CRWA
in the News
Annual Water Quality Check Up for Charles
River:
"B plus" and Better for Swimming
Webwire at
http://www.webwire.com/ViewPressRel.asp?aId=32952
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
For the third consecutive year, the lower
Charles River has attained its highest-ever grade from EPA, a B+,
reflecting that efforts by government and local groups to restore the
river to ecological health by reducing bacteria in the river are on
track. Data showed strong progress toward the goal of making the Charles
safe for swimming all of the time.
The grade is based on the number of days the river meets
boating
and swimming standards during the previous calendar year, and is based
on measurements of bacteria levels. For 2006, the Charles met boating
standards 90 percent of the time, and swimming standards 62 percent of
the time according to data collected by the Charles River Watershed
Association (CRWA) between Watertown Dam and Boston Harbor.
“The hard work that has gone into cleaning the Charles River is no
magic trick,” said Robert W. Varney, regional administrator for EPA’s
New England office. “The improved water quality is the direct result of
work and investment by State, federal and municipal governments, as well
as environmental groups and a host of individuals committed to providing
new life to this urban river.”
EPA’s focus on the number of days that the lower Charles met swimming
standards reflects that 2006 one of the best years for meeting swimming
standards since EPA began the Clean Charles Initiative, and the 62
percent figure represents a significant achievement given the unusually
high amount runoff due to rainfall during the spring. For more than a
decade, the Charles River Initiative has featured coordinated efforts
between EPA,
state and local governments, private organizations, and environmental
advocates, working together to improve the health of the lower Charles
River.
Under a settlement between EPA and the Massachusetts Water Resources
Authority (MWRA) last year, sewage discharges to the river declined in
2006, and are expected to continue declining for the next eight years.
By the time this effort is completed in 2013, MWRA will have reduced
flows from sewer relief pipes by an impressive 99.5 percent. Further,
the municipalities of the lower Charles continued to chip away at sewage
flows from storm water pipes, eliminating 7,500 gallons per day during
2006. This is in addition to the more than one million gallons per day
eliminated from storm drain systems since EPA began the Charles cleanup
effort a decade ago.
"This year marks a real turning point for the MWRA’s CSO program,”
said Fred Laskey, Executive Director of the Massachusetts Water
Resources Authority (MWRA). “We’ve completed a number of important
projects around the Harbor in the last few months. For the Charles
River, completion of the Stony Brook Sewer Separation project has
reduced CSO discharges by an additional 44 million gallons a year.
Through this $45 million project, managed by the Boston Water & Sewer
Commission, 74,000 feet - nearly 14 miles - of new storm drain was
installed to reduce sewer overflows to the Charles and remove storm
water from the sewer system."
The Charles has improved dramatically from the launch of EPA’s
Charles River Initiative in 1995, when the river received a D for
meeting boating standards only 39 percent of the time and
swimming
standards just 19 percent of the time. The improved water quality in the
Charles means that efforts by other local groups to bring swimming back
to the river are more likely to succeed in the future.
“The Charles River Swimming Club’s formation is a testament to the
ongoing success of the EPA’s Clean Charles Initiative. Our upcoming
Charles River one-mile swimming race celebrates not only the tremendous
work done thus far but the promise of the return of public river
swimming. The rehabilitation of the Charles sets the bar for the rest of
the nation and is a story for which all Bostonians can be proud; a river
that was all but abandoned a generation ago is now on the verge of
becoming an even greater part of urban life,” said Frans Lawaetz,
President of the Charles River Swimming Club.
“Swimming in the Charles River is an important step to making the
Charles River Parklands more active and accessible to the greater Boston
community. The water is getting cleaner, and it is time that the public
was able to benefit from it. This initiative will make the Charles River
the first swimmable urban river in the United States,” said Renata von
Tscharner, President of the Charles River Conservancy. The Charles River
Conservancy is a group dedicated to restoring the Charles River to its
former glory, and who are staunch supporters of swimming in the Charles.
Even as bacteria
levels, the basis for the annual grade, have been on the decline now for
roughly a decade, another potentially serious problem affecting the
Charles River has gotten progressively worse in recent years – elevated
levels of nutrients entering the river in storm water runoff.
"We’ve made tremendous progress eliminating sewage from the river.
That’s just not good enough, however. We have to fix the toxic
algae
blooms, and begin to figure out how to fix the sediments. With this
partnership we’ve forged with EPA and DEP, I’m convinced we’ll get
there," said Bob Zimmerman, Executive Director of the Charles River
Watershed Association (CRWA).
Last summer, algae, which are waterborne plant-like organisms that
can create a blue/green coloration and can have toxic effects, bloomed
with great frequency and intensity. The proliferation of algae is caused
in part by nutrients such as phosphorus entering the river and providing
food for them. While EPA’s ongoing work directed at bacterial sources
will also help reduce nutrients and algae blooms, the Agency has
directed new energy toward controlling the amount and quality of storm
water, which is a large source of nutrients. Storm water is rain and
snow melt that empties into the river as either sheet flow or through
storm drains that flow from streets and other impervious areas.
EPA has issued storm water permits to municipalities that require
them to operate and maintain their storm drain systems, regulate
construction sites, educate citizens about storm water, and conduct
other activities to minimize storm water’s harmful effects. EPA will be
reissuing and tightening these permits next year which will help reduce
nutrients and other pollutants. In addition, EPA will be examining other
major sources of nutrients to the Charles and requiring them to take the
necessary steps to reduce the loading.
Recently, EPA and Massachusetts proposed a “total maximum daily load”
resulting from an assessment examining the impact of nutrients on the
Lower Charles. This assessment also determines what reduction in
nutrients will be necessary to meet water quality standards on the
River. The results of the assessment indicate that nutrient loads from
storm water must be reduced by 50 or 60 percent to meet water quality
standards. “This won’t be an easy problem to solve, but we will be
looking to all sources of elevated nutrients in storm water runoff to
see that the necessary reductions will occur,” EPA regional
administrator Varney said.
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