Month: December 2022

Our Waters Bring Comfort and Joy

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Our Waters

Bring Comfort and Joy

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PHOTO: Riley Lewis and Jan Farmer, CCRW Board Vice President 2022
As we wrap up the year, we want to highlight the joys of being close to the water. From rivers and streams to lakes and sounds, water has always been an important part of life along coastal North Carolina.

“I have been thinking about how lucky I am to be living by the coast and have access to so many resources provided by the water. Fresh seafood, fun water activities, and the natural environment is so important to me. I have always lived close to a coastal river system and can’t imagine not being able to hear the sound of flowing water just a short walk away.” – Riley, White Oak Waterkeeper

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PHOTO: Riley Lewis, S. LEAH 2022
Your health and being on the water:

Water quality’s impact on human health has been observed for generations, and research continues to try and understand how being on, in, or by the water can be so good for your physical and mental wellbeing.

Being by the water, especially natural waters like rivers and oceans, has been shown to lower blood pressure, decrease stress, bring on relaxation, improve creativity, and bring about a general sense of happiness.

To those who have livelihoods directly associated with natural waters, good water quality brings additional benefits and peace of mind.

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PHOTO: L. Rider, Gulf Steam/Atlantic Ocean, J. ANDRE 2021
“I was born and raised along the banks of coastal NC and feel lucky and proud to have lived by the sea my entire life. That pride comes with responsibility. The responsibility to protect all that I have enjoyed these many years.

One of the best perks of living by the sea is having the opportunity to experience life under the water. Free-diving and SCUBA diving provides another method of coastal exploration and can be great for your physical and mental health. Being under the water provides an escape from the chatter of modern life, while taking in the abundance of life and constant reminder of how important these ecosystems are to life in coastal NC.

Living near the water has its perks like fresh salty air, access to sandy beaches, fresh local coastal foods, and learning how to navigate the waters by motor, paddle, or sail. All of these perks are in jeopardy, without water quality protection.

One of the best things about living on the coast is being a part of the coastal community. I am grateful for this community that recognizes we are all responsible for protecting the quality of water and life here in our community environment.

Lisa, Executive Director

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PHOTO: L.Rider, Gulf Steam/Atlantic Ocean, J. ANDRE 2021
While being on, in, or by the water can be good for your mental and physical health, it is important for that water to be good quality.

Communities with poor water quality or that struggle with pollution are physically and mentally impacted.

As coastal areas are developed, it is important that the health and preservation of our natural waters Stress from water insecurity or impacts to livelihoods are always a threat but can be avoided with strong water monitoring and advocacy.

Reduced pollution in waterways is not only is good for you physically, but can ease any anxiety about your surroundings.

At Coastal Carolina Riverwatch, we are honored to be your local water quality organization that works to protect the quality of water and quality of life in our community. See everything we have done for water quality in 2022 here and stay tuned for what we have planned in 2023.

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PHOTO: L.RIDER 2021
Need a new years resolution?

Make the resolution to become a water quality advocate and consider donating to the cause!

BECOME AN ADVOCATE
For more info about local water quality information, please contact:

Waterkeeper

WE NEED YOUR HELP!
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Please consider being a part of the Waterkeeper Admiral Club with your sustaining donation of $1,000 or more.

Your donation goes directly to programming that protects the quality of water and quality of life in coastal North Carolina.

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Waterways without Wastewater

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Waterways without Wastewater
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GRAPHIC: N. WEAVER, 2021
Wastewater treatment systems are one of the US’s most widely-used pollution control technologies in the US. These systems’ treatment process includes sewers collecting wastewater, transporting the water to treatment plants, completing a cleaning process, and finally discharging the wastewater.

Municipal wastewater treatment plants, also referred to as publicly owned treatment works (POTWs), filter physical, chemical, and biological pollutants from the wastewater received from households, businesses, and industries. Differing from municipal wastewater treatment facilities, about 50% of homes in North Carolina use on-site wastewater systems, or septic systems (EPA, 2017). They generally have a tank, a distribution box, and subsurface absorption lines with perforated pipes laid in a gravel bed. On-site wastewater systems provide an alternative, natural way to treat and dispose of domestic waste without being connected to a centralized municipal sewage treatment system.

Major water quality concerns associated with untreated or poorly treated wastewater entering water systems include high levels of dangerous bacteria, hazardous materials, elevated total suspended solids, pharmaceuticals, and excess nutrients. Population centers contribute greatly to the amount of daily loads entering bodies of water from POTWs. Inflow and Infiltration (I & I) is a severe water quality implication resulting in the pollution of estuarine waters by raw wastewater. Inflow occurs during storm events when stormwater surges into and overwhelms a sewage collection and treatment system. Infiltration is the process of groundwater entering a sewer pipe system through uncapped sewer line cleanouts, gutters connected to lateral sewer lines, inadequate sewer manhole covers, and cross connections of stormwater lines with sanitary sewer lines (Deaton, et al., 2021). Sewer pipes also receive infiltrated groundwater through faulty pipe joints, sewer pipe cracks, broken manholes, and collapsed lateral pipes.

Coastal North Carolina faces more challenges with wastewater treatment systems failing due to sea level rise, more frequent and severe king tides, higher rainfall amounts, and seasonal temperature effects on groundwater levels (Allen, 2019).

Pump stations and wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are built to receive specific peak flow volumes and rates which can be exceeded with the increased flow from I & I. With a higher risk of overflow, there is also an elevated risk of untreated waters being released from a WWTP. Additionally, communities, especially those home to low-income citizens, often do not have adequate financial resources to maintain and update wastewater infrastructure. Lowincome counties face challenges with a lack of federal funding and the expenses of infrastructure upkeep and replacement, contributing to a greater risk of sanitary sewer overflows (Deaton, et al., 2021).

Sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs) and the resulting water pollution, are generally the effects of failed wastewater infrastructure. During an SSO, the spill may consist of hundreds to millions of gallons of sewage overflow that contain dangerous pollutants (Deaton, et al., 2021). The implications of these malfunctions on water quality include algal blooms resulting from nutrient loading, increased bacteria and toxin levels, fish kills, and contaminated sediments. In addition to the depletion of available oxygen, algal blooms can lead to the release of hydrogen sulphide and ammonia, both potentially toxic to aquatic life in low concentrations. (Shahidul, 2004).

The NC DEQ, Division of Water Resources, just announced the launch of a new GIS reporting application aiming to increase awareness of recently reported SSOs.

As a result of water quality advocates, DWR developed an online mapping tool to help better identify where these SSOs were occurring, volume spilled, and proximity to recreational waters. The app highlights the most recent spills which have occurred in the last 7 days through a graduated blue dot based on estimated volume, as well as continue to collect and add data on a rolling calendar basis.

CLICK HERE TO ACCESS THE SSO DATA.

Waterkeepers from across the State of North Carolina have been advocating for this for several years, after several spills and sewer overflows happened in their watersheds.

Hartwell Carson, French Broad Riverkeeper, works with CCRW White Oak Waterkeeper, notified the coalition group of the new system last week. Hartwell mention that the group “realized the current public notice was widely outdated, as it only provides a press release several days after the spill. This potentially leaves people recreating in polluted waters.”

MountainTrue, CCRW, and several other Waterkeeper groups across the state, advocated for change to the reporting system. These changes help to modernize access to the information to the public. The Division of Water Resources did the heavy lifting of making it happen within the Department and we are grateful that DEQ has taken this step forward. We are hopeful that other reporting methods will have similar updates forthcoming. We also hope this will be a good tool for the public to make informed decisions that further push the reduction of sewer overflows across the state.

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As part of the Water Quality for Fisheries Program, wasterwater has been prioritized as one of the top five water quality concerns that impact fisheries.

CLICK HERE TO ACCESS THE WQ4F PROGRAM.

During the first year of the Water Quality for Fisheries Program, a statewide assessment on wastewater impacts to water quality and fisheries.

CHICK HERE TO ACCESS THE WASTEWATER ASSESSMENT.

CCRW is working with local partners and stakeholders to develop a comprehensive Waterways without Wastewater program for coastal NC. If you would like to volunteer as a stakeholder or partner on this program, please contact Waterkeeper

Support CCRW

Waterways without Wastewater Programming

DONATE NOW
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For more info about local water quality information, please contact:

Waterkeeper

Report a Water Quality Concern
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Be part of the Waterkeeper Admiral Club with your donation of $1,000 or more.

Click here to learn more.

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Pure Farms, Pure Waters – Legislative Agenda for CAFOs in 2023

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Pure Farms, Pure Waters

CCRW Legislative Agenda for CAFOs in 2023

Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) have been a topic of environmental concern for many years but have recently caught the spotlight through the many articles and research that are being released throughout North Carolina.

CCRW has been observing CAFOs and holding them accountable for many years. These concentrated hog and poultry farms are harmful to the environment, North Carolina water quality, and communities that live anywhere close to the facilities. We will continue fighting for the quality of water and quality of life in 2023 and will support policies that help our cause.

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PHOTO: LEWIS, 2022 – Aerial photograph of CAFOs and housing communities scattered throughout the landscape. Photo was taken around the Town of Richlands in NC.
As 2023 approaches, CCRW is collecting our list of legislative priorities that will guide our CAFO work in the new year. We want to see more oversight and transparency of CAFOs and funding to support farmers and best practices.

Here is our current 2023 Legislative Agenda for CAFOs:

  • Funding for the Swine Farm Buyout Program – The swine farm buyout is a voluntary program that was established in the wake of Hurricane Floyd to remove swine farms from the 100-year floodplain.
  • Oversight of the Poultry Industry – The poultry industry in North Carolina has little regulation, which leads to unchecked amounts of nutrients and bacteria from these facilities polluting our state’s waterways.
  • Poultry Study Bill – To understand the impacts of poultry waste on our state waterways.
  • Animal Agriculture Resilience Planning –To remove facilities within the 100 year floodplain and prevent new construction of facilities within the 500 year floodplain.
  • Nutrient Waste Utilization Plans – To be submitted to DEQ for approval and prohibit land application of poultry waste within 100 ft of surface waters.
  • Increase Funding for Soil and Water Cost-Share Programs – The Agricultural Cost Share Program typically receives as much as $20 million in requests for $4 million in annual funding statewide.
  • Livestock exclusion from waterways – We suggest establishing an annually recurring fund to help farmers install livestock exclusion fencing and alternative water sources.
  • Move state water quality standards from fecal coliform to E.coli for all freshwaters– North Carolina is one of only four states that have yet to transition to E.coli as a pathogen indicator. EPA made this change in 1986. In March, 2022, the Environmental Management Commission committed to transitioning on an expedited timeline.
  • The use of a point system for reoccurring permit violations – Farms that are continually in violation of their permits will accrue points depending on the violation. After a certain number of points, the operation must stop until they are within compliance.

READ MORE ABOUT CCRW WORK TO ADDRESS CAFO CONCERNS.

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PHOTO: EWG, 2022 – Map of known Poultry and Swine CAFOs in Carteret and Onslow Counties. View map.

STATEWIDE COVERAGE ON POULTRY CAFOS:

If you are not following the statewide coverage of Poultry CAFOs in North Carolina, please take a look at the series being released by the N&O and the Charlotte Observer:

With little oversight, NC poultry farms raise 1 billion birds a year. Who pays the cost?

With no power to fend off poultry farms, neighbors live with stench and nuisances.

As part of the Pure Farms Pure Water campaign, CCRW calls attention to these destructive practices, advocate for environmental laws, and support traditional family farms.

Coastal Carolina Riverwatch wants to see poultry CAFO’s regulated by the NC Department of Environmental Quality. Without proper regulation and enforcement, large facilities that produce as much waste as a large city will continue to pollute Coastal Carolina’s waterways and threaten our quality of water and quality of life.

This holiday season please consider supporting a small, local farm when searching for pork or poultry products. Small efforts like these, help our community businesses and help protect water quality in your back yard.

*ACTION ALERT*

Though many CAFOs cannot be seen from the road, please keep an eye out for any hog lagoons or uncovered dry litter piles that look (or smell) off and let the White Oak Waterkeeper know!

Report a Water Quality Concern
Want to learn more about how CAFOs impact our coastal community?

Join the Advocacy Book Club in reading “Wastelands: The True Story of Farm Country on Trial”.

Join the community in screening “The Smell of Money” at the Beaufort Picture Show – Mill Whistle Brewery in Beaufort.

Join the community in a book signing event with Corbin Addison and Coastal Carolina Riverwatch

Join the community Advocacy Working Group – Click Here to Sign Up Today!

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WE NEED YOUR HELP!
Click Here to Support
Coastal Carolina Riverwatch
Programming and Services
ACHIEVEMENTS in 2022:

Through Coastal Carolina Riverwatch’s boots-on-the-ground rapid response program we have documented significant water quality problems that threaten human health and aquatic life and utilize that information to increase awareness and support for improved policies. We conduct research and use facilitated collaborative methods to engage advocates, scientists, industry, government, and other stakeholders to provide top-down prioritized gaps-in-service programming for the communities in coastal NC.

Click here for updates to the full 2022 Achievements.

Become A Member Today – Click Here!
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Water Quality for Fisheries: Industrial Agriculture and Factory Farming Impacts

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Water Quality for Fisheries:

Industrial Agriculture and

Factory Farming Impacts

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CLICK ABOVE TO WATCH A SHORT VIDEO.
Coastal Carolina Riverwatch’s Water Quality for Fisheries Program includes a coalition of recreational and commercial fishermen and women that work to identify, prioritize, and tackle actions that protect the quality of water and quality of life in coastal NC. During the WQ4F survey, those who fish on the coast of NC identified industrial agriculture and factory farming as the number one priority focus for reducing water quality impacts to fisheries. The excess nutrients, from these facilities, cause eutrophication, habitat destruction, and algal blooms that block sunlight from reaching aquatic vegetation.

Algal blooms may contain toxic microorganisms such as a Pfiesteria which has contributed to public health issues and fish being plagued with large sores. These factors have caused massive fish kills in NC waters including species such as minnows, gar, largemouth bass, striped bass, and flounder.

Runoff from these facilities can also lead to the presence of fecal bacteria or pathogens in surface water. Fecal bacterial pathogens that can cause human health problems and may lead to shellfish collection restrictions.

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PHOTO: RIDER, 2022

STATEWIDE COVERAGE ON POULTRY CAFOS:

With little oversight, NC poultry farms raise 1 billion birds a year. Who pays the cost?

With no power to fend off poultry farms, neighbors live with stench and nuisances.

NEW PODCAST – This week on the Under the Dome politics podcast, host Dawn Vaughan talks with the main reporting team behind a project by The News & Observer and The Charlotte Observer, “Big Poultry.” Plus a sneak peek of what’s to come in their coverage.

READ MORE ABOUT INDUSTRIAL AGRICULTURE AND FACTORY FARMING IMPACTS TO FISHERIES.

READ MORE ABOUT CCRW WORK TO ADDRESS CAFO CONCERNS.

READ MORE ABOUT RECENT HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS IN COASTAL NC.

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PHOTO: LEWIS, 2022 – Dry litter piles sitting outside between the right two poultry barns.
As part of the Pure Farms Pure Water campaign, CCRW calls attention to these destructive practices, advocate for environmental laws, and support traditional family farms.

Coastal Carolina Riverwatch wants to see poultry CAFO’s regulated by the NC Department of Environmental Quality. Without proper regulation and enforcement, large facilities that produce as much waste as a large city will continue to pollute Coastal Carolina’s waterways and threaten our quality of water and quality of life.

This holiday season please consider supporting a small, local farm when searching for pork or poultry products. Small efforts like these, help our community businesses and help protect water quality in your back yard.

*ACTION ALERT*

Though many CAFOs cannot be seen from the road, please keep an eye out for any hog lagoons or uncovered dry litter piles that look (or smell) off and let the White Oak Waterkeeper know!

Report a Water Quality Concern
Want to learn more about how CAFOs impact our coastal community?

Join the Advocacy Book Club in reading “Wastelands: The True Story of Farm Country on Trial”.

Join the community in screening “The Smell of Money” at the Beaufort Picture Show – Mill Whistle Brewery in Beaufort.

Join the community in a book signing event with Corbin Addison and Coastal Carolina Riverwatch at Promise Land Market on Thursday, January 12th at 5:30pm.

Join the community Advocacy Working Group – Click Here to Sign Up Today!

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WE NEED YOUR HELP!
Click Here to Support
Coastal Carolina Riverwatch
Programming and Services
ACHIEVEMENTS in 2022:

Through Coastal Carolina Riverwatch’s boots-on-the-ground rapid response program we have documented significant water quality problems that threaten human health and aquatic life and utilize that information to increase awareness and support for improved policies. We conduct research and use facilitated collaborative methods to engage advocates, scientists, industry, government, and other stakeholders to provide top-down prioritized gaps-in-service programming for the communities in coastal NC.

Click here for updates to the full 2022 Achievements.

Become A Member Today – Click Here!
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