The Corps has
many things they are responsible for in managing the Savannah River Basin and
these all should come into play in drought planning. Environmental interests are the ones most
often quoted as the reason release rates and lake levels are managed the way
they are in a drought. Recreation is
mentioned only in passing. When pressed
the typical corps response is one of two things. Either recreation such as water skiing and
boating are just not that important compared to environmental concerns or the
folks below the dams like to ski and boat as well as the people around the
lakes.
These
responses show very little comprehension of what is meant by recreation. The
responsibility to protect and provide for recreation has very little to do with
whether someone can go water skiing or boating.
What is really at stake is the hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of
infrastructure that is heavily damaged every time the lakes drop more than
10ft. Marinas, boat ramps, camp grounds,
lake side real estate, restaurants, etc. etc. is what is meant by
recreation. Continued devastating drops
in lake levels such as over the past decade are destroying this
infrastructure. First to go will be all
the homes built on the lakes for weekend get aways and vacations. Then you will see the restaurants and similar
supporting facilities go. Then the marinas will disappear, camp grounds will be
shut down, boat ramps will get in dis repair and slowly but surely recreation
will disappear from our lakes. All this is a direct contradiction to the Corps’
responsibility to balance recreation against all the other concerns.
Compare for a
moment the difference between managing for just environmental concerns and looking
at the whole picture including recreation.
For tens of thousands of years the river was uninterrupted by dams and
fish and wildlife and all the other environmental concerns survived just fine. About
all the benefit man can provide is to take the wild ravages of floods and
extreme droughts out of the picture. Providing
an artificial river that never drops below 3800cfs at the river’s inlet is
taking it to an extreme. Allowing the
river to be more of a river and managing the lakes so that they are not
destroyed makes a lot more sense.
All you have
to do is look at the meetings to discuss drought planning and you see a glaring
omission to balancing the lakes. Where
are the recreation stakeholders? People involved in actually providing the
infrastructure for recreation who can properly represent these interests. We need to hear that recreation interests must
agree to such a change instead of just environmental interests. Until recreational interests are represented
we will not achieve true balance on managing the lakes. As long as there is no representation
from recreation interests even costly studies will not yield balance because of
the way the results are interpreted.
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