If you like to swim at Lake Erie beaches, our wet spring is bad news – Buffalo News

Last summers drought kept the sand and surf at Lake Eries beaches the cleanest in five years, so the beaches usually remained open.

But the region's second-wettest spring on record has changed the outlook for this year's swimming season. Beachgoers in 2017 can expect beaches to be closed to swimming more often.

The increased rainfall nearly 17.5 inches since March 1 brings more runoff into creeks and streams, sewer overflows, erosion and turbidity and trickier beach forecasting.

Woodlawn State Park beach has already been closed to swimming more than half the time since opening just before Memorial Day. Swimming at nearby Hamburg Town Park has been closed about a third of the time.

Infrastructure upgrades offer some hope that swimming will be allowed more often. Erie Countys recently spent $16 million to eliminate wastewater overflows from three pump stations into Rush and Blasdell creeks near Woodlawn.

Other places, like Evans and Dunkirk, are embarking on sustainable green infrastructure projects to capture stormwater before it reaches Lake Erie.

The state Department of Environmental Conservation funded a pair of studies at Lake Erie Beach in Evans and Point Gratiot in Dunkirk to start the process.

Part of the reason these beaches have been prioritized is because of the number of beach closures over the past few years, said Shannon Dougherty, the DECs western Great Lakes watershed coordinator.

Closing time

The beach at Wright Park in Dunkirk, where the number of closures dropped significantly in 2016. (Robert Kirkham/News file photo)

Summertime closings at Lake Erie's beaches have been a sign of the times, especially in recent years, after high bacterial levels became commonplace.

Beach closings at seven Lake Erie beaches Woodlawn State Park, Hamburg, Bennett, Evans, Wright Park and Point Gratiot dropped by nearly 65 percent from 2015 to 2016, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency'sBeach Advisory and Closing Online Notification (BEACON) system.

The unusually dry spring and summer drove most of that reduction. Buffalo recorded only 6.57 inches of rain between March 1 and June 15, 2016.

Rainfall is one of about three dozen factors the beach forecasting model takes into account when projecting whether a beach is safe for swimming. Local officials depend on the model when making a final decision.

Site-specific measurements of the wind, its direction, wave heights, shoreline currents, water levels on tributaries to the beach, water turbidity and numerous other factors are also taken.

"Each beach has its own data set," saidBrett Hayhurst, a water quality specialist at the U.S. Geological Survey's New York Water Science Center in Ithaca.

In Erie County, officials from the county health department also collect daily water samples from the beaches to test bacteria levels and compare them against the model's forecast.

"We're finding we're closing less of the time when the water quality is actually good," saidDolores Funke, the county's environmental health director, "and keeping the beach open on the bad water quality days less."

A plan for Evans Town Park

Over the last decade, Evans Town Beach has been closed to swimmers for 176 summer days because of poor water quality.

The town now has a plan and the $172,125 needed to fix it.

Designs call for bioswayles drifting into rain gardens in Evans Town Park near the beach, according to Roberta L. Rappoccio, the town's director of planning and community development.

Why not beautify, be green and serve a purpose? Rappoccio said.

If successful, the green infrastructure project should alleviate stormwater flows from nearby Fernbrook Creek that often flood the area including a pedestrian tunnel under Lake Shore Road that joins the park and beach with up to several feet of water during heavy rain storms.

Were getting 25 year storms every year, Rappoccio said. Thats something were not equipped for.

Rappoccio said those rain gardens, which will include native plantings, will be designed to capture storm water and slowly filter it before it eventually finds its way a few hundred yards away onto the town beach.

The work is expected to be completed later this year. It is being funded through a federal grant from the EPA.

Whats more, after nearby Mickey Rats expected closing at the end of the summer, Rappoccio said the towns new waterfront design standards will require the use of green infrastructure on any future redevelopment of the site.

Theres no way to do it otherwise, she said. Theres no question about it.

Projects like this to capture and filter stormwater isn't new to the folks at Buffalo Niagara Riverkeeper, but they're heartened that the message is starting to spread.

"Nature wants the eastern basin of Lake Erie to be dominated bycoastal wetland, though human settlement over the last 200 yearshas altered these systems almost beyond recognition," said Jill Jedlicka, Riverkeeper's executive director. "Protecting and restoring Great Lakes living infrastructure is a cost-effective approach to flood protection, filteringdrinking water, andecosystem improvements."

Lake Erie Beach

Views from a closed Lake Erie Beach on Aug. 14, 2009. (Harry Scull Jr,/News file photo)

Just west of Evans Town Park, Lake Erie Beach at Evans Point Breeze community has experienced similar troubles.

Since 2008, it has been closed 160 times.

One culprit: aged septic tanks that leak into Muddy Creek from cottages a half-century or more old.

We know its an issue, Rappoccio said.

The town spent about $75,000 from a state water quality improvement grant to design a plan to help clean up Lake Erie Beach.

It involves a two-phase approach with native plantings and a wetland area that can capture, slow and filter stormwater before it reaches Lake Erie.

Theres no timetable yet for construction, but the town is actively pursuing funding to complete that work.

Who knows? Rappoccio said. Maybe well be one of the communities where well be known as one of these green tourism areas.

Dunkirk's Point Gratiot Park

Waves crash into the cliffs below the lighthouse in Dunkirk. (Mark Mulville/News file photo)

Dunkirks Rebecca Yanus is directing the citys efforts to help filter and clean the water at Point Gratiot Park beach.

Like Evans, Dunkirk hopes a series of five strategically placed rain gardens with several native planting areas will help alleviate flooding in the area and run-off onto the beach and into the lake.

Run-off would come through the rain garden, Yanus said. Its very important we do that at different spots on the property.

A DEC-funded study shows the rain gardens will be filled with a native bedding stone and surrounded by prairie grass and dozens of spots for native plants like the cardinal flower, black-eyed Susans and purple coneflowers, among others.

Two of the rain gardens at West Oak Street and Park Drive will come with accompanying bioswales.

The bedding will be mostly rocks and shale, Yanus said. A lot of the materials that will be used will be materials that are found right along the beach.

That will help defray additional construction costs for the project, which is estimated to be about $140,000.

Point Gratiot has fewer closures than most spots closer to Buffalo, but it remains in the double-digits for each year dating back to 2010, according to EPA data. The highest 28 closures came in 2010 and 2013.

Dunkirk officials hope the DECs involvement in the early part of the process bodes well when the city applies to the agency this summer for a grant to fund the project. If funded, work would be done in 2018, Yanus said.

Were hoping it will bring our water quality up to par so many more people can enjoy our beach, she said.

A big project at Woodlawn

Beachgoers enjoying Woodlawn Beach State Park. (John Hickey/Buffalo News)

At Woodlawn State Park, where theres more pavement and more runoff than at rural parks, cleaning the water will take a lot more than a rain garden or two.

A 2010 state parks report updated in 2015cited five main culprits for impaired water quality at Woodlawn: stormwater outfalls, urban run-off, contaminated stream discharge, algal and leaf debris, and sewage overflows.

The countys expensive Rush Creek Interceptor project addressed the overflows.

It made it possible for us to eliminate the Blasdell Treatment Plant there, pump stations and those overflows, said Joseph Fiegl, Erie Countys deputy commissioner for the Division of Sewerage Management.

Since Nov. 19, there have been no overflows from the traditionally problematic pump stations at Electric Avenue, Blasdell and Labelle, even with some of the extreme weather this spring.

Even so, its been of small consolation for Woodlawns beachgoers this spring.

The beach was closed for six straight days over the Memorial Day holiday from May 28 to June 2 and has been closed five more times since June 5, according to Nowcast beach data.

It's not simply a beach problem, Fiegl said.Woodlawn Beachs water quality problem requires a wholesale solution.

"This is a watershed issue, he said.

Read the original here:

If you like to swim at Lake Erie beaches, our wet spring is bad news - Buffalo News

Related Posts

Comments are closed.