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Refreshed Mill Creek gets EPA attention
Refreshed Mill Creek gets EPA attention The nation’s top water official for the Environmental Protection Agency toured parts of Cincinnati this week, spending a steamy afternoon in the Mill Creek watershed Thursday. In sunglasses and a ball cap, Deputy Assistant Administrator of Water Nancy Stoner, viewed a rain garden outside a large South Fairmount apartment complex, accompanied by Hamilton County Commissioner Todd Portune. She nodded approval at the Laughing Brook, a small wetland of native plants adorned with public art that drains into the Mill Creek across from Spring Grove Cemetery. “Are there pollutants?” Stoner wanted to know, as she toured the creek for the first time, walking a portion of a newly paved 3½ mile bike and walking path at the edge of Spring Grove Village and Northside neighborhoods. “How’s the water quality?” Improving, answered Robin Corathers, executive director of the Mill Creek Restoration Project, focused on reclaiming the troubled waterway since 1994. Corather’s organization was recently named an Urban River Fellow, one of 10 in the country chosen for the first class of the EPA’s new Urban Waters program. The fellowship provides technical support and other resources to the fellows, no direct funds. Also as important, it creates a platform for the organizations to meet and share their experiences. Other fellows were chosen in Seattle, Wash., Buffalo, N.Y., and Denver, Colo., among others. One skill Cincinnati’s group already picked up was how to plant an edible garden, which they began to plant Thursday down the trail from Laughing Brook. “We envision someone riding down the trail can just pluck an apple and continue on,” Corathers said. The highlight of the tour was natural and spontaneous. Stoner leaned against the chain-link fence as the group watched a great blue heron snap up a fish, drop it, fish it out again, then gobble it down. “Will you look at that,” Corathers said. =================================== Crash course: The Mill Creek The Mill Creek watershed is part of 37 communities and encompasses an 166 square-mile radius – twice the size of the city of Cincinnati. Industrial, agricultural and waste removal practices in earlier years polluted the waterway, earning the creek the classification of “most endangered urban river in North America” in 1997 by the national group American Rivers. Many projects have been completed or are underway in recent years, but health and environmental officials still don’t advise jumping in a canoe without a knowledgeable guide. They still recommend using hand sanitizer anytime you come in contact with its water. Mill Creek fish update Last year a comprehensive survey of the Mill Creek was undertaken by the Metropolitan Sewer District, which remains under a court order to upgrade its systems to the tune of $3.5 billion. Many projects are now underway (read more at www.projectgroundwork.org). The studies were performed and verified by the Midwest Biodiversity Institute. It’s the first survey of this magnitude since the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency conducted a survey in 1992. Fish findings: 46 species collected in 2011 compared to 33 in 1992 Highlights includes: • Channel catfish – average numbers increased from 1.3 per site to 6.8. • Sand shiner and emerald shiner were not collected in 1992 – the latter indicates water in the Mill Creek is health enough to encourage these fish to swim into the creek from the Ohio river, said to be essential in the further recover of Mill Creek. • 3 species of darters (sensitive fish) found last year, compared to 1 in 1992. • The percentage of fish with deformities, lesions and tumors has significantly dropped as well. “What all of this points to is that Mill Creek is a recovering system,” said Chris O. Yoder, research director of the Midwest Biodiversity Institute in Columbus. “While Mill Creek is still impaired in terms of compliance with the Ohio water quality standards, it has shown incremental improvement.” http://news.cincinnati.com/article/2...-EPA-attention --- Posted via news://freenews.netfront.net/ - Complaints to --- |
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