water Act):
    Under sections 301 and 502 of the Clean Water Act,[35] any discharge of dredged or fill materials into "waters of the United States," including wetlands, is forbidden unless authorized by a permit issued by the USACE pursuant to section 404.[36] Essentially, all discharges of fill or dredged material affecting the bottom elevation of a jurisdictional water of the U.S. require a permit from USACE. These permits are an essential part of protecting wetlands, which are often filled by land developers. Wetlands are vital to the ecosystem in filtering streams and rivers and providing habitat for wildlife.[37]

    Naturally, my next stop was to our site engineer at Prince William County Development Services (who should have all the required permits on file).  Interestingly, he could not answer my question and referred me to their "wetland staff".  I have not heard from them four days later (though, granted, it was a holiday weekend). 

    I will assume MASAC is going to attempt to make the case that we do not live on a wetland.  If we temporarily disregard the reporting from multiple highly reliable sources that have lived across the street for the past 20 years, the soil under the fill in my yard should completely dispell this argument (I have been planting trees for the past week).  One I dig through the fill dirt, the soil becomes orange gley (indicating standing surface water, according to my research), sand, dark gray gley, sand, then polished small river rock.  All within 18-24 inches of the surface. 

    The professional at DEQ who is helping me (who shall remain nameless, unless I recieve permission to name him) is planning on coming out to see the situation in the next few days.  I will keep you posted.

    Thursday, April 7, 2011

    PW County Visit

    So, last week I had the opportunity to meet with Assistant Environmental Engineer from Prince William County Timothy Hughes.   We had a good walk (other than me falling in the creek) and he took a lot of pictures and made some suggestions. 

    The fantastic news is that it looks like the county is going to step up and help!  PW Public Works Environmental Engineer is currently working up a cost estimate to clean up the really big junk on the flood plain.  It will take some paperwork, but they are taking the right steps! 

    Thank you Supervisor Frank Principi for getting all the balls rolling!  I'll be updating here as progress continues...

    In the meantime I am researching natural ways to deal with excessive algae blooms...we have one on the creek that appears to be killing off the fish...

    Friday, March 25, 2011

    Clean Up, 19 March 2011

    My most sincere thanks going out to the Woodbridge Potomac Community Civic Association, Porter Traditional School, Supervisor Frank Principi and the local community for an unbelievable clean up effort for Neabsco Creek.  56 people came out, pulled a shopping cart, at least a dozen tires, a car battery, and a half a construction-size dumpster worth of trash out of the creek and surrounding flood plain.   The Prince William Clean Community Council, the PW Soil and Conservation District Adopt a Stream Coordinator Kelly Jimenez also joined the effort.

    We had great success cleaning up the simple trash...what we could not clean included an old commercial refrigerator (buried), a truck axle (tires still attached), piles of construction debris, tons of logs and dead trees and a leaking oil boom. 

    Here are some pictures, courtesy of Kelly Jimenez (I am the crazy person in the waders).














    Where we started

    So this is the monitored location.  This map shows Route 1 and Neabsco Rd in Woodbridge Virginia.  The building on the left is a Wawa gas station, which was essentially built on a manufactured penninsula on the creek flood plain.  Our housing development was also built on fill to elevate it above the flood plain.  About a mile to the east is the Potomac River. 
    All of this land used to be part of the Lee Family (as in Cival War General Robert E. Lee) Plantation.  Leesylvania State Park is about a mile downstream, too.  The bulk of the land in this photo around the creek is now owned by Prince William County Park Authority and developer Robert B. Hart.

    
    VDOT Picture Taken in 2007
    
    Until 2009, this portion of Neabsco Creek had a nasty habit of flooding Route 1 (a major Northern Virginia Road) because of the huge amount of debris that collected under the old bridge.  So, the Virginia DOT solved that problem by building a higher bridge so all of the debris would not get stuck any longer. 
    This, of course, did not even remotely solve the problem, it just pushed all of the trash into the creek wetlands and the Potomac River.  Solves VDOT's problem, but since my drinking water comes from the Potomac--like most of Northern Virginia--I am not as fond of this solution as they were.


    
    My picture taken during rain storm in Fall 2010--after new bridge completed
    
    One of dozens of tires in the creek--along with an oil sheen
    What is difficult to see in the above satellite photo is that only a few yards west of Route 1, bordering the creek is a complex of auto repair shops.  Now, we all need auto repair businesses (I have to go to work, too), but I am pretty sure I pay a disposal fee each time I need new tires so the company can properly dispose of them.  Paying them to throw tires into the creek does not really qualify as "Properly dispose" in my book.  Yet there are dozens of tires within 4 blocks of those shops.  Not a coincidence.

    In addition to the Wawa shown in the picture, there are 4 more gas stations within 2 blocks of the creek at this point--7-11, Shell and a PW Police Vehicle gas station.  ALL of the runoff flows directly to the creek.  Add the auto repair oil changes and absolutely nothing in place to clean up accidental spills and we get a glossy sheen on the water. 

    Living on Neabsco Creek

    So, when my family found a beautiful new house bordering the Neabsco Creek wetlands in Woodbridge, VA in February 2010, I had no idea that it would evolve into a cause.   

    But, as the months progress, I watched the state of the little waterway behind my house deteriorate at a rapid pace.  Of course, the builder of my community neglected to tell me how much debris and trash they had pulled out of the creek prior to selling my tiny community.  Trash, pollution, trees, tires, construction trash...it is all here. 

    The problem is overwhelmingly bad...and this is the point just before the creek flows into the Potomac River, which then flows to the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean.  So, the problem of my little creek is a single example that is mirrored a thousand times in the US into the river that provides our drinking water.  That thought makes me slightly ill.

    This creek at the point I am monitoring it sits on Prince William County Park Authority property.  So, this is blog is my journal of working with county officials and local non-profits and environmental groups to do my small part cleaning up the water...and my astonishment at the indifference from the people I thought were handling the problem.