logo

Clean Water News

SearchRSS Feed

For Immediate Release:
2007-07-02
For More Information:
Contact Jennette Gayer
(404) 892-3573

Groups Seek Highest Level of Protection for Conasauga Headwaters

The Conasauga River would receive the status of ‘Outstanding National Resource Water’ (ONRW), the highest level of protection identified in the Clean Water Act, if a recent petition filed by Environment Georgia and the Southern Environmental Law Center is enacted. If successful, the group’s efforts would make the Conasauga River Georgia’s first ONRW. Currently, Georgia is the only southeastern state, besides Mississippi, with no ONRW waterways.

“The Conasauga River deserves to be Georgia’s first Outstanding National Resource Water,” said Jennette Gayer a Policy Advocate with Environment Georgia. “The headwaters of the Conasauga support one of the most biodiverse river ecosystems in the country plus it is a truly breathtaking part of our state to visit and enjoy.”

The ONRW title provides protections against both point and non-point sources of pollution. New point sources of pollution, such as pipes, that are channeled into the designated segment are prohibited.  In turn, regulations that preserve buffer zones and ensure smart growth are implemented across the watershed to curtail non-point pollution.

“The Conasauga is truly one of the country’s outstanding natural resources, and deserves strong protections to help ensure it remains so,” said Brian Gist, an attorney with Atlanta office of the Southern Environmental Law Center.  “The southeast is the fastest growing region in the country – we need to use all the tools we have to safeguard our rich natural heritage.”

The Conasauga starts in the Chattahoochee National Forest and runs up to the Tennessee border where it loops briefly into Tennessee before running back into Georgia and down through Dalton. The ONRW designation would begin at the headwaters of the river, which lie within the Cohutta Wilderness Area, and end before the Alaculsy Valley, a few miles before the Georgia-Tennessee state line. Cool, clean waters support outstanding paddling and trout fishing and feed a downstream snorkeling hole where outdoor enthusiasts can sneak a peak at more than 90 different fish species and 25 species of freshwater mussels.  Twelve of these fish and mussel species are federally designated as endangered or threatened species.

“ONRW designation is the highest protection we can give to our rivers in this country,” said April Ingle, Executive Director of the Georgia River Network. “It’s great that Georgia now has the opportunity to afford this special protection to such a special place.”

The petition was submitted to the Environmental Protection Division (EPD) who, after reviewing the proposal, will open a public comment period and convene a public hearing. In September the issue will be brought to the Board of the Department of Natural Resources where a vote will decide whether or not protection will be granted.

###

To view a copy of the petition click on the link below.