Clean And Clear Catawba, by Alice Battle – May 11 3012
The industrial use of the lakes that occurred along the Catawba
in the last 100 years brought potentially lethal by-products into the River. Silty
water flowed into the 15-foot settling tanks at the Hickory Filter Plant. The
next tank was clearing and emerald green.
Dumped chemicals were a big problem. There
were 40+ dye plants above Lake Hickory. The Burke County dump was near Lake Rhodhiss.
Sediment carries bacteria. Lots of chlorine had to be added
to treat the water for drinking.
Charlotte draws its water from Mountain Island Lake, which
is below Lake Norman. Lake Norman stabilizes the water so that Charlotte’s
drinking water source is one of the best in the Southeast.
Was the river clean or dirty? It depends on where you were along the river,
the weather, and whether you the land nearby was urban or rural. Factories, sewer plants and slaughter houses
dumped directly into the Catawb early in the industrial age.
The federal Clean Water Act of 1972 stopped the pollution at
the sources. Forty years of reforestation along the river stopped most of the
mud and soil runoff.
Today 15 towns and cities take their drinking water from the Catawba. At
least a dozen send their variously treated wastewater directly back into the
Catawba. The river has not been studied in depth to know the effect of years of
pollution.
About Alice Battle – Alice lives on Mountain Island Lake has
served on numerous groups devoted to protecting the lake, including the Duke
Energy Relicensing stakeholders group. She currently is Lakekeeper for the
Catawba Riverkeeper Foundation.
1 comment:
I am surprised that there are no comments on this story. I am from Maryland [live on the upper Chesapeake Bay] and am considering moving to North Carolina. I am an outdoors person and enjoy boating and fishing. It is important for me to find a location that has clean water and plans to protect the resource into the future.
I came across this site while researching Lake Rhodhiss and Lake Hickory. There seems to be conflicting information available on the Internet at this time and I would like to find a reliable resource on the lake quality of North Carolina.
Thank you.
Post a Comment