N.J.
Critics say Delaware River flood relief plan is a drop in the bucket.
by The Associated Press - Wednesday April 16, 2008
ALLENTOWN, Pa. -- At the request of Gov. Ed Rendell, New York City
has agreed to release more water from its reservoirs in the Catskills
in an effort to reduce the danger of flooding in communities downstream
along the Delaware River.
Flood-battered residents in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, though, say
the amount of water to be released from the Neversink, Pepacton and
Cannonsville reservoirs will have little practical effect on river
levels, leaving them just as susceptible to a devastating springtime
flood.
The plan, announced today by Rendell, calls for New York to release
water on any day when the reservoirs are more than 97 percent full
through the end of April. Previously, there was no limit to the amount
of water that New York could store in its reservoirs after April 1.
"While we can't scientifically quantify the benefits lowering
these reservoirs will have, continuing to make releases ... is a commonsense
approach that will provide an added measure of comfort to residents
downstream," Rendell said in a statement.
Since the reservoirs can store a combined 271 billion gallons of water,
the agreement to maintain a 3 percent void in them during the remainder
of April translates into about 8 billion gallons of water released
down the Delaware.
Elaine Reichart, whose house in Belvidere, Warren County, N.J., has
been flooded three times, called that a "minuscule, teeny-weeny"
amount.
"They're giving (Rendell) a bone," said Reichart, a member
of Aquatic Conservation Unlimited, a group calling for lower reservoirs.
"We need more than that, a lot more than that. We need them to
take us seriously."
Three major floods between 2004 and 2006 caused several deaths and
tens of millions of dollars in property damage along the Delaware.
The reservoirs were at or near capacity just before all three floods;
unable to store water from torrential rains, they sent billions of
gallons cascading down the river and into homes and businesses.
Aquatic Conservation and other citizens' groups want the city to permanently
lower its reservoirs to 80 percent capacity so they can capture and
store more rainwater. The city has resisted, saying its reservoirs
need to be as full as possible during summer as a hedge against drought.
New York provides drinking water from the three reservoirs, which
were built in the 1950s, to 9 million people in the Delaware River
basin.