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Critics say 10% decrease in flow to Fla. not enough
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 04/16/08
In what can only be viewed as a mea culpa for allowing metro Atlanta's main water source to sink to a record low, the federal government on Tuesday proposed changing operations at Lake Lanier and four other reservoirs on the Chattahoochee River.
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The modified plan by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers would decrease the amount of water released from Lanier under most conditions.
But Georgia water experts say the plan does not go nearly far enough to protect Lanier during droughts.
In a letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the corps' Mobile District planning and environmental division chief Curtis M. Flakes said the corps learned two lessons during the ongoing, record-breaking drought:
First, the corps needs a drought contingency plan for operating its Chattahoochee dams;
Secondly, more water should be held in the reservoirs when they are low.
"The prolonged exceptional drought conditions experienced in the [Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint] basin throughout the spring and summer of 2007 resulted in impacts to the basin and composite storage within the basin that were unanticipated by the previous [operations plan] analysis," Flakes said in the letter.
Fish and Wildlife has until June 1 to review the proposal to make sure it protects federally endangered and threatened fish and freshwater mussels in Florida. Any changes will take effect then.
One of the main operational changes proposed has to do with the minimum flow of water the corps sends into Florida, where the Chattahoochee and Flint rivers meet and flow into the Apalachicola River.
Until November, when the corps made a temporary adjustment to its operational plan, the agency for months had been sending no less than 3.2 billion gallons of water a day into Florida, even when Mother Nature was providing less than half that amount in rainfall and stream flows. The proposal calls for dropping the minimum flow into Florida during droughts to 2.9 billion gallons of water a day, a 10 percent decrease.
The flow comes from Lanier and four other reserviors on the Chattahoochee, as well as from the Flint River.
Pat Stevens, the Atlanta Regional Commission's environmental planning chief who helps plan for the metro region's water needs, called the corps' proposal "a step in the right direction. They're recognizing that the [current operation] needs to be modified, but it's not going far enough."
Stevens said Lanier, which is at a record low for this time of year, would only be about one foot higher than it is today if the plan had been in place when the drought began. The lake is currently nearly 13 feet below its normal level. That equates to just more than half the lake's stored water capacity as the hot summer months loom ahead with the related increases in water use and evaporation.
Florida officials have said too much water is being left in Lanier, mostly to quench metro Atlanta's thirst.
Sarah Williams, spokeswoman for Florida's Department of Environmental Protection, said the department hopes a new operations plan will be "protective of the Apalachicola Bay and River ecosystem."
When the drought began in 2006, the weather collided with corps policy, creating metro Atlanta's water crisis late last year. That led to the near-total ban on outdoor watering and a state mandate to reduce water use 10 percent.
In the spring of 2006, the corps began releasing billions of gallons of additional water from Lanier and the other federal reservoirs on the Chattahoochee to assist fewer than 10 federally protected Gulf sturgeon fish in laying their eggs.
At the same time, the corps was accidentally releasing more than 22 billion gallons of water from Lanier due to a faulty gauge that measures the lake's elevation. The result was a nearly two foot drop from which the lake never fully recovered.
The two actions coincided with the beginning of metro Atlanta's record-busting drought, now entering its third year.
As Atlanta's Commissioner of the Department of Watershed Management Rob Hunter told a Congressional committee last month, the drought has been terrible, but "it is the management plan implemented by the Corps that has been the real disaster."
Not much was done about the lost water from the faulty gauge, other than a public tongue-lashing of an Army general by Georgia's two U.S. senators.
But when the corps' sent copious amounts of water down to Florida for the prehistoric fish and several types of threatened and endangered freshwater mussels, with very little scientific data to support the need for the additional water, Gov. Sonny Perdue and state Environmental Protection Division Director Carol Couch protested, to no avail.
In a letter to the corps in May 2006, Couch foreshadowed Lanier's precipitous drop to levels not seen since the lake was filling in the 1950s and warned "draining Lake Lanier to such a low level could cause serious harm throughout the [Chattahoochee] Basin in 2006 and for years to come."
Between November and February, the White House tried to nudge the governors of Georgia, Alabama and Florida into a water-sharing agreement over Lanier and the Chattahoochee. The talks failed. But Perdue's spokesman Bert Brantley said Tuesday's proposal shows the corps at least listened to Georgia's request for a change in how Lanier is operated.
"In our opinion, all you have to do is look at Lake Lanier and see that the [current operations plan] is what got us into the situation where literally the headwater of the system was threatened," Brantley said. The proposal is "a positive outcome in that it's the process moving forward."
Tuesday's proposal only tweaks the current operations plan, which is considered interim. The Chattahoochee System has not updated its water control plan since an attempt in 1989, just before the tri-state water war broke out over how much water metro Atlanta was taking from Lanier.
A new plan is currently in the works, and is expected to take three years. Any operations plan approved now will be in effect until then.
Wilton Rooks, a director of the Lake Lanier Association board, said the fact that the corps is proposing a drought contingency plan is encouraging.
"When things get into that zone, it requires some more drastic actions to be taken," Rooks said. "At least they're beginning to recognize that the mussels might have to get by with less water if we don't have the water to give."
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More on ajc.com
- WATER WAR: Court rulings crucial to state (08/17/2008)
- Court rulings could settle water war (08/16/2008)
- Bookman: Don't leave tri-state water woes to a court decision (08/14/2008)
- Don't leave tri-state water woes to a court decision (08/13/2008)
- Ga. official: 3 states should do water study (07/25/2008)
- A first step toward ending water-wars stalemate (06/30/2008)
- METRO BRIEFS: Florida officials want more water (05/16/2008)
- Fla. senator calls reduced Lanier releases 'irresponsible' (05/15/2008)
- Lanier property owners to press Corps on lake's level (05/14/2008)
- GEORGIA'S WATER CRISIS: Florida to fight drought strategy (05/01/2008)
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Comments
By Scott
May 15, 2008 3:32 PM | Link to this
What's with all this talk that we're not conserving water in Atlanta? They just announced they have to raise our water rates because we've been conserving so much they can't get by on the lower revenue.
By martha
Apr 17, 2008 8:32 AM | Link to this
corps states they released too much water? WELL DUHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH -- we figured that out last year when the bird brains did it
By hotatl
Apr 17, 2008 7:50 AM | Link to this
Dear Birminghamster,
Jealous?
By Seymour Buttz
Apr 17, 2008 5:53 AM | Link to this
Hey B'ham,
You just confirmed what I had suspected for years about people from Alabama---you only bath on Saturday night and still use outhouses.
Still marrying your first cousins as well?
Seymour
PS Bite my clean, shiny, white ass-- you uppity pig.
By Birminghamster
Apr 17, 2008 3:57 AM | Link to this
Unless you guys (Atlantans) want to repeat the water wars of the middle east, you pumpkins should learn how to actually conserve water, instead of just walking around saying "Well, I'm sure they won't just let big ol' Atlanta run out of water, dee dee dee".
At the height of the drought last year, you clowns took zero conservation steps, and you didn't significantly reduce your usage.
Meanwhile, here in Bham, we cut our usage by 35%. Got that, over-entitled morons? 35%. Each month and every month until the drought began to ease.
The problem you Atlantans have is NOT the corps of engineers...it's the "me, me, me, me" approach that seems to be part of your city's culture.
When (not if) you clowns run completely out of water, we'll be happy to sell you some more, but our prices will make a gallon of gas seem cheap. If you won't learn how to behave, the market will teach you.
Toodles.
By Environmental Science Major
Apr 16, 2008 11:03 PM | Link to this
Ripkelly,
You brought up a good point, but are slightly off about how the water was flowing and how it is now. Before the resevior, Florida was forced to deal with whatever water flowed down the river from northern Georgia. If there was a drought or not the mussels and sturgeons had to deal with whatever mother nature dealt them, a drought year or not. Since we have damned up the river and saved billions of gallons of water for less than plentiful years, it in return has ended up saving those endangers species. Without the water to send down like we have been they wouldn't be alive today and would be extinct. It makes since that they are doing so poorly at this point.
If we however send these millions of gallons downstream and not consider the multitude of other wild life and ourselves, we will in return not do so well, especially with a changing climate. The sturgeons actually should already be dead, thank god for the resevior, but humans come first.
By Environmental Science Major
Apr 16, 2008 11:03 PM | Link to this
Ripkelly,
You brought up a good point, but are slightly off about how the water was flowing and how it is now. Before the resevior, Florida was forced to deal with whatever water flowed down the river from northern Georgia. If there was a drought or not the mussels and sturgeons had to deal with whatever mother nature dealt them, a drought year or not. Since we have damned up the river and saved billions of gallons of water for less than plentiful years, it in return has ended up saving those endangers species. Without the water to send down like we have been they wouldn't be alive today and would be extinct. It makes since that they are doing so poorly at this point.
If we however send these millions of gallons downstream and not consider the multitude of other wild life and ourselves, we will in return not do so well, especially with a changing climate. The surgeons actually should already be dead, thank god for the resevior, but humans come first.
By dirty white boy
Apr 16, 2008 10:16 PM | Link to this
Dear Mom,
Have you been drinking water straight out of hooch untreated?
What the hell are you talking about?
By the way, if you claim to be my mom, I must have been adopted---I sure hope I don't have any of your mutant genes. Rumor has it you married your half brother?
DWB
By dirtywhiteee's mom
Apr 16, 2008 9:22 PM | Link to this
Does water come out of the tap when you turn it on? Then shut up. We are in a drought - a historic one at that. Sorry you can't wash your dirty car.
Me, me, me... it's all about me. Be thankful you have water (clean water at that) to shower, wash clothes, and cook with. The drought will pass and we'll all be back doing whatever we want with all the water we could ever need.
Or better yet, move back north where you all came from.
By dirty white boy
Apr 16, 2008 9:10 PM | Link to this
Hey RipKelly,
Are you shitting me? Corp of ********* were releasing twice as much water as required due to a faulty meter.
On top of that, Chief dumbshit admits they should have had a drought contengency plan.
And to make matters worse, it is the Corp of shitheads who manages the lakes and knows how much water Atlanta needs. Why did they wait almost two years to develop some semblence of a plan?
And besides, who the hell are you to tell people to shut up when we are about to go dry.
Bite my dirty, thirsty white ***.
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