Planned closure of federal center in Georgia triggers worries about ability to monitor water quality
Chattahoochee Riverkeeper Jason Ulseth leads a team in monitoring water quality and groundwater levels along the river that provides drinking water to millions of Georgians. Photo submitted by Chattahoochee Riverkeeper. Photo submitted by Chattahoochee Riverkeeper
Routine water sampling conducted by the Chattahoochee Riverkeeper as part of a federal partnership revealed alarming levels of bacteria discharged into the river by Fulton County's largest wastewater treatment plant in 2023.
The Georgia Environmental Protection Division issued several violations and a $300,000 fine against the city of Atlanta for maintenance problems causing numerous illegal discharges of pollution at the RM Clayton Water Reclamation Facility in northwest Atlanta.
Chattahoochee Riverkeeper's Chris Manganiello considers the Fulton County pollution drama as a reason to sound the alarm over the now-uncertain future of the U.S. Geological Survey's South Atlantic Water Science Center in Norcross.
The center's lease recently appeared on the Elon Musk-led U.S. Department of Government Efficiency's list for possible terminations by the end of 2025, but it's still unclear what that means for the staff and the program's mission.
The U.S. General Services Administration, which manages federal property, did not respond to the Recorder's emailed questions about the terms of the lease and the fate of the staff.
Since the early 2000s, the Chattahoochee Riverkeeper and the federal agency have collaborated on the BacteriALERT program that provides live updates to the public of the amount of E. coli contamination in a river that is a source of drinking water for millions of Georgians.
'Eventually after working with Fulton County, they came to an agreement with us that their plant was not functioning,' Manganiello said. 'This is a situation where we're pretty sure that we wouldn't have identified this problem without the help of collection from USGS sources.'
Environmentalists and Democratic congressional members are expressing concerns about the planned lease termination, which the DOGE website says will save the federal government more than $1.3 million.
The center is one of more than a dozen government offices in Georgia that could have its leases ended under the Trump administration's cuts.
Riverkeeper members said that water gauges are essential for maintaining compliance with state and federal permits. The data collected by these gauges tracks flood levels and the National Weather Service contracts with the center to collect rainfall data.
Manganiello, the Riverkeeper water policy director, said that the closure of the Norcross office and potential layoffs could at a minimum disrupt water monitoring for several months, which could lead to a significant decline in water quality and compliance.
'It's one thing if we all knew they're going to close this office because they moved into another location, that would be okay,' he said. 'But because we don't know what's going to happen if the lease is terminated and these people don't have a place to physically work, that means there's going to be a disruption in the maintenance of the physical equipment and to data collection and data processing.'
Chattahoochee Riverkeeper Jason Ulseth said the center operates water flow gauges essential for monitoring everything from bacteria to water flooding levels impacting water management in Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina.
'This science center is critical for many reasons, including the fact that they run all of the flow gauges for Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina,' Ulseth said. 'These flow gauges tell us how much water is in any part of the river throughout the system and is essential to municipal water to decision makers, dam operators, (utility) power operators and fishermen.'
The government water monitoring benefits the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area, which draws 3.5 million annual visitors.
The scientific water surveying covers a 48-mile stretch between the Buford Dam and Atlanta. The employees also track water levels, flooding and dam releases at the Buford Dam.
'They're fishing, they're tubing, they're kayaking,' Ulseth said. 'So the health of the river and the amount of pathogens that are in the river are very important to the people that are going there. With the bacteria alert program, we are able to actually predict the current levels of E. coli and give public health advisories in real time, which is a one-of-a-kind program in the entire country.'
Atlanta Democratic U.S. Sens. Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock expressed their concerns about potential layoffs in a letter to U.S. Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum.
The relocation plans remain unclear despite the office lease set to terminate in a few months, the senators wrote Tuesday.
'Staff at the (center) perform water quality testing to ensure the safety of drinking water and maintain water gauges across Georgia, including Lake Sidney Lanier and on the Chattahoochee River, which supplies most of metro Atlanta's drinking water,' Ossoff and Warnock wrote. 'Local officials in metro Atlanta rely on gauges at Lake Lanier to ensure enough water is drawn from the lake to provide water to millions of Georgians every day. These gauges also inform water flows for Georgia's agriculture industry, nuclear reactors across the state, and Department of Defense installations, among others.'
The potential ramifications of staff layoffs at the Norcross science center is also being watched closely by Suwannee Riverkeeper John Quarterman in south Georgia.
He said his organization relies on the data to predict the risk of flooding in areas like the Skipper Bridge on the Withlacoochee River north of Valdosta.
'It will be a problem for flood preparedness if (flood mapping) goes away, or if either of those gauges does,' Quarterman said.
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Boston Globe
2 days ago
- Boston Globe
Food for starving children worldwide is still sitting in a Rhode Island warehouse. It's a case study in DOGE aftermath.
Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up But the backlog remains. The nearly 200,000 US government-branded boxes are stuck in North Kingston, and Edesia's founder, Navyn Salem, says she has no idea when—or if—they'll be shipped. Each box can bring one child back from starvation. Advertisement 'What are children supposed to do when we tell them that they need to keep their hearts beating for another six months?' Salem said in an interview. 'Can you imagine if your child dies because you didn't have the equivalent of $1 a day to give them this life-saving food?' Edesia has spent months trying to get answers on a system broken by the Department of Government Efficiency, which Musk formerly ran. And even if the government reversed course tomorrow, it will still take weeks, if not months, to get any of the medicinal food to the children worldwide who need it. Advertisement Edesia's plight has become a case study not only in how quickly DOGE disrupted the federal government, but how long it is taking to undo its mistakes. Despite repeated public statements from top officials that they've resumed the program, deep spending cuts and an overhaul of the foreign aid apparatus have left Edesia in limbo. In the meantime, Edesia and supportive Democratic lawmakers have been trying every avenue — including recruiting Republican colleagues — to correct the issue. Edesia and a similar organization based in Georgia, MANA Nutrition, have for years made a fortified peanut-based paste called to digest regular food. Edesia, named for the Roman goddess of food, says it has fed 25 million children since its opening in 2010. Most of the nonprofit's funding came from USAID. In January, after DOGE decimated USAID, Edesia Eventually, the money came, but now Salem says the product, which is technically owned by the US government, is sitting in her warehouse because the shipping and distribution system that sent the food around the world was run by USAID experts. With the agency's staff essentially terminated and its work set to transition to the State Department as of July 1, Salem has spent weeks contacting anyone in government she can reach through a 'a patchwork of emails and phone calls' to try to get food around the world. Advertisement 'The only thing the government has to do is sign a piece of paper that says, 'It's going to ship here,'' Salem said. 'It's sitting here. It's been paid for by taxpayer dollars. If we're trying to gain efficiencies, we're not being successful, currently.' The State Department denies that it is the hold up, but it did not explain where the breakdown occurred. They referred the Globe to a 'We are proud to continue working with our local partners to deliver life-saving ready-to-use therapeutic food,' a State Department spokesperson said in an unsigned statement. 'As for the warehouse, this is simply stock waiting for pickup, but they aren't waiting on the State Department.' Edesia's cause has been taken up in Washington by Rhode Island lawmakers including Representatives Seth Magaziner and Gabe Amo. Magaziner has given a speech on the House floor every day it is in session since late April to try to bring attention to the issue. He's at 26 and counting. He has been working closely with Republican Georgia Representative Austin Scott, who represents MANA Nutrition, to try to get the administration's attention through a more ideologically friendly messenger. Advertisement 'Every time he talks to the administration they say the right thing and then a few weeks go by and nothing has changed,' Magaziner told the Globe. 'The damage that was done by Elon Musk in just a couple months is going to take a long time to undo. … Irrespective of whether he found any actual waste or not, a lot of good programs were hurt in the meantime and no doubt many innocent lives were lost.' Amo, who sits on the committee that oversees the State Department, had a fiery exchange with Rubio last month at a hearing in which Rubio insisted the problem was fixed and denied his agency was the source of any further issues. 'No children are dying on my watch,' Rubio told Amo as he asked about the boxes in Edesia's warehouse. 'That food is being distributed now.' Calculating the human toll of the delayed food has been difficult, but Amo has been in regular contact with the State Department about Edesia's ordeal. He believes the administration staff are trying to resolve the problems but failed to understand the complexity of the network. USAID's systems were for not just paying for the RUTF, but they also were also identifying where it was needed and distributing it in dangerous and impoverished parts of the world. Advertisement 'It's a little bit of Whac-A-Mole,' Amo said. 'You have an interlocking set of contracts and agreements that can be upset when you make arbitrary decisions that don't see the whole enterprise of how this moves from farm to human being.' Scott, the Georgia Republican working with Magaziner, defended the administration's mission of identifying waste and said he's confident the issues with MANA Nutrition and Edesia will be resolved. 'If you read the book on Elon Musk, I mean, the way he built his companies is to tear it down to the minimum and then build it back up,' Scott said. 'I would have preferred that we measure twice and cut once, if you will, but ... a lot of things they exposed about where US tax dollars were going, that they shouldn't have been going, needed to be done.' Senator Shelly Moore Capito, a West Virginia Republican who worked to get DOGE cuts in her state and others reversed, said she's helping some Democrats now, but under Democratic administrations, they've also had to help her. 'I don't think that's so highly unusual,' she said. Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock, a Democrat who has been working to restore shipments and payments to MANA Nutrition, said he has personally spoken with Rubio, a former Senate colleague, and some progress was made as a result. But he feels the administration still doesn't understand the urgency and importance of the situation. 'What we saw was an administration that came in literally with a chainsaw and cutting without knowing or caring what they were cutting,' Warnock said. 'And so now, not only are millions of lives at stake, not only are children literally dying as a result of this, the tragic insult and irony is that they're dying while these products, literally, sit on shelves. Make it make sense.' Advertisement Tal Kopan can be reached at


Newsweek
5 days ago
- Newsweek
US States Issued Drinking Water Warning
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Western U.S. is confronting a growing groundwater crisis exacerbated by factors such as rising temperatures and water demand. A legal expert is proposing multiple reforms to aid in the preservation of this essential resource. Why It Matters The U.S. Geological Survey notes that groundwater is the source of drinking water for about half of the total U.S. population and nearly all of the rural population. What To Know University of New Mexico law professor Warigia Bowman, who teaches water law, administrative law, natural resources and property, is suggesting that policymakers adopt stricter groundwater regulations. "We either make changes, or we run out of water. I would say the situation is dire, but it's fixable," Bowman said, in an interview published by "If we don't make changes by the end of the century, places will run out of groundwater. While not every aquifer will run out, many will." Bowman's recommendations, published in the Ohio State University Law Journal, center on four reforms intended to help preserve groundwater. A groundwater well stands in the Phoenix suburbs on June 9, 2023, in Queen Creek, Arizona. A groundwater well stands in the Phoenix suburbs on June 9, 2023, in Queen Creek, she urges refinement of the doctrine of "safe yield," which refers to the maximum volume of water that can be extracted from an aquifer without harmful impacts, per Bowman recommended redefining safe yield to include specific timeframes, making groundwater management more effective. She argued that vague terms like "over a period of time" lack clarity and should be replaced with defined intervals. "Timescales should be developed to connect measurement, planning, and reevaluation," Bowman wrote. "An annual time frame would be an excellent start, and longer time frames such as five years, a decade, or twenty-five years would allow water managers and scientists time to evaluate successful outcomes in aquifer management and adjust for changes in precipitation or miscalculations in withdrawal estimates." Second, she calls for the regulation of domestic and livestock wells, which in most western states are not always required to be metered. "The idea was that back in the day, people weren't going to use that much water, but in the absence of accurate measurement, water use from domestic and livestock wells could be overdrawn," she said, according to "It's possible someone could have one of these wells and use far more water than the Office of the State Engineer allows, and with an absence of meters, there's no way to enforce it." Third, she advocates for comprehensive metering of water withdrawals. "Monitoring, goal-setting, and auditing are critical components of any successful aquifer management program," she wrote in her research. "Both the federal and state government should give farmers incentives to meter. State water management bodies should use the data generated by metering to implement active monitoring of groundwater withdrawals throughout entire states." Lastly, Bowman highlighted that some states manage groundwater with a patchwork of rules—strict in certain areas but lax elsewhere—resulting in a multi-tiered system. Instead, Bowman argued, states should adopt more uniform and stringent regulations that apply consistently across all regions. What People Are Saying "Maybe farmers don't like metering, but they will like metering more than they like having no water," Bowman said, as reported by She also emphasized the need for behavioral change among producers: "A lot of land in the western United States maybe shouldn't be farmed." What Happens Next A separate, recent study found that increasing wastewater recycling to 40 percent in the Colorado River Basin could save around 900,000 acre-feet of water each year, which would be enough to supply nearly two million homes. The states that depend upon the Colorado River have also been in talks to establish new water-sharing agreements by 2026.


Los Angeles Times
18-06-2025
- Los Angeles Times
Endangered fish saved from the Palisades fire were just returned to their Malibu home
Hundreds of tiny endangered fish slipped from orange plastic buckets into a glittering lagoon in Malibu on Tuesday, returning home five months after being whisked away from threats wrought by the Palisades fire. The repatriation of more than 300 northern tidewater gobies — led by the Resource Conservation District of the Santa Monica Mountains — marked a peaceful moment in a region still reeling from the aftermath of wildfires and now in turmoil due to federal immigration raids. 'In this time of total madness in our world and total upheaval in our environment, there's not many moments when we get a chance to do something as hopeful as bringing the gobies back to their home,' Rosi Dagit, principal conservation biologist for the conservation district, told attendees of a small ceremony. In January, Dagit orchestrated a successful rescue of 760 of the semi-translucent, swamp-colored fish from Topanga Lagoon, an unassuming biodiversity hotspot located off the Pacific Coast Highway that drains into the Santa Monica Bay. The Palisades fire that sparked Jan. 7 tore through the area, scorching all of the critical habitat for the gobies and an endangered population of steelhead trout that occupied the same watershed. Soon after, meteorologists predicted rains that could sweep massive amounts of sediment into the water, threatening to kill the fish. To save the gobies from that fate, scientists and citizen volunteers arrived on Jan. 17 and used giant nets that served as sieves to retrieve the fish that rarely exceed a length of two inches. Numerous partners participated in the effort, including the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Geological Survey, California State Parks and Cal State University Channel Islands. At the time, water from the firefighting effort had swept down the mountain creek and unnaturally breached a sandbar that separated the lagoon from the Pacific Ocean. Rescuers feared the fish would be flushed out to sea and difficult to find. But they caught several hundred more than they had aimed for. The fish were loaded into coolers and ferried by truck to the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach and Santa Monica's Heal the Bay Aquarium, where they've hunkered down ever since in comfort. In fact, their diets at the aquariums had to be scaled back because the fish were getting 'chubby,' said Dagit, of the conservation district. When the fish were plucked from the lagoon, it was far from certain they'd be able to return so soon. Watersheds scorched by fire can take years to recover. And the fish only live for about a year. 'We were really worried. We did not think [the habitat] was going to be good enough,' Dagit said. Then the breached sandbar closed and the lagoon started filling up with water, 'and all of the sudden there was habitat.' The lagoon is now about 2 meters deep — the deepest it's been since the conservation district began monitoring it 30-plus years ago. Last week, Dagit said she kayaked on the roughly one-acre lagoon. The watershed's Southern California steelhead trout, many of which were rescued in a separate operation in January, are still unable to return home. The part of the creek they inhabit is still too damaged, but they appear to be thriving in their news digs. In February, roughly 260 trout were transferred from a hatchery in Fillmore to a creek in Santa Barbara County. Two months later, they spawned — a process wildlife officials feared could have been disrupted by the trauma they endured. At the time, it was believed at least 100 baby trout were born. None of the gobies reproduced in captivity, but some of the females were 'gravid' — or full of eggs. 'With all the gravid ones that we have being released today … hopefully they'll be able to have [their babies] out in their natural environment,' said Stacy Hammond, a senior aquarist at Aquarium of the Pacific, who helped care for the gobies during their stay at the facility. Tidewater gobies are a hardy fish, able to withstand extreme temperature and salinity changes. They can even slurp air from the water surface if conditions force them to. They also have developed a reputation for cuteness, borne of their beady eyes and diminutive size. But their numbers plummeted amid habitat destruction from agricultural and coastal development, prompting their listing under the federal Endangered Species Act in 1994. The fish also are threatened by drought and invasive predators. The gobies were first documented in Topanga Lagoon in 2001. They swam over from Malibu Lagoon — located about five and a half miles to the north — where scientists planted 53 of them in 1993, Dagit said. They fish thrived in Topanga — a 2022 population estimate for the lagoon was in the tens of thousands. It's unknown where the figure stands after the fire, but recent surveys found there were still wild gobies. And the recent release adds to the tally. The Topanga gobies comprise the biggest, most stable population in the Santa Monica Bay area, according to Dagit. Bustling population centers like that can be used to repopulate areas that blink out elsewhere. Brenton Spies, a lecturer at Cal State University Channel Islands with goby expertise, said gobies play a critical role in the food chain. Removing them from an ecosystem can cause it to collapse. 'It's not just this one individual fish that we're trying to save, it's the health of these ecosystems,' he said at the fish release ceremony. Before the gobies were released, Robert Dorame, tribal chair of the Gabrielino-Tongva Indians of California, led attendees in a blessing. He directed the group to face different directions. 'We are the stewards of the four directions, Indian or non-Indian, religious or no religion,' he said. 'But we are all spiritual beings, so let's make this a special day for the gobies.' To acclimate the gobies to their new/old home, water from the lagoon was slowly added to two coolers where the fish were hanging out nearby. Once the right salinity and temperature was reached — roughly 1-2 parts per thousand and 66 degrees Fahrenheit respectively — the fish would be good to go. In a large, white Igloo cooler, the gobies teemed in one corner, blending into rocks and sand that lined the bottom. They were transferred to buckets and personnel wearing waders carried them into the lagoon. Someone threw fragrant sage as the fish disappeared into the water.