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News Archive

News from Selected Month

The State of Our Drinking Water Systems

The Plattsburgh Press Republican recently reported that the spillway at the 90-year old Mead Dam, which supplies water for the city, does not meet state regulations and must be reconstructed. Like many places throughout the country, Plattsburgh faces…

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The state of America’s water supply infrastructure is appalling and remedying the problem will not be cheap.

"Fix a Leak Week" March 12 - 18, 2012

LCC is joining with the EPA’s WaterSense Program to promote Fix a Leak Week. Fix a Leak Week encourages Americans to find and fix water leaks at homes and businesses. “Leaks can account for more than 10,000 gallons of water loss in an average home…

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Photo by Wikipedia.com

Aging Water Infrastructure in the News

Lake Champlain Committee Staff Scientist Mike Winslow was featured on WCAX's evening news to discuss our aging national and local water infrastructure systems. Watch the interview on our website. MORE

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After the Floods – Did the Fish Survive?

The past year will forever be remembered as the year of flooding. Record high lake levels in the spring were followed by Tropical Storm Irene in the late-summer. With such tremendous increases in the amount of water in the lake and in our rivers, how…

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How do fish cope with floods? Photo by Kevin Connors.

Watershed for Every Classroom ~ 2012-2013

Watershed for Every Classroom is a year-long, 11-day professional development experience for K-12 teachers. In a supportive, collaborative, and fun environment, we explore the many different ecological and cultural stories of the Lake Champlain…

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Explore the many different ecological and cultural stories of the Lake Champlain Basin through Watershed for Every Classroom. Photo by LCC.

Winter Questions About the Lake?

Look in LCC’s Award-winning book! Why is ice so hard and slippery? Does Lake Champlain produce lake-affect snow? Why does fog form over the lake on cold days? What is the probability that Lake Champlain will freeze over in any year? MORE

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Get LCC’s book to learn more about the lake.

March 15 – Lessons from the Savage Seas

On Thursday March 15, Brad Van Liew, the only American to win a solo around the world sailboat race will speak at the Main Street Landing Film House, 60 Lake Street in Burlington, Vermont. The event is the Spring Ice Breaker of The Regatta for Lake…

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March 10 – Climate Change Workshop for Teachers

Educators and interested citizens can learn more about the science behind climate change and action steps for students in a hands-on workshop. The workshop will run from 8:30 AM until 3:00 PM on Saturday, March 10 at St. Michael’s College,…

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The Champlain Basin Education Initiative is hosting a workshop for teachers on March 10 that will address climate change and action steps. Photo by morguefile.

Stream Gage Closing Deferred

Thanks to the work of Senators Leahy and Schumer, funding for USGS stream gages has been extended -- for the time being. Eighteen gages in the Champlain Valley – nine in Vermont and nine in New York - were slated for closure. MORE

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The Chazy gaging station and 17 others in the Lake Champlain Basin will receive funding for now. Photo from USGS.

Air Pollution: Good News, Bad News

The end of the year brought good and bad news on management of air pollution in the United States. On the plus side, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson announced new rules and standards that will cut mercury emissions from power plants by up to 90%. MORE

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New EPA regulations would limit mercury pollution to Lake Champlain. Photo from flickr.

Fracking – NY DEC Reviewing Rules; VT House Passes 3-Year Moratorium

The issue of using hydraulic fracturing or “fracking” as a means of extracting natural gas from shale and other tightly packed rock formations has stirred a great deal of controversy. MORE

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People gather in Albany, NY to protest fracking. Photo by Bennet V via flickr.com.

Nature Note - Winter Ducks

Winter is a great time for observing waterfowl on Lake Champlain. During the chilly months many birds escape from even colder northern climes to the relative warmth and tranquility of Lake Champlain. Ducks can be found wherever the edge of the ice…

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A common goldeneye male. Photo from Wikipedia.

Thank You Donors!

Membership support provides the majority of LCC’s funding and helps us protect water quality, safeguard natural habitats and enhance recreational access. MORE

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LCC Members Pitch in Post Flooding!

The historic flooding of 2011 sent unprecedented quantities of nutrients, sediments and debris into the lake and brought tragic losses to many communities. The events reinforced the need to adapt to climate change by ensuring that our infrastructure…

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LCC Wish List of Goods and Volunteers

LCC is seeking the following items and help for our new office space and work on the water. If you have items or time to contribute, please contact LCC Executive Director Lori Fisher. MORE

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Thank You!

LCC’s work for a healthy, accessible lake depends upon the active involvement of many dedicated volunteers who lend heads, hands, and heart in a myriad of ways. As we close out 2011the LCC Board of Directors and staff extend our thanks to everyone…

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Welcome Jessica!

The Lake Champlain Committee staff got a boost this fall with the hiring of Office Manager Jessica Rossi. A graduate of Elon University with a degree in strategic communications and business administration, she previously worked for the Boy Scouts of…

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Lake Champlain Bridge Opens

On November 7th the new bridge over Lake Champlain at Crown Point opened to the public. It replaced a structure built in 1929 under the administration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who was governor of New York at the time. That bridge was closed…

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The new Lake Champlain Bridge on opening day. Photo from NYSDOT.

Irene Response Update

On November 15th at the Vermont statehouse, lawmakers discussed issues surrounding gravel extraction as a response to Tropical Storm Irene. They heard from academics and state regulators about how removing gravel can often exacerbate downstream…

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Gravel removal from streams can create more problems than it solves.

Nature Note - Mixing Begins

The twice annual mixing of the lake’s warm and cold layers begins in earnest once the water temperature dips below 40F. At that point, the lake water temperature and thus density becomes relatively uniform from top to bottom. When the lake reaches…

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Photo by www.dreamstime.com

In Memory of Gary Cronin

Gary loved Lake Champlain. Binoculars at the ready, always a close eye on the level of the lake, concern for how the Winooski was affecting water clarity in a given summer, whether the storm rumbling above the Adirondacks would make it to Colchester…

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Gary enjoying a lake outing with daughter Sarah and grandson Noah. Photo by Shawn Keeley.

Vermont Denies Mudpuppies Protection

The native mudpuppy, a large salamander that lives in rivers along Lake Champlain, was denied a spot on Vermont's Endangered Species List for the second time since 2002. The Endangered Species Committee and Natural Resource Secretary Deb Markowitz…

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Mudpuppies are the only completely aquatic salamanders in the Champlain Valley. Photo courtesy of Wikipedia.

New York CAC Discusses Lake Levels, Stream Gages

Many USGS gages like this one on the Great Chazy River may be closed in March due to a loss of federal funding. On November 29, Staff Scientist Mike Winslow was asked to discuss regulation of Lake Champlain’s level with the New York Citizens’…

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Many USGS gages like this one on the Great Chazy River may be closed in March due to a loss of federal funding. Image via USGS.

South Lake - Important Meetings on Phosphorus Reduction

The second round of important public meetings on the re-writing of the Lake Champlain Phosphorous Total Maximum Daily Load – or TMDL - the phosphorus reduction budget will be held November 14 – 17 in the southern portion of the Lake Champlain Basin.…

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LCC Wraps Up Rugg Brook Monitoring Project

In 2011 LCC completed five years of monitoring at a stream restoration site in St. Albans. Rugg Brook was targeted for restoration following an LCC assessment of the watershed. Prior to restoration, the stream had cut up to 11 feet deep into a…

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Before restoration in 2005, note the deep cut banks. The water sits about 10' below the level of the floodplain. Photo by Mike Winslow.

Blue-Green Algae Season Overview

LCC completed its ninth season of blue-green algae monitoring on Lake Champlain. In 2011, volunteers collected 172 samples and there were 29 low alerts and two high alerts issued during the ten weeks of citizen monitoring. MORE

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Blue-Green Algae on Lake Champlain.

University of Vermont awarded $20M to study lake

(Adapted from an AP report)

A science program at the University of Vermont has been awarded a $20 million federal grant, the largest grant in the school's history, to help study the health of the Lake Champlain basin and look at the effects of…

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Photo by Carolyn Bates.

McAllister Clean Up

Commercial divers recently reached the shipwrecked tugboat McAllister to assess whether it still contained diesel fuel from when it sank in 1963. The wreck sits in about 165-feet of water off Schuyler Reef. The tug was carrying diesel fuel when it…

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Tugboat from the McAllister Towing and Transportation Company. Photo by Rob and Jessie Stankey.

Fall Clean Lake Tip

Piles of autumn leaves left in the road can become part of the stormwater problem for the lake. Help keep our waters clean by sweeping or raking leaves away from roadways. Mulch them with a few passes of the lawnmower so the nutrients left in the…

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Photo by Chiot's Run.

Water Conservation Tip

Installing a WaterSense labeled aerator to your faucet is one of the most cost-effective ways to save water. Also consider replacing the entire faucet with a WaterSense labeled model. Either way, you can increase a faucet's efficiency by 30 percent…

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A WaterSense label indicates water saving products.

Tropical Storm Irene: How Do We Prepare for the Next One? Second in a two-part series

Under any scenario events like Tropical Storm Irene and the spring floods of 2011 will be extreme outliers; however, climate models do predict we should expect and prepare for more intense storms in the years to come. MORE

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Photo by USFWS.

Tropical Storm Irene: How Do We Respond? First in a two-part series

Tropical Storm Irene will shape our thoughts about and relationship with rivers for at least a generation. A previous generation reacted to the floods of 1927 by straightening and berming rivers and dredging sediments. Bulldozers ran down the rivers…

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Gravel removal from streams can create more problems than it solves.

Tern, Tern, Tern

The sandbar at the mouth of Mill Creek in Port Henry is covered with loafing birds, white balls of feathers in various states of repose. Most are ring-billed gulls with a few other gulls mixed in, but two birds in particular stand out. They are the…

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Caspian Tern. Image via Wikipedia.

Volunteers Help Clean up Burlington Shoreline

Thanks to the lake lovers who joined the Rozalia Project, LCC and other lake partners in a September cleanup of the Burlington waterfront! The afternoon effort removed 1,500 items and 408 pounds of debris along a half mile of shoreline. MORE

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Important Meetings on Phosphorus Reduction

This week, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation will host important meetings on the re-writing of the Lake Champlain Phosphorous Total Maximum Daily Load or TMDL - the phosphorus reduction…

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Rozalia Project Cleanup & Trash Bash September 17, 2011 ~ Rain or Shine

Join the Rozalia Project, LCC and other lake friends in a lakeside cleanup as part of the International Coastal Cleanup (ICC). The ICC is the world's largest effort for ocean (and lake) health with millions of volunteers from over 150 countries…

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Save the Date ~ October 1 is LCC’s 48th Annual Meeting!

Please join Lake Champlain Committee board, staff and friends at "The Big House" at Sunnywood in Chazy, New York on Saturday, October 1st from 2:00 PM-5:00 PM for our 48th Annual Meeting. Learn about LCC’s work and lake issues, get a guided tour of…

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Built on the Chazy shore in 1913 by George and Eliza Hubbell, the "Big House" is the largest Adirondack style "shed" in New York. Graphic from Pete and Jane Hubbell.

Tropical Storm Irene Prompts Lake Seiche

Between 7:00 AM and 4:00 PM on Sunday August 28th Lake Champlain rose approximately three feet according to the gauge in Whitehall, NY at the southern end of the lake. Over the same time span the gauge at Rouses Point at the northern end of the lake…

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Tropical Storm Irene wreaked havoc in Vermont and Upstate New York. Photo by NASA/NOAA GOES Project.

Boating After Irene

Tropical Storm Irene delivered another slug of nutrients and sediments to Lake Champlain along with tremendous quantities of debris causing challenges for navigation. Boaters should use extreme caution on the water. Conditions are particularly…

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Tropical Storm Irene caused tremendous destruction in the Lake Champlain watershed. Photo by Lars Gange and MansfieldHeliflight.

Spring Flooding Triggers Discussion of Prevention Options

Lake Champlain was above flood stage for two months this spring. The record flooding that occurred in New York, Vermont and Quebec has led to calls for the governments to ‘do something’. Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin and Quebec Premier Jean Charest…

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A flooded Burlington playground along Lake Champlain's waterfront. Photo by Lori Fisher.