Paul Smith’s College Adirondack Watershed Institute (AWI) has announced it was recently awarded two research grants from the Lake Champlain Basin Program (LCBP).
The first grant will help scientists and policy makers understand the extent of road salt pollution in Lake Champlain. The second grant will support AWI scientists to assess the effectiveness of recent stormwater upgrades in Lake Placid to improve water quality in Mirror Lake.
Road salt is as a significant source of pollution in the Lake Champlain Basin, which includes 11 sub-basins drained from major tributaries in New York, Vermont, and Quebec including the Saranac, Ausable, Winooski, Missisquoi, and Lamoille Rivers. With the support of the LCBP, AWI scientists will compile existing data from all water bodies within the Lake Champlain Basin to determine what is driving sodium and chloride levels. As a result, scientists will have a better understanding of the extent and cause of road salt pollution in the basin, which will help inform long-term practices to reduce road salt and protect the environment.
The second grant from the Lake Champlain Basin Program will allow AWI and its partners at the Ausable River Association to assess the effectiveness of stormwater upgrades around Mirror Lake in Lake Placid.
Mirror Lake has one of the most developed watersheds on the New York side of the Lake Champlain Basin. For many years, stormwater runoff from around Mirror Lake has flowed directly to the lake. The Village of Lake Placid is currently amid a two-year multi-million-dollar construction project to improve the sewer and stormwater systems below Main Street, including the construction of three large underground retention basins that will receive stormwater runoff and allow percolation into the ground, resulting in a slow-release to Mirror Lake. These new systems are a substantial improvement over the current systems.
Stormwater runoff can have significant impacts on waterbodies like Mirror Lake. Runoff that moves over impervious surfaces, such as parking lots, sidewalks, and roads, picks up road salt, sediment, petroleum products and other toxins. The untreated water is discharged into waterbodies, causing excess pollution in the environment.
The mission of the Paul Smith’s College Adirondack Watershed Protect is to protect clean water, conserve habitat, and support the health and well-being of people in the Adirondacks through science, collaboration, and real-world experiences for students. More can be found on their website.
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