2022 SwimGuide Report Results Highlight Need for Increased Monitoring Efforts

As part of Waterkeepers Carolina, Yadkin Riverkeeper monitors swimming sites for e.coli during the summer season. This program is part of SwimGuide, an international platform sharing the results of bacteria monitoring at local swimming areas. This past summer YRK sampled 9 areas throughout the watershed and had a 72% pass rate overall. The sampling season runs from Memorial Day through Labor Day.

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NCEJN Summit: The 2022 Reunion

On the morning of Friday, October 14th, Grace and I began our journey to the town of Whitakers to attend NCEJN’s 23rd Annual Environmental Justice Summit. Upon arriving at our destination, we were greeted by seemingly endless acres of cotton, tobacco, and soybeans. Nestled among the crops lay the conference center where we would spend our weekend “remembering, recovering, resting, and reimagining” with a hundred environmental justice advocates from across the state.

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GEMS in the Creek

On Saturday, September 17th, a group of young girls traveled to Salem Creek to learn about water quality. Known as the "Girls Empowered by Math & Science" (GEMS), these girls were excited to get their hands dirty for the sake of science. Earlier in the day, the GEMS learned how to code robots to dance to the sound of music. This unique program is an outlet for students to experience learning in new and exciting ways.

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Consumed by the Smell of Money

“The Smell of Money” is a documentary directed by Shawn Bannon that highlights the dismal reality of life in eastern North Carolina’s hog country. The late Elsie Herring of Wallace, NC lived beside one of Duplin County’s many industrial hog farms. In 1985 Smithfield constructed a concentrated animal feeding operation (referred to as a CAFO) on her family’s land which was purchased by her grandfather during post-Civil War reconstruction. The film begins with her story.

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Riverpark Rezoning Letter to Forsyth County Commissioners

Dear Forsyth County Commissioners,

Two Yadkin Riverkeeper members who live in a neighborhood off Idols Road brought to our attention that a proposed rezoning request (Zoning Petition F-1617) is under consideration as part of the "Riverwalk" development on Idols Road. The proposal would rezone approximately 318 acres currently in the Yadkin River (YR), Agriculture (Ag) and RS-30 districts to zoning (YR-S, RS15-S, RM5-S) suitable for higher density development.

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June 2022 Flight Blog

Riverkeeper Edgar Miller took to the air on June 2 with Southwings Pilot Holliday Obrecht, III, to do an aerial survey of the Yadkin Pee Dee Lakes region, including a flyover of poultry and dairy concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs), hydropower dams, drinking water facilities and wastewater treatment plants in the lower Yadkin watershed. The Lake region faces different challenges than the upper Yadkin Watershed, including excessive sedimentation and nutrient loading, harmful algal blooms, and inactive hazardous waste sites at Alcoa’s former aluminum smelter on Badin Lake. A major YRK priority is the state adopting an effective Nutrient Management Strategy requiring reductions in nutrients and sediments from all sources.

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Yadkin Riverkeeper Advocacy Update- June 2022

The first six months of 2022 have proven to be a pivotal time for the development of new water quality standards in North Carolina, and specifically the Yadkin Pee Dee River basin. Yadkin Riverkeeper’s job number one it to protect and improve the water quality in the entire river basin, which supplies drinking water to more than one million North Carolinas. We are diligently tracking all major regulatory, permitting and legislative initiatives that might impact water quality in our basin and statewide. Please see below for an update on YRK’s major advocacy priorities.

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Yadkin Riverkeeper Spring Appeal

I hope you had a happy and productive Earth Day. I am writing to ask your support for the Yadkin Riverkeeper. We all know the Yadkin is a remarkable river that flows through the very heart of North Carolina. It is large watershed, roughly 7,221 square miles that serves as the drinking water source and sustains a population of almost 1.7 million residents. The magnitude of the river basin is both immense and impressive. And yet, the overall conditions of the large river system are influenced by an infinite number of situations, both good and bad, that occur on a smaller, more localized scale.

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Yadkin Riverkeeper Advocacy Update

Significant progress is being made in establishing more stringent water quality standards to protect public health and water quality in North Carolina. NC Riverkeepers, including the Yadkin Riverkeeper, have been at the forefront of advocating for these changes to ensure our waters are drinkable, swimmable and fishable. For latest regulatory and policy developments see below:

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YRK is Hiring a Diversity Communications Specialist

Yadkin Riverkeeper, Inc. (YRK) is seeking to hire a part-time (20 hrs/week) diversity communications specialist to:

1) identify and reach out to communities of color on water quality and environmental justice issues,

2) develop outreach materials and youth educational programming for communities of color and YRK generally,

3) update YRK’s diversity plan and goals in conjunction with the executive director and YRK board.

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The Mitchell River and Blue Ridge Trout Unlimited

For many years locals have enjoyed the beauty and tranquility of the rivers in Surry County while fishing for trout and other species. One of the most prized fishing spots is the Mitchell River in Dobson. Over twenty years ago the North Carolina Wildlife Commission designated a three-mile section of the Mitchell from the Kapps Mill north, a Delayed Harvest stream.

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Reflection on Water Sampling & Testing at High Rock Lake

On the last day of August recently, I found myself a little lost in Lexington. After getting myself turned around a bit, and a few dropped phone calls, I finally made it to my destination: Skipjack Harbor, a small marina off of High Rock Lake, tucked away past a private development. As I arrived, I was greeted by Edgar and Brian, our current and past Riverkeepers as they prepared to get us out on our skiff on the lake. After loading up our supplies, gassing up the boat, checking all of our water testing materials, and getting a quick rundown of boat safety and emergency information, we were off!

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