When Puyallup citizen Patty Carter noticed that the storm water retention pond near her property was brown, she assumed it was duck feces. She would soon learn that the causeΒ was actually toxic chemicals seeping into the pond as the result of silt buildup in ClarksΒ Creek, and that the pond was below the high groundwater level.
βClarks Creek is our main way to get storm water out of town to the river, so if itβs reallyΒ filled with silt, all the water table around here has gone up,β Carter said. βItβs not justΒ right next to the creek; itβs the whole valley.β
Over four feet of sediment has piled up on the bottom of the creek, which has not beenΒ dredged since the 1950βs. The waterβs flow is not fast enough to move the silt along, soΒ the problem compounds itself. The silt has contributed to various water quality problemsΒ in Puyallup, including the elodea blooms.
βSilt is breeding ground for elodea, so if you remove the silt, youβre not going to have theΒ elodea,β Puyallup Historical Hatchery Foundation President David Couch said.
Many Puyallup residents are unaware of the problem because the cityβs water qualityΒ report only details information about water going into Puyallup for use, and doesnβtΒ address what happens to waste water. Years of housing development in the city haveΒ negatively affected the waterβs natural flow into Clarks Creek, which empties into theΒ Puyallup River.
Carter and Georga Prossick have advocated for action on the bad water quality. ProssickΒ was part of an Elodea Task Force, which met last fall and recommended silt removalΒ to City of Puyallup officials. The group chose Streamside Environmental, based outΒ of Findlay, Ohio, which could remove the silt without causing harm to the creekΒ habitat. Streamside gave a presentation in Oct. 2012 that was well attended. Streamside wouldΒ demonstrate their technique on a 400-foot area to show how they would remove theΒ sediment, would the City sign off on it.
However, City officials never put in a permit request for the silt removal. At a CityΒ Council meeting on June 4, Councilmember Steve Vermillion stated his concerns aboutΒ acting too quickly.
βIf we canβt get this done on a timely basis, I would prefer to go to 2014,β VermillionΒ said. βI would really like to see whoever does this have the success that weβre lookingΒ for, and I think weβre pressing this time limit way too close.β
Public Works Director Rob Andreotti echoed Vermillionβs concerns.
βWe donβt have all of our permits in,β he said. βWe want to make sure that we meetΒ everyoneβs needs.β
The result was a non-action by the council. The toxicity remains. In the retentionΒ pond, which is city-owned land,Β toxicity levels have reached 39 times the amount of toxins allowed by theΒ regulation.
The Pierce County Health Department has posted a sign by the pond stating the dangerΒ present and warning others to stay away. If things continue to get worse, it will beΒ harmful simply to breathe the air around the pond.
βIt should never have gotten to this point,β Carter said.
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