Cuyahoga
River Fire: 40 Years Later
The fire on the Cuyahoga, the river once described as the river
that "oozes rather than flows", symbolizes the start of the
environmental movement.
A green City on a Blue Lake
Monday
June 22, 2009 marks the 40th anniversary of the
last time the Cuyahoga River caught
fire. This particular fire marked the point in time where
environmentalism came of age. In this post I would like to
examine what happened and the subsequent events that make this date in
history so important for environmentalists. Special thanks to
Paul Graham for alerting me via the social media release:
Positively
Cleveland - a green city on a blue lake. The city of
Cleveland is obviously proud of what they have accomplished in the last
forty years and we all hope the next forty will be equally as
successful. Now lets explore the issues a bit further.
Year of the River
In 1969 the Cuyahoga was considered one of the most polluted rivers in
the USA and was completely devoid of fish from Akron to
Cleveland. A Cleveland University symposium had previously
described one section of the river as follows:
"...
The surface is covered with the
brown oily film observed upstream as far as the Southerly Plant
effluent. In
addition, large quantities of black heavy oil floating in slicks,
sometimes
several inches thick, are observed frequently. Debris and trash are
commonly
caught up in these slicks forming an unsightly floating mess. Anaerobic
action
is common as the dissolved oxygen is seldom above a fraction of a part
per
million. The discharge of cooling water increases the temperature by 10
to
15°F. The velocity is negligible, and sludge accumulates on the
bottom. Animal life
does not exist. Only the algae Oscillatoria grows
along the piers above the
water line. The
color changes from gray-brown to rusty brown
as the river proceeds downstream. Transparency is less than 0.5 feet in
this
reach. This entire reach is grossly polluted.
..." Reference: Wikipedea
- Cuyahoga River
|

The Cuyahoga River was so polluted
that, over the previous century, 13 fires had been recorded, the most
severe fire occurring in 1952 when not only boats were damaged but also
riverside buildings. In
1969 the last fire occurred. An oil slick fire, apparently
started by sparks from a passing train, resulted in
flames
five stories high. The fire lasted only 1/2 hour and caused
$50K worth of damage; relatively tame for a man-made disaster.
BUT, it's significance
extended far beyond the immediate dollars and sense. This
fire marked the beginning of real environmental movement, a time when
when action
replaced talk.
"Legislators
who had been
talking about protecting the environment finally did something about it
-- and
industrialists who had been polluting the river since the Industrial
Revolution
had to change their ways." -
Cleveland.com.
The
fire was the ultimate catalyst for:
- Creation of the Environmental Protection Agency
- Creation of the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency
- the Clean Water Act
- the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement
Cuyahoga River Cleanup Begins
The
following table summarizes the cleanup activities since the 1969
Cuyahoga River Fire. (Reference: After
the Flames)
1970
|
The
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency was created
Kent
Environmental Council was created, with an emphasis on Cuyahoga
River
|
| 1972 |
The
Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District took over sewer operations for
Cleveland
Adoption
of the Clean Water Act
|
| 1974 |
Creation
of Cuyahoga Valley National
Recreation Area which preserves natural areas
along the river. This area is now known as a National Park
|
| 1988 |
The
45 river miles between Akron
and Cleveland named one of 43 most polluted waterways on the Great Lakes
The
Cuyahoga River Remedial Action Plan was put in place
|
1990
|
Founding
of the Friends of The
Crooked River, a group that has sponsored a cleanup along the
length of the Cuyahoga
Fish
found in the river:
Bluntnose minnow
Brown bullhead
Common carp
Common white sucker
Creek chub
Eastern gizzard shad
Freshwater drum
Grass pickerel
Northern bluegill sunfish
Spotfin shiner
White bass
Yellow bullhead
|
| 1991 |
An
Ohio EPA report shows
improving fish populations and water quality in tributaries to Cuyahoga
New
fish species found:
Central stoneroller minnow
Goldfish
Green sunfish
Largemouth bass
Northern hog sucker
Sand shiner
Spotfin shiner
Sunfish hybrid bluegill
Sunfish hybrid pumpkinseed
White perch
|
1992
|
New
species found:
Black bullhead
Bluntnose minnow
Northern rockbass
Pumpkinseed sunfish
Smallmouth bass
|
| 1994 |
Fish-eating
birds (great
blue heron and bald
eagle) are
observed at the Cuyahoga
|
| 1997 |
Construction
begins on Mill Creek tunnel, a massive pipe designed to
hold sewage and rainwater for treatment before it enters the Cuyahoga
River
New fish species found:
Channel catfish
Common Emerald shiner
Steelhead trout
*Golden redhorse
|
| 1998 |
White
House names Cuyahoga as
one of 14 American Heritage Rivers
New
fish species found:
Green sunfish hybrid
*Greenside darter
Northern logperch darter
|
1999
|
New
fish species found:
Bigmouth buffalo
Black crappie
Common shiner
Golden shiner
Northern fathead minnow
Shorthead redhorse
Striped shiner
Warmouth sunfish
|
| 2000 |
An
Ohio EPA report indicates that six of eight areas between Akron and
Cleveland
meet some or all of the goals set by the federal Clean Water Act
|
2001
|
New
fish species found:
Central stoneroller minnow
* Northern longear sunfish
Northern pike
|
| 2002 |
Akron announces a $377 million
plan to correct its sewage dumping activities into the
Cuyahoga during heavy rains
|
| 2003 |
USA
EPA approves state report
that outlines ways to improve the river
New
fish species found:
Pumpkinseed
Green sunfish hybrid
Smallmouth buffalofish
White crappie
|
| 2004 |
The
Cuyahoga is rerouted around the
Kent dam to give fish a better chance to move upstream
New
fish species found:
Central quillback carpsucker
|
| 2005 |
The
Munroe Falls dam is removed
|
2006
|
New
fish species found:
Brook silverside
Flathead catfish
*Mimic Shiner
Rainbow darter
Silverjaw minnow
|
| 2007 |
A
prototype underwater habitat basket is
developed by the Cuyahoga River Community
Planning Organization for
placement
along steel bulkheads in Cleveland to give aquatic plants and animals a
chance
to thrive in the still lifeless channel.
New
fish species found:
Round goby
Silver Redhorse
Western blacknose dace
|
| 2008 |
Northeast
Ohio
Regional Sewer District studies are forwarded to the EPA showing that
much of the middle
section of the Cuyahoga should meet the "fishable" standard set by
the Clean Water Act
New
fish species found:
Bigmouth Shiner
|
| 2009 |
Year
of the River declared by
Cuyahoga River Community Planning Organization
|
Recent Cuyahoga Assessments
When the Ohio
EPA biologists first started counting fish back in 1984 there were only
a few pollution-tolerant fish species in the worst polluted section of
the Cuyahoga River. "they would literally come back with fewer
than 10 fish. Not 10 fish species, but 10 fish, and most of those
were species like gizzard shad, which can survive in polluted water,
but end up deformed or mutated." (Reference
After
the Flames.)
In
2008, approximately 60 species of fish are found in the Cuyahoga River,
the two most common being Hogsuckers
and Spotfin Shiners. Both are moderately
sensitive to
to the quality of the water. Meanwhile a
robust fishery is still beyond reach in the most affected areas.
Many
polluted areas of the river now meet
aquatic
life water quality standards
except near
dam
impoundments. In these cases the water quality is not an issue
but instead fish passage and habitat issues.
All in all, the City of Cleveland and the relevant agencies, districts
and groups have done an excellent job over the last 40 years.
Let's all hope we can put the Randy Newman song "Burn On, Big River"
behind us and come up with a new environment friendly tune such as "Thrive On Cuyahoga".