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Jul. 14, 2011

Friends of Deep Creek Lake – a nonprofit community group dedicated to the watershed’s protection, preservation, and restoration – presented an update report to the Garrett County commissioners last Tuesday morning. Executive director Barbara Beelar stressed the importance of the county’s role in revitalizing the 86-year-old man-made, state-owned lake.

“Our taxes are your revenue,” Beelar told the commissioners about DCL users and property owners. “We have a relationship, and I don’t think that’s been fully understood or explored.”

She noted the lake’s natural aging process is evidenced in the amount/types of submerged aquatic vegetation, invasive species, and sediment build-up in many of Deep Creek’s 20+ coves. The ramifications of not addressing these problems quickly, she reported, include declining property values, the loss of tourism tax revenue, and increased restoration costs.

“The faster we move on this, the less sediment we’re going to have to remove, and the less negative impacts we’re all going to experience,” Beelar said.

She reported that the Maryland Department of Natural Resources (DNR) recently completed Phase I of the Deep Creek Lake Sediment Plan/Study and is expected to publish the results in the next few weeks.

Funded by the DNR, the $100,000+ study looked at sediment build-up in 10 specific coves, included a survey characterizing existing sediment throughout the lake, and compared past/current data and samples.

As noted by DCL manager Carolyn Mathews in an article titled “DNR Selects 10 Coves For Sediment Study” in The Republican’s Oct. 28, 2010, issue, the chosen coves represented areas where DNR did not have sufficient data. In addition, some coves were selected because they represented different drainage basins, soil types, slopes, or land uses.

The results of Phase I will determine if DNR should move to Phase II of the study/plan, which will quantify and characterize the accumulated sediment and identify “reasonable, feasible, and sustainable” alternatives to address that issue, Mathews noted in the article.

During last week’s meeting with the commissioners, Beelar indicated that Phase II could begin as early as Sept. 1 if funding can be secured.

“They (DNR) want you guys to pay for Phase II,” Beelar told the commissioners.

She asked the commissioners to fund the $180,000 project. Possible revenue sources, she noted, include dock permit fees, the state “flush tax,” state/federal coffers, and through establishment of a public/private restoration fund.

Beelar also asked the commissioners to lobby lawmakers to establish watershed implementation programs to address lake issues.

Commission chair Gregan Crawford indicated he was well aware of the importance of Deep Creek Lake and has contacted the DNR about the need to make a commitment to address the problems.

“But it’s very hard to get the DNR’s attention,” Crawford said.

More here.

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Deep Creek Lake residents complain of overgrown algae

DEEP CREEK LAKE, Md. – After complaints from several Deep Creek Lake residents about algae blooms and overgrowth, state environmental regulators have investigated and found that the problems are not caused by excessive nutrients in the watershed.

Some residents believed that the blooms and aquatic grasses were due to an overload of nutrients, but state officials have determined that nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorous are only at low levels in the streams and creeks that feed the reservoir.

Read the rest here.

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Deep Creek tributaries free of water quality issues, MDE says

Citizens group questions sample location, size
Megan Miller
Cumberland Times-News Sun Sep 19, 2010, 08:02 AM EDT

— DEEP CREEK LAKE — While Deep Creek Lake might have water quality issues with nutrients levels in some of its coves, those problems don’t appear to be flowing in with the streams that feed the lake.

That’s according to a report released in mid-August from the Maryland Department of the Environment. Officials outlined the report’s findings Thursday in a meeting of the Deep Creek Lake Workgroup.

Lake-goers have complained of algae blooms and overgrowth of aquatic grasses in some coves, pointing to an overload of nutrients such as phosphorous as a potential cause.

But the data examined by MDE showed that in the watershed, meaning the waterways outside the body of the lake, nutrients including nitrogen and phosphorous are present only in low levels.

“We’re not saying it’s not impaired,” said Ross Mandel, an official with the Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin. “We’re just saying it’s not impaired by nutrients.”

Not everyone agreed with MDE’s assessment of the situation. Barbara Beelar, director of local conservation group Friends of Deep Creek Lake, pointed out that MDE looked at data gathered in only a few of the dozens of tributaries feeding Deep Creek Lake.

“I’m concerned about the blanket statement that there is no nutrient impairment of the watershed,” Beelar said. “It’s only four tributaries out of fifty-ish you’ve taken a look at.”

 She pointed out that most of the streams sampled feed into the northern part of the lake, while nutrient-related problems seem more concentrated in the southern part.

The report looked at the watershed as a whole, and also looked separately at the overall water quality of the lake. It contained data collected by MDE and the Department of Natural Resources at different periods over the last decade.

MDE officials say they plan to proceed from this point with studies of any existing problems in the lake from a more localized approach. An MDE field monitoring group will conduct water quality monitoring and other testing through the upcoming months, and could potentially conduct dye tests on septic systems in the lake area — with the permission of property owners — in the spring.

Septic systems are one of the potential sources of phosphorous, along with things like crop fertilizers and animals in pastureland.

Another assessment of the health of Deep Creek Lake is scheduled to be released sometime in the next few months.

Friends of Deep Creek Lake plans to publish the lake’s first-ever ecosystem health report card with the help of EcoCheck, a team affiliated with the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The report card will factor in things like land-use patterns, watershed boundaries and available data from testing conducted by multiple agencies. In addition to “grading” the lake, the report card will include suggestions of things property owners can do to improve the watershed’s scores.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

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Ecosystem Health Report Card To Be Created For Deep Creek

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Aug. 12, 2010

About 150 people attended Saturday’s “State of the Watershed” forum, sponsored by Friends of Deep Creek Lake, a local nonprofit group addressing ways to protect, preserve, and restore the watershed. The 2½-hour information-packed event included overviews of research that has been or will be conducted about the lake.

“It was clear from the turn out, and high level of attentiveness to often detailed presentation, those who attended want to know what is going on at the lake, want to urge governmental actions to addresses various issues, and are willing to be a part of watershed protection efforts,” said Barbara Beelar, Friends of DCL director.

Attendees included Del. Wendell Beitzel, Sen. George Edwards, and Secretary John Griffin, Maryland Department of Natural Resources. Beelar said Griffin’s presence at the event gave a serious air to the gathering and gave a strong signal that the state, which owns the lake, has come to realize the need for action on watershed protection, conservation, and restoration.

“I am very heartened by the turnout for the forum and the interest in the well being of the lake expressed today,” Griffin said.

He said he believes the lake is “generally okay,” but acknowledged there is work to be done and that precautions need to be taken to ensure that development and tourism do not damage the very thing that is attracting the visitors.

Griffin pledged his commitment to be more focused on lake related issues and that his agency would support adoption of best management practices for watershed protection.

The forum included an overview of all available research and water monitoring of the lake that has been conducted by various agencies in the past. Beelar noted, however, that a comprehensive analysis of the watershed has never been conducted.

To remedy that, EcoCheck, a team affiliated with the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, will create a “report card” on the state of the watershed. Funded by a Chesapeake Bay Trust grant, the report will be released this fall.

Published annually, report cards help monitor changes in a watersheds over time. In addition to “grading” the watershed, the DCL report will include ways in which property owners can help improve its score.

EcoCheck has also created reports for the Chester River, Chesapeake Bay, and other watersheds in the state.

The team’s Dr. Heath Kelsey gave an overview on the work that will be done to collect and analyze all the current lake data. His tentative plans include dividing the lake into three separate areas.

One section is the area south of Glendale Bridge, where the watershed is more open, has multiple coves, is impacted by agricultural uses, and is the location of many older homes.

Another is the “town center” area in McHenry, and the last sector covers the deeper, cooler sections of the lake, where streams and the lake are more tree covered and water flows more naturally through releases from the dam, according to Beelar.

She noted that the great differences among these sectors of the lake lead to differing but equally valid reports about the health of the lake.

The director said much of the forum focused on particular issues relating to the lake south of Glendale Bridge, “where water quality and recreational decline are manifesting.”

Bruce Michael, head of science services for the Department of Natural Resources, announced at the forum that a new DNR sediment plan for Deep Creek Lake will be developed.

“This plan will focus on the section of the lake south of Glendale Bridge and in particular in nine coves which have been identified as problematic,” Beelar said.

She noted that DNR research has determined between 11.7 to 33.8 acre-feet/year of sediment is deposited into the lake annually and that over 99.9 percent of all sediment that enters the lake remains.

To address this growing problem, DNR will begin creating its sediment plan. The first phase will involve mapping the bottom of selected coves to develop baseline data.

“With this and other data, DNR will determine where dredging is needed and develop a plan for funding and implementation, estimated within three years,” Beelar said.

Griffin informed the audience that the Watershed Improvement Trust Fund can be used to pay for the dredging. This fund receives the 5 percent tax levied on the sale of every boat sold in the state of Maryland. None of these funds have been used at Deep Creek Lake, Beelar noted.

“Unfortunately,” she added. “Secretary Griffin reported the fund is now low on monies due to slow boat sales due to the economic down turn.”

Anthon Allred from the Maryland Department of Environment (MDE) also presented findings of the recent Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) report on phosphorus impairment in the lake and its tributaries. This work and presentation in the public forum are a part of the TMDL requirements under the federal Clean Water Act. The report will be available for public review and comment by mid-August.

“Twelve years ago the lake and tributaries were listed as impaired for phosphorous,” Beelar noted.

Phosphorous is a nutrient that contributes to water quality decline through supporting intrusive submerged aquatic vegetation growth and algal blooms. It comes into the lake through agricultural runoff, septic system leaks, tributary and shoreline erosion, road run off, storm drains, and other hard surfaces in the developed areas, the director explained.

“While the data show the overall lake is no longer impaired by high levels of phosphorous, MDE is concerned about the section of the lake south of Glendale bridge,” Beelar said.

MDE will be conducting on-going sampling in this section of the lake and expanding current work to include sites in the various coves.

“If high phosphorous levels are found through this sampling, remediation actions will be required,” Beelar said.

Allred encouraged county and state governments to work together to develop a watershed improvement plan to address existing problems.

Alan Klotz, DNR Fisheries, and Charles Poukish, Maryland Department of the Environment’s Fish Kill and Algal Bloom Division, gave the audience an overview of the recent fish kill. The incident took place in the section of the lake south of Glendale Bridge.

“While it (the investigation) is still going on, the scientists have settled on the theory that the very high water temperatures in the lake down to about 20 feet stressed fish populations, especially the cold water ones,” Beelar said. “Forced to deeper depths, they encountered low levels of dissolved oxygen levels in which they could not survive. Bacteria and parasites have been found on these fish.”

Lee Karrh, head of DNR’s Submerged Aquatic Vegetation Division, made a presentation on his team’s work this year. The members are diving and sampling sites around the lake to determine the kinds and massing of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV). They will also be doing an overflight with a specialized camera to conduct mapping of the SAV beds in the lake.

Karrh explained to the audience the benefits of SAV grasses for the health of the lake, including filtration of sediment, habitat for fish, and stabilization of the bottom sediment. A number of audience members, especially those from coves in the southern end of the lake, talked about the problems they have with reduce
d recreational use because of the grasses.

One concerned person brought a sample of grasses that have recently appeared off his dock in Thousand Acres.

Another person expressed her feelings about SAVs by stating, “I don’t care whether they are good for the lake, I want to get rid of all of them.”

Secretary Griffin responded, “I understand that while grasses are sign of healthy lake, they are a nuisance, and I promise to find a way to achieve a balance between natural resources protection and recreational use.”

The largest audience response of the day came when someone reminded Griffin that Garrett County pays into Chesapeake Bay improvement projects through the “flush tax,” but no funds are devoted to addressing real problems in the lake.

Friends of DCL chair Steve Kallmyer concluded the forum by giving a summary of the event.

“This forum has been a major, hopeful step forward,” he said. “It is a watershed moment in the history of the lake. The secretary and other top state agency officials have come to learn and share their work. Lake stakeholders have come to learn about the state of the watershed and what can be do to protect it. Clearly, we can work together to assure a bright future for our watershed.”

Griffin echoed that assessment.

“All of us from state government were very impressed with the constructive comments from the assemblage, and we should probably done this every so often in the future,” he said.

Beelar said important documents from the forum will be posted on her group’s web site (www.friendsofdcl.org) by mid-August, including the DNR Sediment Plan and the TMDL Report, which will be open for public comment for one month.

Friends of DCL will be making a DVD of the forum for those who were not able to attend.

Read the full article here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!

Residents concerned about Deep Creek Lake's future

Some of the facts need to be checked with this article (lack of no wake zones? – I can show you at least 10 no-wake buoys on the lake), but there some legitimate concerns voiced here. I’m anxiously awaiting the water analysis results from the state labs – I am confident that the answers to all of the speculation will be found in those results.
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MCHENRY — — Something’s killing the fish at Deep Creek Lake. The die-off appears to be weather-related, but some people wonder if it’s an omen for the future of this mountain resort, as the “crown jewel” of rural western Maryland becomes increasingly crowded with vacation homes, boaters and tourist attractions.

Over the past couple of weeks, about 1,000 yellow perch, walleye, northern pike, smallmouth bass, catfish and bluegill have been found floating belly-up on the 3,900-acre manmade lake. Though the fish kill is small compared with die-offs around the Chesapeake Bay, it’s the largest here since the state Department of the Environment began keeping track.

“This is too depressing,” said Barbara Beelar, 68, as she piloted her outboard boat among dead perch scattered across the water near her lakefront home. A retired community organizer who began summering here in her childhood, she worries that the dead fish are “canaries in the coal mine,” harbingers of an ecosystem increasingly stressed by all the people drawn to the lake to live, work and play.

Two years ago, thick mats of bright green algae formed on the southern end of the lake, prompting Beelar to form the Friends of Deep Creek Lake. She and other residents say they’re concerned about polluted runoff from farms and vacation homes, about leaking septic tanks, sewage leaks and about shoreline erosion muddying the water and filling in the coves. The number of homes there has grown by 50 percent in the past 25 years and is projected to nearly double in the next two decades.

Read the rest here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Do It All specializes in cleaning services in Garrett County & @ Deep Creek Lake. Give them a call (301-501-0217) or visit the website – competitive rates and quality results from a locally owned & operated company!

Illegal dump seems water pollution culprit – Friends of Deep Creek Lake

Join or Donate to Friends of Deep Creek Lake – find out more here

Deep Creek site cleaned up twice after tests showed poor quality
Megan Miller
Cumberland Times-News

Oakland — OAKLAND — An illegal garbage dump located on private ground in Garrett County could be the cause of ongoing water quality problems in Deep Creek, according to local officials.

The dump site is located off Mayhew Inn Road east of the intersection with Sang Run Road. Water from nearby Deep Creek flows directly into the Youghiogheny River just below Swallow Falls.

The organization Friends of Deep Creek Lake discovered water quality problems in Deep Creek through sampling and testing conducted in 2004, and repeated in April 2009. Both rounds of testing showed the creek’s water quality to be very poor. Director Barbara Beelar attributed the testing results largely to contamination from the dump site.

“Volunteers found everything from old tires, microwaves, batteries and household items to multiple animal carcasses at the site,” Beelar said. When the organization discovered the garbage dump, members reported it to county officials.

A cleanup crew removed one refrigerator, 13 tires and an additional 1,940 pounds of trash from the site this spring. That cleanup followed less than one year after a similar project at the site in summer 2009, in which an unknown amount of trash was removed.

Both cleanups were organized by county officials and the work was done by local inmates, with assistance and equipment provided by the county roads department.

This spring the county also took steps to prevent more trash from being dumped in the future, by blocking a pull-off area near the dump site with a row of large rocks.

The water sampling was conducted as part of a Maryland Department of Natural Re-sources program called Stream Waders, in which trained volunteers take water samples from streams throughout the state. The samples are analyzed in an Annapolis lab.

The water’s quality is determined by the types and numbers of tiny aquatic animals found living in it, since certain organisms can only live in healthy streams while others typically live in poor-quality water.

“This is an excellent example of collaboration among many parts of Garrett County government and the local watershed group,” Beelar said. “We will resample the water next spring and expect there will be major improvements.”

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350 Deep Creek Lake Info, Business Directories, Classified Ads, Events & more! Advertise on http://www.deepcreekalive.com/!

Deep Creek program in search of volunteers

From Staff Reports
Cumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — Friends of Deep Creek Lake needs volunteers for its Off Your Dock program, which begins Saturday.

Lake users with access to a dock are asked to sample turbidity, which is the suspended sediment in the water from stream runoff and shoreline erosion. The group seeks volunteers from a couple of docks in each cove and others areas around the lake.

The group is concerned with the lack of research being done in the zone from the shoreline to 100 feet beyond.

Equipment and training will be provided for samples to be taken twice a week. Participants who have to be away can have the samples taken for them during that time period.

To volunteer, e-mail contact@friendsofdcl.org; call (301) 873-1519; or write to 779 Chadderton School Road, Oakland MD 21550.

Donations are needed to purchase the equipment, with kits costing from $45 to $115 depending on their contents.

Friends of Deep Creek Lake is also planning a Forum on the State of the Lake to be held Aug. 7. The Maryland Department of the Environment is conducting a study on phosphorous in the lake watershed. High levels of phosphorous release nutrients that result in growth of submerged vegetation and algal blooms, contributing to the decline of water quality.

The forum will include a presentation on the study. The community forum is underwritten in part by funds from the Chesapeake Bay Trust and is the focal point of the Friends’ work with the University of Maryland, Center for Environmental Studies. A report card on the lake will be forthcoming in the fall.

House meetings to learn of concerns of property owners are scheduled in the Hickory Lane, Hickory Ridge and Turkey Neck Loop areas. Anyone interested in hosting such a meeting in other areas of the lake is asked to contact Friends of Deep Creek Lake.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350 Deep Creek Lake Info, Business Directories, Classified Ads, Events & more! Advertise on http://www.deepcreekalive.com/!

Friends of Deep Creek seek to protect lake from degradation

OAKLAND — Friends of Deep Creek Lake, a Garrett County watershed organization, submitted a proposal for the creation of a Deep Creek Lake Restoration Fund at the Tuesday meeting of the Board of Garrett County Commissioners.

The proposal came about in response to the aging of the Deep Creek Lake reservoir, which was created by the construction of the Deep Creek Dam in 1923. According to Friends of Deep Creek Lake, as the lake grows older, invasive vegetation and lower water quality lessen its recreational value and use as a natural resource. Friends of Deep Creek Lake believes that federal funding, state assistance and a more active role for Garrett County are necessary to combat this natural degradation.

According to Barbara Beeler, member of the Friends of Deep Creek Lake board, the degradation of the lake will result in economic consequences in impacted areas. The detrimental effects of aging could lead to decreased property and housing values and lower tax revenues for Garrett County. “All of us — county, users, beneficiaries — we’re all going to be impacted by the continuing decline of the lake,” said Beeler.

Friends of Deep Creek Lake’s proposal features three main components. The first is the creation of a Deep Creek Lake Restoration Action Plan. “We need to make a lake policy from the bottom up,” said Beeler. Friends of Deep Creek Lake suggests that the plan include a variety of restoration and maintenance programs for such tasks as fighting the existing impacts of lake aging, eliminating algae blooms, reducing sediment and nutrient runoff, and upgrading septic systems.

The second is a means of funding the restoration. One of the primary obstacles to a restoration project would be the lack of available funds due to the current economic climate. According to Friends of Deep Creek Lake, funding for the Department of Natural Resources’ Lake Management Division comes only from dock permit fees, and the majority of this money is spent paying operating fees and taxes. Friends of Deep Creek Lake believes that federal money is necessary for the project.

“Until the economic crisis goes away, we’re really stifled,” said Commission Chairman Denny Glotfelty. “It’s impossible to get the state to move right now.”

Finally, the proposal includes a call for leadership for the restoration effort. The proposal suggests the formation of a working group that would lay groundwork for the plan, raise funds, and lobby for Deep Creek Lake in state and federal venues.

Along with the lack of available funding, another obstacle to the proposal is the fact that the lake is owned by the state rather than Garrett County. This makes it difficult for Garrett County to create an action plan regarding the lake as Friends of Deep Creek Lake’s proposal intends.

“It’s Maryland’s water. Whether it’s private or state property, it’s their water. That’s the problem,” said Glotfelty, who added that action regarding the lake is necessary. “We’ve got an 85-year-old lady that we’re trying to give a face-lift to right now.”

The commission did not act on the proposal during Tuesday’s meeting. It will be discussed further at the next meeting of the Deep Creek Lake Policy and Review Board, beginning at 6 p.m. on Oct. 26 at the Deep Creek Lake Discovery Center.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Long & Foster Real Estate for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350