Monday, July 28, 2014

"We all live Downstream"

Submitted by: Jennie Inglis  

Published in The Northeast Georgian 
Friday, October 1, 2004

Did you see that picture of Pitts Park on the cover of the September 21 issue of The Northeast Georgian?  Pitts Lake is more like it!
            My amateurish guess tells me that that much water in Pitts Park means that the Soque River was about 15 feet above normal!
            The day after Hurricane Frances dumped that much water on us, Ralph Shaw and I traveled to Atlanta to attend the 10th anniversary celebration of the Upper Chattahoochee Riverkeeper (UCR).  We learned that night that the Chattahoochee had crested at 23 feet above normal.
The Soque’s 15 feet contributed to one of the highest recorded water levels of the Chattahoochee River in history.  So goes the water out of the hills of Habersham, down through the valleys of Hall.
            The upper Chattahoochee, as defined by the UCR, is the 200 miles or so of the river from West Point Lake below Atlanta to the headwaters here in Northeast Georgia.
            Our beautiful little river, the Soque, fully contained within Habersham County, makes up the eastern branch of the headwaters.  The western headwaters rise in the hills of White County.
            What is the UCR?  Its website says, “Established in 1994, the Upper Chattahoochee Riverkeeper Fund Inc., is an independent environmental advocacy organization dedicated solely to protecting the Chattahoochee River.  From its headwaters to West Point Lake, the Chattahoochee is severely impacted by urban development, industrial discharges and agricultural runoff.  State water quality standards are routinely violated along the entire stretch of the upper Chattahoochee.  Development in Atlanta and the continued discharge of untreated sewage in the river during storms are significant problems for communities downstream.”
            “Riverkeeper’s mission is to advocate and secure the protection and stewardship of the Chattahoochee River, its tributaries and watershed, in order to restore and conserve their ecological health for the people and fish and wildlife that depend on the river system”
            At the anniversary celebration, I learned the names of some the individuals and corporations that substantially support the UCR.  That organization has some clout!
            While Ralph and I are just citizens who are concerned – more for the Soque River than the entire upper Chattahoochee River – we are the organization, too.
            Ralph made significant personal sacrifice to the river; I dedicated a couple of years volunteering with the Soque River Watershed Association.  We are to the UCR membership what the Soque is to the Chattahoochee.  To extend that metaphor, Habersham County is to the Atlanta Metro Area what the Soque is to the Chattahoochee.
            Those of us here in the headwaters and the headwaters themselves, represent the grassroots of the UCR and the Chattahoochee river system.
            Our work is here at home.  Think, for just a moment, of how our little river fits into the big picture.  If you can’t imagine that, think of how the creek that runs by your house, on your property or in your neighborhood, contributes to the Soque.
            Then, consider the phrase, “We all live downstream.”

Notes: 
The Upper Chattahoochee Riverkeeper changed its name to the Chattahoochee Riverkeeper and is celebrating its 20th anniversary in October 2014.
Ralph Shaw died in early 2014.