Tag: Atlantic Coast Pipeline

Water Watch

February 12, 2025

Water Watch

Monitoring your waterways!

Have you ever wanted to be a Riverkeeper? Do you have a favorite creek, stream or section of the river that you like to keep an eye on?

Sound Rivers Neuse and Pamlico-Tar Riverkeepers need you to help keep an eye on our waterways by signing up for our Water Watch community-science program! 

Our Riverkeepers are responsible for keeping an eye on the health of our waterways, making sure environmental laws are being followed and polluters held accountable. But our riverkeepers have more than 12,000 square miles of watersheds to pay attention to, and they can’t be everywhere at once.

This is why we rely heavily on community members to let us know when things are wrong on the water. As an organization working in about a quarter of the entire state of North Carolina, we know the value of community members who are engaged in keeping our waterways safe. If you are passionate about water quality and looking for a way to give back to your watershed and community,  lend a hand to our Riverkeepers by signing up for our Water Watch program!

MORE ABOUT WATER WATCH WATER WATCH TRAININGS SIGN UP FOR A WATER WATCH TRAINING GET THE HANDBOOK

More about water watch

Water Watchers are community scientists who help keep an eye on our waterways by collecting basic observational data about river health. Water Watchers are trained in the field to collect scientific observations about water quality, flooding, erosion, habitat and more, that can help inform our understanding of the condition of our waterways and also help flag any pollution concerns. With the help of volunteers with our Water Watch program, we can monitor and protect more stream miles in our watersheds, and help grow a volunteer base of community members who are trained and knowledgeable in water quality science. 

Water Watchers commit to one training and to returning to a site of their choice in the Neuse or Tar-Pamlico watersheds at least once every three months (quarterly) to collect observations. Data is submitted to our online mapping system, where the public can see the observations that our Water Watch volunteers collect. This is community-led science in the name of water quality. So what do you say … will you join our Water Watch team?

Pamlico-Tar Riverkeeper Katey Zimmerman collects a water sample.

Constructed Wetlands

A constructed wetland is exactly what it sounds like: a manmade wetland that mimics the processes of the natural kind. Constructed wetlands collect and temporarily store stormwater runoff, reducing and stabilizing flow to adjacent natural wetlands and streams.

The bonus is — just like with natural wetlands — sediment settles and multiple pollutants are taken up and transformed by wetland plants and microbes, which reduces the number of pollutants entering your groundwater and waterways.

Rainwater Harvesters

A rainwater harvester is a fancy name for “a tank collecting rain from a rooftop.” One of the impervious surfaces we don’t often think of is, quite literally, above our heads. During a hard rain, rooftops can sluice off tens of thousands of gallons of water, but a rainwater harvester collects that runoff which then becomes a non-potable water source to be used for a variety of purposes, including irrigation of vegetables in raised beds (West Craven High School) and watering a football field (Epiphany School).

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Current Action Alerts

September 25, 2024



Current Action Alerts


Make your voice heard!

Your voice can make a difference in the fight to stop pollution. Sound Rivers’ Action Alerts are set up to make it super-easy for you to weigh in on what matters to you. Since you’ve landed here, we already know you care about the health of your waterways — waterways that belong to YOU, not polluters. Here’s an opportunity to make your voice heard, whether you’re weighing in on permit being considered, ineffective regulations contributing to pollution or legislation that will codify harms to your waterways into law.

Sound Rivers’ Action Alerts are pre-written, but you can always add your own comments to the draft message, or even delete the draft message altogether and make it wholly your own. All that’s needed is your name and email address (occasionally, an Action Alert will ask for your physical address, solely to identify which elected official your email will be sent to).

If Sound Rivers has not created an Action Alert for any listing below, contact and other relevant information is available.

Bridge Harbor Marina, Washington

Public comments sought for CAMA permit application

A marina is being proposed for the property on the far side of U.S. Highway 17 Business and the Pamlico River.

The North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality is accepting comments on a CAMA permit application for the construction of a marina at the southern base of the U.S. Highway 17 Business bridge in Washington. The proposed marina will have 133 boat slips, stick-built and floating docks, bulkhead, boardwalk, a boat ramp and boat lifts. The permit application is a scaled-down version of a project proposed in 2021 (read about the original project here). Sound Rivers is evaluating potential impacts and will comment in the near future.

For more information about the scope of this project, the Division of Coastal Management’s field report can be viewed HERE, and the permit application HERE.

Those who wish to comment can send an email to  ashley.grandy@deq.nc.gov and Wayne.Hall@deq.nc.gov. Comments will be accepted up until the decision date, which will likely be “towards the 75-day review deadline for the project,” according to NCDEQ staff.

Durham: Lick Creek

Durham must adopt stronger ordinances to stop sediment pollution

We need your help to protect Durham’s water quality!

   Despite new regulations, new sprawling developments continue to pollute Durham’s waterways, and the Falls Lake drinking water supply downstream.

   Large-scale land clearing developments are turning Durham’s rivers a “tomato soup” shade of muddy. For over two years, in partnership with community members, Sound Rivers has been documenting sediment runoff from active construction sites polluting streams and creeks. Southeast Durham’s most heavily developing Lick Creek watershed has regularly seen levels of sediment ten and twenty times over the state of North Carolina’s standard for healthy waterways. Ellerbe Creek at the heart of Durham has also gained attention for running orange since the start of this year due to runoff from a large development at its headwaters. All of the waterways in Durham’s Neuse River basin flow directly into Falls Lake, a drinking water supply for half a million total people.

The problem is that Durham’s Sediment and Erosion Control regulations have not yet caught up with the rapid scale of growth. In response to public outcry about Durham’s tomato soup creeks, Durham officials have adopted some measures to strengthen S&EC practices. However, we have not seen evidence that these new measures are working to prevent mud from polluting Durham’s public waterways.

We need your help to tell Durham’s City Council that enough is enough — Durham must adopt stronger protections for its waterways before annexing more large-scale land clearing developments in its sensitive watersheds! Lend your voice to this call to action!

Write your email to Durham city councilmembers here!

Read more about this issue on this page.

Want to learn more about sediment pollution in the Neuse and Tar-Pamlico watersheds? Neuse Riverkeeper Samantha Krop breaks the problem down in our Sound Rivers: Riverkeeping Tales from the Neuse & Tar-Pamlico” podcast. Look for the episode, “Muddied Waters” here. The podcast can also be found by searching for keyword “riverkeeping” on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and Amazon Music.


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Adopt a Trash Trap!

September 19, 2024

Adopt a Trash Trap

Xylem employees emptied out a full trash trap on Little Rock Creek in Raleigh.

Want to do something good for your waterways? Adopt a Trash Trap!

Adopting a trash trap gives groups the chance to sign up for a month of monitoring the amount of trash collected by a trash trap, organizing clean-outs and participate in keeping local waterways clean. Groups aren’t defined in any way: it could be a student group, a civic group or even a group of friends.

Trash trap adopters will be responsible for monitoring the trap, cleaning it out at least once (or more if there’s a big storm), weighing the trash, then disposing of it, taking pictures and sending Emily photos and data. In return, Sound Rivers will promote the group on social media and provide up to five Sound Rivers shirts to the group.

Sound Rivers will supply waders, gloves, trash grabbers, trash bags and a scale for weighing the trash.

View and/or download the Adopt A Trash Trap handbook, checklist and data form by clicking on the links below!

Resources

Our handbook has everything you need to know about adopting a trash trap. View or download the PDF by clicking on the image!

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Thank You

June 25, 2024



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