Archive for the ‘Fourmile Creek’ Category

Four Mile Creek Ecosystem Gets Makeover

Friday, April 11th, 2008
By DAVE SKELLIEIt’s only eight miles long in a watershed that encompasses 11.93 square miles, yet its health is important for an entire ecosystem. Four Mile Creek, four miles east of the city of Erie, flows through the municipalities of Greene, Harborcreek and Lawrence Park townships and Wesleyville Borough. From its mouth about one-half mile north of Route 5 at Water Street, this stream runs through densely developed areas southward to 38th Street. From that point on, the Four Mile Creek watershed becomes much more rural in character.A study several years ago for Pennsylvania-Lake Erie Watershed Association (PLEWA) showed Four Mile Creek had the fourth-lowest water quality of 22 streams it monitors. This diagnosis prompted numerous projects to improve water quality and remove manmade impediments to water flow and fish passage.

PLEWA has other partners in the effort, including the Pennsylvania Sea Grant Program, which has taken a lead on several. Other partners include the Pennsylvania Coastal Zone Management program, the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission, the Wesleyville Conservation Club, Lawrence Park Township, Penn State-Behrend, and private property owners.

The stream improvement projects should increase the stream’s quality. Gannon University biologist Greg Andraso monitored the creek in the summer of 2007. His findings will allow researchers to determine the overall success of the projects.

Enhancements like these benefit everyone, including residents, tourists and fishing enthusiasts and, of course, such improvements increase the stream’s biodiversity. More importantly, this effort clearly illustrates that many people in the Erie area are willing to work together to improve our local quality of life by improving the quality of our water and our local environment.
Dam removals

To return Four Mile Creek to a morenatural flow and to improve the ability of fish to more easily migrate upstream, two dams were demolished in August.

The Station Road concrete dam protected an out-of-use sewer pipe that was replaced by a new connection to the city of Erie public sewer system. The other encased an old telephone cable on the Penn State-Behrend campus that had not been used since at least 1982. The Iroquois School District paid for the work to compensate for the environmental impact of building its new elementary school in Lawrence Park.

Soil erosion/sedimentationFunding awards to correct a stormwater quantity and quality problem at Penn State-Behrend were received from the Great Lakes Commission, the Erie County’s Environmental Initiative (PADEP Growing Greener) program, and Penn State University. Construction of stormwater facilities will use best management practices to eliminate sources of erosion and sedimentation by dissipating the water’s energy. Sediment, a major source of nonpoint pollution, washes from the campus and into the Trout Run tributary of Four Mile Creek, and then into Lake Erie. The outlets from three stormwater pipes have carved gullies, exposing tree roots and washing an estimated 78 tons of sediment per year downstream.While the erosion began about 20 years ago, the rate at one location has recently accelerated. Once the stormwater slows, the badly eroded slopes can be restored and stabilized with matting and by planting native species of vegetation on these slopes.

Construction is scheduled for mid-2008.

Fish ladder installation

The Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission (PFBC), Lawrence Park Township, and Pennsylvania Sea Grant have obtained funding for another Four Creek project from the state Department of Environmental Protection and Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. The funding will be used to design, buy and install fish ladders at the Lawrence Park Golf Club dam and at an up-stream waterfall on golf course property.

These ladders will enable steelhead and native species of fish to migrate upstream as far as Penn State-Behrend. A number of issues that will require the agreement of the Golf Club must be addressed to allow the project to proceed in 2008.

DAVE SKELLI E , a coastal land use and economic specialist for Pennsylvania Sea Grant, can be reached at 217-9014 or at dus18@psu.edu.

Check out these Web sites to learn more:

http://seagrant.psu.edu/

http://www.fish.state.pa.us/mpag1.htm

P.S. Behrend Erosion Control Project

Thursday, February 1st, 2007

Erroded Stream Bed - Penn State Behrend Erosion Control ProjectOn May 27, 2005, Penn State University was awarded a Soil Erosion and Sediment Control grant from the Great Lakes Commission’s Great Lakes Basin Program totaling $43,350 to address stormwater management infrastructure failures at three locations on the Penn State Behrend campus. PA Sea Grant prepared and submitted this grant application and Urban Engineers Erie, Inc. was hired and has finalized the design for best management practices (BMPs) to substantially reduce erosion and to control the introduction of sediments into Trout Run, a tributary of Fourmile Creek which runs through campus. Also completed is the identification of additional green infrastructure improvements that may be implemented on campus in the future.

With design completed, PA Sea Grant has authored two more applications which, if funded, will be used to construct these BMPs to implement the design recommendations. An application was submitted to the Pennsylvania DEP for Growing Greener funds totaling $150,900 on March 3, 2006. A matching application requesting $75,000 in Great Lakes Commission GLB Soil Erosion and Sedimentation Control funds was submitted on March 14, 2006. PA Sea Grant has obtained a notice of award from the Great Lakes Commission. If the Growing Greener application is funded, construction is expected to occur during the Summer of 2007.

Focus on Fourmile Creek

Thursday, February 1st, 2007

Fourmile Creek Watershed - Focus on Fourmile CreekFourmile Creek is a stream on the east side of the Erie urban area flowing through the municipalities of Greene, Harborcreek, Wesleyville and Lawrence Park (see map). From its headwaters to the mouth, this stream reaches approximately 8 miles in length. Its watershed encompasses 11.93 square miles, including densely developed areas from Route 5 southward to 38th St, then on southward becoming much more rural in character.

  • PLEWA completed a Strategic Action Plan for PA’s Lake Erie drainage basin ranking water quality in 22 streams flowing into Lake Erie.
  • Fourmile Creek is ranked as having the 4th lowest quality of these streams.
  • Lower reaches of Fourmile Creek have slightly degraded or poor conditions.
  • Benthic macroinvertebrate communities in its upper reaches are in good condition - Due largely to the fact that there are little or no non-point source pollution problems there.
  • PLEWA subcommittee for Fourmile Creek has beenworking to make improvements.
  • Partners include: PA Sea Grant, PA Coastal Zone Management program, the Wesleyville Conservation Club, and Penn State Behrend.

Stream Impediments

One of Fourmile’s most distinctive characteristics is that it includes numerous impediments in the stream.

  • 2 Dams - one located near the mouth at the Lawrence Park Golf Course - one located immediately south of Station Road (see photos).
  • 1 Waterfall approx. 5 ft tall - located about midpoint between Cooper Rd and I-90
  • Concrete slab 1’ thick x 3’ wide along the entire breadth of the waterfall creating a 3rd dam-like structure.
  • 1 Locomotive Ballast (large chunks of concrete partially encased in metal) at various locations in the lower reaches of the stream.
  • This ballast may have originally been placed in the stream in an attempt to stabilize bank erosion or possibly to eliminate swimming holes to keep people out of the stream.

Efforts are now being discussed to remove or alter these impediments to return the stream to a more natural flow and to improve the ability of fish to swim from the mouth up to the upper reaches of the stream. Funds are being provided by the Iroquois School District (ISD), which is in the process of constructing a new school necessitating the realignment and piping of a small tributary to Fourmile Creek.

First Waterfall - Fourmile Creek - Focus on Fourmile Creek
First Waterfall

ISD has been asked by the PA Department of Environmental Protection to pay $20,000 to mitigate the encapsulation of this waterway and half of that fee must be directly applied to improvements within Fourmile Creek.

Improvements

  • Remove the dam at the Nacopoulos property near Station Road.
  • Remove the cap on the concrete-covered waterfall located on the Penn State Behrend campus.
  • Modify the golf course dam to allow fish passage.
Concrete Covered Waterfall - Fourmile Creek - Focus on Fourmile Creek
Concrete Covered Waterfall

The PA Fish and Boat Commission (PA FBC) is working with ISD in obtaining the permits necessary for removal of these impediments and developing the design drawings necessary to bid this project to a local contractor. These two impediments removal projects are expected take place during summer of 2007. The PA FBC and the Lawrence Park Golf Club are working on proposed Fish ladders be installed at this dam and at the waterfall located between the dam and Route 5. PA Sea Grant is working with them to prepare grant applications for the purchase and installation costs. If funded, fish ladders would be installed in 2008.

With these improvements, the stream may return to a condition that will enable fish migration, benefitting the local tourism industry. But more importantly, these changes will clearly demonstrate that the Erie area cares about improving its quality of life by improving the quality of its environment.

Written by Dave Skellie, PA Sea Grant


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