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80beats
« Some Tiny Raindrops Land Moving Faster Than Their Terminal Velocity
Scientist Smackdown: Were Giant Kangaroos Hunted Into Extinction? »

40 Years After the Cuyahoga Burned, Clevelanders Fish in It

Cuyahoga RiverCleveland’s Cuyahoga River caught on fire 40 years ago June 22 when oily garbage floating in it was ignited, probably by sparks from a passing train. In turn, the fire sparked the creation of environmental agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency, along with passage of 1972′s Clean Water Act. And the river, once a dumping ground for industrial waste and an icon for environmental disrepair, today supports more than 60 species of fish along with beavers and various bird species, and serves as an example of environmental restoration.

The river’s recovery is an inspirational account of how even the most putrid bodies of water could be cleaned up. Indeed, the first time [Cleveland resident] Gene Roberts fell into the Cuyahoga River, he worried he might die. The year was 1963, and the river was still an open sewer for industrial waste. Walking home, Mr. Roberts smelled so bad that his friends ran to stay upwind of him. Recently, Mr. Roberts returned to the river carrying his fly-fishing rod. In 20 minutes, he caught six smallmouth bass. “It’s a miracle,” said Mr. Roberts, 58. “The river has come back to life” [The New York Times].

The 1969 fire, which lasted half an hour and caused about $50,000 in damages, wasn’t the first time that the river went up in flames. The Cuyahoga has come a long way from the waterway that a Cleveland mayor in the 1880s (Rensselaer R. Herrick) described as “a sewer that runs through the heart of the city.” The Cuyahoga had burned as early as 1868 and several times more before a 1952 fire caused more than $1.5 million in damage [Cleveland Plain-Dealer].

Still, the 1969 fire was notable because by that time, experts had largely figured out how to prevent rivers from igniting. The conflagration helped the environmental movement gain momentum; in fact, in pushing for the Clean Water Act of 1972, former congressman Louis Stokes says he successfully argued that “if you could clean up the Cuyahoga River, that would demonstrate to the rest of the nation that we could clean up any body of water” [USA Today].

Related Content:
80beats: Dams May Degrade One of China’s Remaining Healthy Rivers
80beats: Blue Whales on the Move: Good News or Bad Sign?
80beats: Chemicals That Fight Fires Also Pollute Waters

Image: flickr / zoonabar

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June 22nd, 2009 5:18 PM Tags: ecosystems, environmental policy, pollution, rivers
by Allison Bond in Environment, Living World | 4 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

4 Responses to “40 Years After the Cuyahoga Burned, Clevelanders Fish in It”

  1. 1.   Roberto Ruth Says:
    June 22nd, 2009 at 10:15 pm

    Bravo!!

  2. 2.   Vlad Says:
    June 23rd, 2009 at 9:44 am

    Telling people it’s easy to restore heavily polluted bodies of water makes them think they can get away with polluting them.

  3. 3.   John Cassady Says:
    June 23rd, 2009 at 10:42 pm

    Or it gives us hope Vlad, would you rather they lie to us so people think it’s not worth the effort?

  4. 4.   Susan Williams Says:
    June 25th, 2009 at 12:23 pm

    There are fish in it, but will you eat them?

    Clean water will be the new millenium’s oil wars.

Leave a Reply





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