By
TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI.org News staff
PROVIDENCE
— Narragansett Bay and Rhode Island’s lakes and rivers are getting cleaner, but
funding is in jeopardy for monitoring pollution and the impact of climate
change on state waters.
Specifically,
the monitoring of beach pollution is threatened by the $85 billion federal
spending reduction known as the sequester.
Beach
closings from pollution in Narragansett Bay have been declining, but the entire
$212,000 summer monitoring program has been eliminated from President Obama’s
most recent proposed budget.
Also
threatened is funding for the state’s 30 flood gauges that measure water levels
in rivers and streams. The gauges are essential for tracking the growing threat
of flashfloods and river overflows.
“It’s really important for climate change,” said Janet Freedman, coastal geologist with the Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC). “We could lose them all.”
Friedman
was one of several speakers at the annual Watershed
Counts conference April
23 at the Statehouse, where some 60 state groups contributed to a statu
s report on the Ocean State's lakes, rivers and streams and on Narragansett Bay.
s report on the Ocean State's lakes, rivers and streams and on Narragansett Bay.
The
good news: Narragansett Bay is getting much healthier. Since 2003, nitrogen
inflows into the bay from the state’s largest wastewater treatment plants are
down 59 percent. The oxygen-choking nutrient is expected to reach a 79 percent
reduction by 2014, well ahead of a 50 percent goal.
“It’s
the best we’ve ever seen," said Tom Uva of the Narragansett Bay Commission
(NBC).
The
ongoing loss of open space in coastal areas and flood plains, however, is a
major concern.
Protecting flood-prone areas reduces the risk of flood damage
and improves the overall quality of the Narragansett Bay watershed, according
to state officials. Since 1995, a third of the state’s open space available for
development has been lost to construction.
“How
we develop land affects water quality in the bay and at beaches, which has a
major impact on our economy,” said Meg Kerr, Watershed Counts co-coordinator.
The
Narragansett Bay watershed covers 2,066 square miles in Rhode Island and
Massachusetts. Some 2,800 miles of rivers and 44,000 acres of lakes serve as
natural habitats, recreation areas and drinking water supplies. More than 2
billion gallons of fresh water flow daily through the watershed, creating the
Narragansett Bay estuary.