Update 2020-01-23: Okapilco Creek better, Withlacoochee still clean 2020-01-22.
The good news:
Gretchen Quarterman’s test results from the Mayor’s Paddle Saturday were clean.
Photo: Suzy Hall, of Gretchen Quarterman testing during Mayor’s Paddle 2020-01-18
The Withlacoochee River tested clean
all the way from the state line to the Suwannee, and the Suwannee River clean all the way to US 250,
on Friday, January 17, 2020,
according to the Florida Department of Health (FDOH).
But somebody (Valdosta?) needs to pay for the well and river testing incurred to date from that record-largest Valdosta raw sewage spill of December 2019.
And we need ongoing regular, closely spaced, water quality testing, and sources of funding (Valdosta?) for that, for at least two reasons detailed below.
Maybe you’d like to come talk about that at the
Florida Rivers Task Force meeting
4PM today at the Holiday Inn, 213 SW Commerce Blvd, Lake City, FL,
or at the
North Central Florida Regional Planning Council (NCFRPC) meeting at 7PM, same location.
Or you can speak in Citizens To Be Heard at the end of the Valdosta City Council meeting, 5:30 PM today, Valdosta City Hall, 216 E. Central Ave., Valdosta, GA.
Clean rivers 2020-01-15-18
The entire composite spreadsheet by WWALS is
on the WWALS website,
along with
the recent data from Lowndes County and Florida.
The
Suwannee River Water Management District (SRWMD)
projection reported by WCJB on Thursday that Valdosta sewage had reached the Suwannee River fortunately proved not to come to pass.
Cleaner Friday than Thursday, by results from
WWALS, Lowndes County (which has its own sewer system that did not spill), and Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP).
Valdosta did not test on any weekdays last week, even though their Mayor was scheduled to paddle.
The difficulty of projecting river flows is one reason continual testing is the only way to be sure what’s in our rivers.
The interesting news:
Lowndes County found high E. coli on Okapilco Creek south of Continue reading →