Sept. 19, 2007
Stakeholders Helping to Protect Cedar Creek Watershed
Writer: Mike Jackson, 972-952-9232,mcjackson@ag.tamu.edu
Contact: Clint Wolfe, 972-952-9653,cwolfe@ag.tamu.edu
KAUFMAN – Water quality has declined in the Cedar Creek Reservoir, but
experts with the Texas A&M University System are helping landowners and
government officials develop plans to plans to clean the water that flows
into the 160-acre lake.
Stakeholders in the reservoir's four-county watershed have an
opportunity to offer opinions and help draft the Watershed Protection Plan
for Cedar Creek Reservoir, said Darrel Andrews of the Tarrant Regional
Water District. They can form their own plans and act voluntarily in the
coming years before regulatory agencies impose changes.
"This is a proactive approach," said Andrews, the water district's
assistant director of environmental services. "Let's get everybody
involved before it gets to the level that draws somebody in who is going
to make us do it."
A meeting to finalize plans for a committee on the issue will be held
Oct. 23 at the Kaufman County Library, 3970 S. Houston Street in Kaufman.
It will run from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Landowners, agricultural producers, municipal and county leaders,
environmental group representatives and other area residents are
encouraged to participate, Andrews said. The watershed covers portions of
Henderson, Kaufman, Rockwall and Van Zant counties.
"Local stakeholders provide a point of view that is needed to create a
viable plan that will result in a cleaner water source," he said.
Experts with Texas Cooperative Extension, the Texas Agricultural
Experiment Station and the water district have led efforts to form the
committee, officials with each agency said. They will collaborate with the
Texas Water Resources Institute on efforts to study water quality and
improve the reservoir, said Clint Wolfe, grant and project coordinator
with the Experiment Station in Dallas.
The project will eventually expand to include four other major
reservoirs managed by the Tarrant district in the Trinity River basin,
Wolfe said. The district serves 1.6 million people in 11 counties.
"We will be collecting data for the watershed protection plan," Wolfe
said. "The planning involves a nine-step process outlined by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency."
The process also includes assembling stakeholders and developing
pollution-reduction programs, Wolfe said. The goal is to implement best
management practices to reduce nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment in the
reservoir.
Experts will be looking to landowners and local government officials
for ideas on the most practical approaches to solving the problem, said
Dr. Balaji Narasinham, a research scientist with the Spatial Sciences
Laboratory at Texas A&M University.
"We have to determine the most effective ways of keeping sediment and
nutrients out of the lake," Narasinham said.
Project coordinators have set a tentative May deadline for an initial
watershed protection plan that would include the project's timetable,
Wolfe said. The reservoir was built in 1965 and filled to capacity in
1969, according to the water district. A 16-year research study showed an
increasing trend of excessive amounts of nutrients, which results in
declining water quality.
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