Categories
Carl and Lewis Stokes Cleanup Cuyahoga River Dam Removal fish free flowing John Kasich randy newman Restoration Symbol

From Flames to Free: The Symbolic Restoration of the Mighty Cuyahoga River

Soundtrack: Burn On by Randy Newman

There must be a thousand rivers like the Cuyahoga in America, and ten thousand around the world.. it runs only 84 miles, only drops 500 feet, drains only 809 miles of America’s 3 million.  On top of that it drains in the ignominious City of Cleveland, which Eddie Murphy implied many years ago in Beverly Hills Cop was not much of a place for classy execution, well before I ever got to see it with my own eyes and give it a personal judgment of coming back but hardly Paris.  Never been off the highway in Akron, but they did produce LeBron. The River Cuyahoga might be able to flow a half million CFM into Lake Erie, and it’s got a reputation for some pretty scenery and ledges in it’s upper reaches, so impressive they were made a National Park, but it’s hardly a world class waterway. What made if famous beyond Ohio was this:

This is a picture of the Cuyahoga someplace I am pretty sure in Cleveland, on fire in 1952. It caught on fire some 13 times between 1868 and 1969 it is reported, about every 7 years it sounds like, and who knows how many minor fires were snuffed out that didn’t make the broadsheets.

The Cuyahoga wasn’t famous for this:

it was famous for this:

and this:
Image result for cuyahoga river environmental problems
it was biologically dead from Akron to Cleveland, some 50 river miles, toxic and anaerobic, unable to support life, and more a gutter than a river as it ran between these two famous industrial cities, dredged for navigation, dammed some 9 times a sluice for pollution going out and raw materials coming in, looking like this:

but even that didn’t make it famous, that wasn’t an uncommon sight in America either back then, as rivers from the Delaware, to the Hood Canal, to the LA River became sad reflections of themselves, sooty industrial monstrosities.. that was about every urban river in America and a few rural ones to boot in places like coal country. What made it special was catching on fire some 13 times ( how the F@#$ does water catch on fire!?), and finally that picture above of the fire making it into Time Magazine in 1969 ( August 1, 1969 America’s Sewage System and the Price of Optimism), right when America’s optimism for the moon landing made it particularly embarrassing how shabby we had let things become. We had perspective now, we had photographed the world from above, and to quote the famous adage, if we can out a man on the moon, why the heck can’t we fix a problem like this!

The fire and the Time article some 48 years ago have been commemorated many times, having helped launch Earth Day and mass adaptation of environmental values that were channeled by Richard Nixon into some very important pieces of legislation including the Clean Water Act..  that was the nadir, nationally even, and now things are perfect nationwide. Done and done, right?
Well, not really, because the Clean Water Act focuses on pollution, and pollution was only the most obvious problem back then.. frikin’ river catches on fire, and people got some explainin’ to do, right Tommy Boy, but think about it, pollution is only part of the problem, but the only part the Clean Water Act had a real mission to solve in 1972 when it passed, most publicly as a result of this event.
Sure the Cuyahoga still has pollution issues, it runs through two major cities Akron and Cleveland.  Impervious surfaces, sewage, automotive and industrial run off are just a few to mention almost anyplace people live near water, and where you find water, you almost always find man. While we have controlled the old boogie men of industrial waste and pollution, we came up with more nuanced bad guys like the aforementioned, contamination not just from major big bad factories, which they call major point source pollution, but leaky car oil pans and radiators and fecal matter from walked pets are the potent but somehow less menacing and horrifying new bad guys; fix a big problem and move onto the next one down the list, and that is what makes what is happening on the Cuyahoga so impressive, because they are moving down the list well past where anyone might expect for a river that had so many problems, nor resting on their laurels. They have blown past storm water runoff and are now taking on derelict dams! Them kids at Patagonia just told the Starbucks set that dam’s were bad three years ago, but them Trump voting hard heads in Ohio have been ripping out dam’s for more than ten!
What am I talking about?
 We’ve come a long way baby.. enter again one of my favorite new themes, dam removal, stage right.
Why I became curious to research this is I was poking around looking at data from American Rivers for a previous post on Dam Removal going Prime Time, and I kept noticing a particular river on the lists of the 60 or so dam’s removed every year. it wasn’t high profile projects like the Klamath or the Penobscott, where Endangered Species Act and blue state political inertia is making things happen, it was a river in Ohio with a familiar name. For one river this small, no matter what the reputation or location, to have 5 dam’s removed or diverted in the last 15 years with at least one if not two more in planning might be a record, per river mile or by any measurement. To have this happen in the perennially environmentally distracted heartland is almost astounding. And the to such a iconic river. What was happening on the Cuyahoga? I had to ask myself.. a whole lot it seems, in the right direction after a whole lot of industrial might made it such a laughing stock.

Cuyahoga River Dam Status
Upriver to Downriver:

1. Lake Rockwell Dam  no plans.. upriver of Akron, and provides the city with it’s drinking water

2. Kent Dam   removed 2004  Kent
3. Munroe Falls Dam   Removed 2006

Cuyahoga Falls Dams:
4. LeFever  removed 2013
5. Sheraton Mill Dam 2013

6. Gorge Dam ( AKA First Energy) removal 2019 ( waiting for funding)   Akron
7. Brecksville Dam  State moving to remove it in 2017 or 2018

multiple tributary dam’s have been removed as well.

What’s powerful about this from a narrative perspective is that there are large water falls behind the Gorge Dam, just yards behind it. If it is removed, they will be restored in some form!

If that dam is taken down, there will be something like 60 miles essentially wild flowing river running from Lake Rockwell Dam all the way down to Lake Erie.. this would be a huge benefit to the Lake, which is experiencing horrible algae blooms in part due to the increased water temperatures that come with stagnant waters.
State Government and the EPA have so much momentum to fix this river to a bar set high for water quality scores that they seem to be heading towards a wild restoration, which no one would have dreamed of so long ago when the river was dead and on fire less than 50 years ago. It’s like going from Quadruple Bypass to Marathons.. turning Calcutta into Copenhagen ( if that’s progress…). Making William Hung actually sing and dance like Ricky Martin, it’s almost seems implausible. If you figure on the 30-80,000 dams nationwide that the greenies keep trumpeting about, there are very few free running stretches of anything, especially this close to population sources, industry, and agriculture and east of the Mississippi & Rockies, all situations that demanded river control in the old school tradition.

Mayor Carl and Cong.Lewis Stokes of Cleveland

What also impresses is that you have a state with a politically adept and not foolhardy Republican There might be a thread of inevitable progress here. Ohio is pretty far east.. it’s a place where people have made mistakes and had time to move away from them.. while the west stumbles into the reinvention of the wheel, perhaps Ohio is joining the east coast in acts of societal maturity, watching aging infrastructure through it’s decrepitness impose something different, and a place so long from it’s wild roots somehow recognizing intuitively what might change it’s moribund economic state, a return to a pre-industrial environmental state. While so may rivers in America languish without momentum fighting runoff, dam’s, diversion, and neglect, the Cuyahoga seems to be benefiting from how bad it got, but in some ways it isn’t.. It is benefiting from how bad it got that it might have contributed to laws and programs that fix the problem, but they weren’t intended for it. The US and Ohio might recognize the symbolic significance of this river but they don’t necessarily account for it’s momentum. If you talk to those involved as I was able to do a few busy months ago, they will tell you that the laws and efforts that are setting the Cuyahoga free as as much from the regular band of state employees and local activists as from any celebration. It all supposedly started with a pair of power brothers, the mayor of Cleveland and his brother a long serving US congressman Carl and Louis Stokes. When Carl became mayor a year before the ’69 fire he was on fire himself and talented to do what the city needed to recover from strife and decay brought along by so many things from pollution to racial issues to urban decay and steelbelt economic woes. He saw the river as a worthy way to turn the town around and his emphasis flowed not only up river but around the country. The Cuyahoga as the symbol of pollution became the focus of improvement, and guys like his brother pushed those ideas in Washington as well. A framework built locally but to the benefit of all.

Gov.John Kasich signing a bill to give ODNR more power in Lake Erie 

Governor in John Kasich who hasn’t tried to strip or hamstring these efforts as happens out west, where water going anywhere but into a dam or onto a plant is argued as wasted by a cranky contingent of industrialists. While Ohio DNR might have cash flow issues like any well meaning state bureaucracy is bound to, it’s still doing it’s job, it hasn’t been politicized or stripped bare so much that Dam Removal projects couldn’t happen on his watch. Fish don’t know party, and clean water doesn’t only impact one side or the other, and it’s neat to see the wheels of government doing what they are supposed to in such a famously contested state. In the traditional narrative so espoused right now by partisans, African American Politicians aren’t known for prioritizing the environment no more than Republican Governors are. It appears that a cleaner Cuyahoga has become a shared value.
And don’t forget the activists. Their work progresses, to the point of celebration, and is now moving through hurdles to an almost pristine state that barely any other river this size could imagine benefiting from east of the Mississippi, let alone west of it.
This river, diminutive though it may be, runs through so many populations, rural and urban, left and right, green and rust colored, that it’s great to see it as a uniting force in a better life for all than a source of contention.. it’s about two visions of America experimented with and now redeemed.. industry exchanged for beauty as time and circumstances allow. From a fiery symbol of what was broken to now almost a model of the pristine. Something is working here other than the steel mill.
What can I say.. Cleveland ( and Kent, and Akron) Rocks!

Categories
Charlie Steen Cleanup Colorado River Mi Vida Mine Moab Moab Tailings Pile TARP Funds Train Uranium Mine Utah

Move 16 (Million) Tons…: The Shrinking of the Moab Tailings Pile

Merle Travis might have written it:

Paul Robson might have done it best:

Here’s a mining themed version some guy did:

Hell, the Red Army Choir gave it a try:

but no one is doing it quite like the Department of Energy, UMTRA, and Portage Inc. of Idaho are in Moab, Utah right now, times a million, about 5000 tons a day worth..
What the heck am I talking about? None other than the Moab Tailing’s Pile, the byproduct of some 30 years of Uranium Mining, that currently sits in the flood plain of the Colorado River next to one of Utah’s biggest tourist destination hubs.

Before I tell a sad but hopeful story about the pile, lemme set a time and place with the rags to riches to rags story of Charlie Steen, the man who found the mother lode of Uranium in the United States, the Mi Vida Mine in the Lisbon Valley of Utah, about 40 miles to the South East, near the little Mormon berg of La Sal. Don’t confuse him with the Tiger Blood swilling TV hack that never would have made it in this man’s old west! He’s Sheen, not Crazy ‘ol Charlie Steen, who is a legend of a different sort.
Image result for moab tailings pileWhen America started the Nuclear Age with a series of experiments in places like the University of Chicago, Oak Ridge, TN, Idaho, Hanford, Washington, and Los Alamos, NM, culminating in the Big Bang at White Sands (“Now I am become Death, Destroyer of Worlds” quoteth Robert Oppenheimer at the time). From what I can tell, we had to get our Uranium from the former Belgian Congo for the most part to do the dirty deed in White Sands, Nagasaki and Hiroshima. I will leave the meditations on this act to Oppenheimer and John Hersey, because I am trying to depict the Gee Whiz exuberance of the birth of the Atomic age and the Money Money Money that caught up a guy named Charlie Steen, the Charlie Sheen of Moab, who took the town into it’s third incarnation from Indian Village to Mormon Settlement to Nuclear Mecca, which paved the way for the final incarnation, Gateway to Canyon Lands, but not without a little environmental impact.
Image result for moab tailings pileCharlie Steen was a geologist, and at about the time that the US government started promising beaucoup bucks for Uranium, to make our Nuclear Age a home grown affair, in the Aftermath of World War II, he moved his family to south west Utah,because for some reason, from Australia to Namibia to Canada, Uranium seems to like the red rock areas, and Utah turned out to be no exception. Charlie had his own theories about Uranium and Anticlines, a geological feature that is a bit like a dome, and some hole he had dug down 200 feet proved to be his fortune when his family was broke as could be.Charlie couldn’t afford a Geiger counter, so the guy at the Moab Gas Station had to spot it for him when he pulled up in his beat up old truck with a load from 80 feet deep, when he was well past it to 200 ft… He had struck it rich, the counter went nuts, and from this moment was born the crazy legends of how Steen was so sick of doing laundry by hand he would have all his clothes flown to Grand Junction to be Dry Cleaned, and he would fly up over the canyons to watch TV from the back of his plane too, since he could catch signals from Denver and Salt Lake up there… it was a grand time, and Charlie helped fuel the flood of Uranium, sold at top dollar until 1960 when the US Government finally figured out how to buy Wholesale, that gave us the Dr. Strangelove era of a 20,000 warhead arsenal and the growth of the Nuclear age that ended one morning in the 70’s on Three Mile Island.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Steen
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranium_mining
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranium_mining_in_Utah
unfortunately, if you’ll pardon the pun, there was a bit of fallout from all this.. Moab got rich, which is channeled into such cultural gifts and indulgences as Milt’s Stop & Eat:
http://www.miltsstopandeat.com/
people started to discover Moab and Parks were created and the tourists came, and the bottom fell out on the price of Uranium, leading to a pretty seamless transition, violence only being done in the written world, by Ed Abbey who just might have assumed that Moab would have been left just the way it was:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Abbey
photoBut the most tangible piece of fallout was this huge pile of Uranium, and given the Merle Travis Song it almost seems too perfect to be true, an estimated 16,000,000 tons of it, so tall you didn’t used to be able to see Moab from north of town when you came in on the Highway from Green River. You see, like in so much mining, The Uranium didn’t come in pure veins, maybe some of it was pretty dense, but they were processing 1400 tons of rock a day on average right there north of Moab to get the Uranium they wanted, and the rest was tossed in this pile on a flat spot by the river, loaded with heavy metals and lower grade radioactive materials, heck, probably some missed uranium as well, and there it has sat, kind of like the chunk of almost pure uranium they once found in a guys back yard in Moab after a fly by with a helicopter sporting a Geiger counter, not obviously hurting anybody, but likely not in the best spot.. as people started to come to Moab for recreation more and more, not just filming westerns and mining bomb bricks , and the nation’s environmental consciousness started to invade even the last redoubts of old school industry like Utah, a plan was hatched to clean it all up. Now the Moab Tailings Pile ain’t a Superfund Site, people point that name around like a rattlesnake points his snout,
http://www.epa.gov/region8/superfund/ut/index.html
but it is being supervised and paid for by the Federal Government, the Department of Energy, as they are to some degree the guys who caused the whole mess to be made in the first place. They are moving the whole pile to some big hole far from rivers where it might even be reprocessed to get just a wee bit more uranium out of it. How much have they moved, well, 36% at last count, about 6 million Tons, so while we’re all another day older and perhaps, due to the TARP spending, truly deeper in debt, I can’t say it didn’t need to be done.
They post updates often. Due to running out of Stimulus Money, they are no longer working winters but are on the move 4 days a week, maintain equipment one day a week schedule, and oh yeah, you can see Moab from the crest of the highway now…
http://www.grandcountyutah.net/pdf/UMTRA_Status.pdf
http://www.gjem.energy.gov/moab/
http://www.new.ans.org/pubs/magazines/download/a_838
Maybe someday soon, the natives of the Future, some funny combo of Mormon, Hippie Raft Guide and Navajo, will be banging drums on that very spot unaware of what had occurred, safely smokin’ dope, makin’ sacred undergarments out of river reeds, and having fun as the river floods once again, free of the contamination Charlie Steen and The Space Age unleashed upon the river.. 2025 if not before…

Colorado River Canyonlands National Park
Colorado River in Canyonlands NP just down from tailings pile

Image result for colorado river