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QRWA - Quinnipiac Slide Show
Part 2 - River Pollution & Solutions
- What are the kinds of pollution which degrade our river, and what can
we do about them? They include TRASH, STORMWATER RUNOFF from urban areas,
INDUSTRIAL DISCHARGES, SEWAGE TREATMENT PLANT DISCHARGES, LANDFILL LEACHEATE,
FERTILIZERS & PESTICIDES, AND EROSION & SEDIMENTATION.
- Polluted runoff from paved surfaces contains oil and other engine
fluids; polluted dust from tire, engine, and pavement wear; road sand and
salt; and nutrients and bacteria in pet feces.
- Runoff from roofs or other impervious surfaces
- may contain air pollution fallout, soot from chimneys, and is often
acidic due to acid rain. Galvanized roofs and flashing release and zinc
and copper, and roof vents may also release pollutants.
- What can we do about stormwater runoff ? We can pressure our
towns to clean out catch basins and stormwater basins regularly; to preserve
open space; and to apply for funding for urban storm-water retrofitting.
We can also speak out at public hearings, in favor of state- of -the- art
stormwater treatment technology for new commercial and industrial facilities
and residential developments. We can also keep our cars in tune and free
of leaks and use a pooper scooper.
- All the five upper river treatment plants are at an advanced treatment
level (this one is in Cheshire), although some occasionally overflow,
like the one in Meriden, because they don't have enough capacity or because
groundwater leaks into the system. Also sometimes illegal industrial poisons
are put in sewers which knock the biological treatment systems out of operation
for several weeks. This happened in Cheshire in March of 1995.
- What can we do? If we are connected to a sewer, we can avoid putting
toxic substances down the drain. We can report illegal dumping or discharges.
- Industrial discharges, such as those from Cytec, which makes plastics
and resins, are more strictly regulated than polluted runoff. Formaldehyde,
Cytec's largest discharge, although carcinogenic as an air pollutant, is
fortunately relatively harmless to humans, diluted in water. However, studies
also indicate that formaldehyde may be toxic to aquatic insects (food for
fish), well below the level permitted for discharge by Cytec.
- What can we do? The public can apply pressure on government for prompt
permitting, conservative discharge limits, and strict enforcement.
- Another source of pollution is landfill leacheate, polluted, nutrient-rich
liquid which oozes from the bases of seven landfills next to rivers
in the watershed, even after they are closed. This is the Meriden landfill.
Although groundwater monitoring data is regularly collected at landfills,
the problem of land-fill leacheate has not been investigated in the Quinnipiac
watershed.
- Sludge piles from Upjohn, in North Haven, formerly a major polluter,
are protected by plastic covers, and pumping controls leacheate discharge.
- 51, 52. Occasionally there are major oil spills, like the one in
North Haven in the fall of 1995. Coordinated clean-ups involve catch oil
with absorbent booms that float on the river, and absorbent diapers, but
oil also includes a non-floating portion, which enters the ecosystem and
has various harmful effects.
- Dumping is another serious pollution problem.
- Trash is ugly, but dumping also pollutes water. Fluids leak from drums.
- Toxic metals are released from appliances and
- auto parts, as they corrode.
- Household dumping in New Britain
- prompted building of this ugly cement wall.
- Tire dumps like this one on Sackett Point Rd. in North Haven are a major
problem.
- What can we do? We can promptly report dumping and participate
in and help organize clean-ups, working with New Haven's River
Keeper, the QRWA, scout troops and community groups. The QRWA is coordinating
a May 1998 watershed-wide clean-up.
- Groundwater contamination is now being addressed by sophisticated groundwater
remediation programs like this one at TRI in Plainville.
- New DEP regulations prevent pollution from publics works storage
areas - by requiring covers on salt piles, for example.
- 63, 64. Another serious pollution problem is soil erosion from construction
sites.
- 66. Sediment buries aquatic habitat, clogs fish gills, and
carries excess nutrients into streams.
- What can we do? We can encourage use of erosion prevention
measures, like well-designed sedimentation basins, and properly installed
silt fences, which reduce sedimentation. We can promptly report sedimentation
problems to town officials and/or the QRWA. The QRWA is seeking more
volunteers to monitor turbidity in streams.
- We can advocate for buffers and leave buffers along watercourses on our
own properties. Leaving natural vegetated buffers along a stream is one
of the best ways to filter out sediment.
- Naturally vegetated "buffers" or "greenway corridors" also help prevent
excess fertilizer and sediment from reaching streams, lakes along the
river, and eventually LI Sound, where they cause excess growth of algae.
- 71. When algae dies, sinks, and rots, this creates low dissolved oxygen
conditions and turbidity. This is a severe problem known as hypoxia
in Long Island Sound. Fish and other aquatic life need sufficient oxygen
to be healthy, and plant life in deep waters need light for photosynthesis.
- Pesticides and herbicides can also harm aquatic life,
a problem which would be much reduced if homeowners tolerated ground covers
like clover in their yards.
- What can we do? We can leave nitrogen-rich grass clippings on the lawn;
we can test soils to avoid unnecessary fertilizer application; we can use
natural pest controls like milky spore disease for Japanese beetle grubs.
Also, reducing lawn areas by leaving and planting native trees and shrubs
reduces pollution from fertilizers.
- This is especially helpful where soils are sandy, and fertilizers may
pass readily through the soil in groundwater, even if one's yard is quite
a distance from a stream.
- Native shrubs provide habitat for thicket songbirds like yellow
throat warblers.
- 77. In addition to what we can do in our own lives to prevent water and
sediment pollution, our taxes help support important water quality related
enforcement work by the Department of Environmental Protection and government-funded
research, by scientists like those at the Yale Center for Coastal and watershed
Systems.
- And we can support river conservation groups like the Quinnipiac
River Watershed Association, which produced this slide show.
- The QRWA runs educational and recreational programs, such as
hands on workshops and
- canoe tours, which promote awareness and understanding of the river.
Since our founding in 1979 we have also provided citizen input into local
land use proceedings for proposed projects, which may impact wetlands and
water resources.
Our thanks to Tom Mudry, Frank Pearson, Bill Bennett, Elizabeth Marks, Heather
Crawford, Jay West, and others, who contributed slides for this show.
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