Buyers Guide '09

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The Elizabeth River Project

A grassroots effort in the Chesapeake Bay area

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By Carol Brzozowski

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For years, before the Clean Water Act went into effect, the Elizabeth River in southeastern Virginia was a literal dumping ground for industrial waste from industries that lined its shores to serve commerce.

One of the bends in the River—Money Point—was so named for the wealth it created for shipping terminals, factories, and wood treatment plants, according to locals. Others believe Blackbeard buried treasure along the shores.

But the contaminated sediments in Elizabeth River are anything but treasure. A grassroots effort has joined together environmental and business interests to address a watershed action plan in what is one of the largest environmental cleanup efforts in the Chesapeake Bay.

Although the contamination is due to earlier industrial waste practices, as much as 90% of new pollution entering the Elizabeth River these days comes through stormwater runoff from parking lots, lawns, and other industrial and residential surfaces, according to some reports. An aging system of stormwater drains discharges soils, fertilizers, pesticides, and metals directly into the Elizabeth River.

The solution is to reduce stormwater runoff pollution while promoting stormwater reuse, say advocates of the effort to clean up the Elizabeth River.

“The Money Point project is not just cleaning up the contaminated sediments and walking away from the project—which a lot of times is what happens when people are only interested in cleaning up a contaminated site and that’s it,” says Joe Rieger, the director of watershed restoration for the Elizabeth River Project.

The Elizabeth River Project is a nonprofit grassroots effort spearheading the Elizabeth River cleanup. Begun around a kitchen table in 1991, the organization grew under the leadership of Marjorie Mayfield Jackson, who serves as executive director, from the original four interested parties to a current staff of eight and a dues-paying membership of more than 2,000.

The grassroots effort has expanded to include industries; citizens; and local, state, and municipal government agencies, all of which are undertaking individual efforts toward the main goal of remediating the river and its shorelines.

“Since the day Marjorie founded this organization, our main mission was to work with the state and federal government along with the industries, because we knew that we couldn’t be effective on this river if we had an attitude of pointing fingers,” says Rieger.

While the efforts embrace the Elizabeth River watershed as a whole, special attention is being given to critical concerns at Money Point. The overall philosophy of action looks not only to remediate the consequences of the past, but also to set in place actions that will ensure no recontamination in the future.

To that end, the Money Point Revitalization Task Force met from January 2005 to August 2006, convened by the Elizabeth River Project and facilitated by the University of Virginia’s Institute for Environmental Negotiation.

The group produced a 10-year plan “put together with diverse stakeholder input that included all of the Money Point landowners, the state government, and the citizens, and we got their input as to the most comprehensive plan we could come up with to restore Money Point,” says Rieger.

“What we didn’t want to do is spend $5 million, walk away from the project, and then find out that the River got recontaminated from the uplands. This plan addresses the recontamination issues.”

Former USEPA administrator Christine Todd Whitman has called the Elizabeth River Project “the model” for voluntary partnerships between government, businesses, and citizens to achieve real environmental results.

The main waste pollutant over the years has been creosote, used as a wood preservative. Lumber for outdoor use—such as railroad ties, posts, and marine pilings—was soaked in creosote to extend the life of wood that is exposed to weather elements. Money Point had been one of the focus areas for creosoting timber.

The lumber had been treated there before it was sent north for use in telephone poles or piers. At one time, four large creosoting facilities were located within a 2-mile area in the southern branch of the Elizabeth River. Eventually, some of the highest levels of PAH (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) in the world were found offshore of Eppinger and Russell, a former wood treatment plant, as well as at the site of the former Republic Creosoting. The PAH suite of compounds is typically found in creosote and creosote materials that go onto various types of timbers.

Some 35 acres are contaminated by PAH.

 “There’s a spottiness of contaminants out there in the river, which has led us to believe—based on looking at some historical structures—it’s the result of day-to-day activities when there was no Clean Water Act for controlling substances like creosote,” says Rieger.

The Elizabeth River has played an important role in the history of the region. It is part of the Elizabeth River watershed, which includes the towns of Norfolk, Portsmouth, Chesapeake, and Virginia Beach.

The watershed is further divided into smaller branches, with the main stem, the eastern branch, the western branch, the southern branch, and the Lafayette River.

The Elizabeth River watershed is 200 square miles and is one of the oldest port facilities, has one of the largest naval fleets on the Eastern seaboard, and is the third-largest cargo importer into the East Coast.

Consequently, it is a “very protected” harbor area because the harbor has protection from large storms, which is why it became a port and is one of the nation’s oldest ports, notes Rieger.

“It’s become a key area for the maritime industry,” Rieger says. “The soft bottoms allowed for dredging to occur so they could get larger ships into the port without having to dig through stone or other materials, like in New York Harbor where they have to blast.”

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Over time, as material was dredged to create port facilities, the Elizabeth River became deeper and narrower. Initially, it was a very shallow estuary with a maximum depth of about 20 feet, but the average depth was about 5 to 7 feet.

Rieger points out the Elizabeth River is not a “flow-through” river as are others. The southern portion of the river is part of the Intracoastal Waterway, and a canal links it to the Dismal Swamp, which is the only constant source of freshwater other than stormwater runoff during rain events. Next Page >

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