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By Mike Isbell
University of Georgia



Don’t think for a moment that the junk the “Rivers Alive”
volunteers cleaned out of West Point Lake came downstream from
Heard County.



It may have passed through here, but the vast majority of it
didn’t come from here. Most of it came from somewhere upriver
from here.



Heard County had its own Rivers Alive cleanup. With the help of
Georgia Power’s Plant Wansley, we had quite an army of volunteers
working back-to-back weekends.



We were cleaning up our part of the Chattahoochee, and that
should keep a whole lot of stuff from ever reaching West Point
Lake.



Many experts say the Chattahoochee River is the natural resource
of greatest economic importance in the Southeast, after the
Mississippi River.


River in peril



But it’s a river in peril.



The late professor emeritus of ecology at the University of
Georgia, Eugene Odum, once said, “The Chattahoochee is an
endangered river, short and simple. With few exceptions, no other
major metropolitan area in the world has to depend on such a
little river for its existence.”



Environmental regulations are helping clean up single-point
sources of pollution. But many problems in Georgia’s streams are
the result of nonpoint sources.



Litter and other debris continually washes into our streams and
rivers. This process of debris loading from upstream has resulted
in serious impacts to the Chattahoochee and to West Point Lake.


Rivers alive



Rivers Alive is a statewide effort using volunteers to clean up
Georgia rivers and streams. All together, 19,000 volunteers
devoted 70,000 hours to cleaning 1,105 miles of streams in
Georgia this year.



The state had more than 180 Rivers Alive cleanup events in 2003,
at least 20 on the Chattahoochee. Others cleaned up sections of
the Altamaha, Coosa, Flint, Ochlockonee, Ocmulgee, Oconee,
Ogeechee, Satilla, Savannah, St. Mary’s, Suwannee, Tallapoosa and
Tennessee rivers.



A dozen 4-H clubs were among the sponsors of these cleanups in
Georgia.



The Heard County Extension Service and Heard County 4-H
Club collaborated with Plant Wansley on three days to remove
debris from the Chattahoochee here.


Quite a haul



When they were done, the 92 4-H’ers and Plant Wansley employees
and family members in Heard County removed quite a haul from the
river:



  • 226 industrial-size bags of trash.
  • 56 tires.
  • 12 appliances.
  • 10 tons of metal pipe.
  • 10 barrels.
  • 3 dump truck loads of nothing but plain old junk
  • 1 doghouse.
  • 1 old truck.



It’s heartwarming that all these people volunteer their time to
clean up our rivers in these events. It would be better, though,
if we’d all commit to being more careful about letting our junk
wash into our streams in the first place.



(Mike Isbell is the Heard County Extension Coordinator with
the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and
Environmental Sciences. Dan Rahn, a CAES news editor, also
contributed to this article.)