Blue-Green Algae Found in Ohio River, Residents Urged To Use Caution

The Wheeling-Ohio County Health Department and the city of Wheeling are asking residents to use caution after blue-green algae was found in water samples…

The Wheeling-Ohio County Health Department and the city of Wheeling are asking residents to use caution after blue-green algae was found in water samples taken from the Ohio River.

 

According to a health department news release, water testing on Wednesday, Aug. 19, at the Pike Island Lock and Dam on the Ohio River showed elevated levels of blue-green algae. The algae, at high concentrations, can cause health problems such as skin irritation, eye irritation or intestinal illnesses.

 

As a result, the health department and water treatment plant is urging residents to use caution when swimming, boating, fishing, or doing other recreational water activities in the Ohio River this weekend.

 

Public drinking water supplied from the Wheeling Water Department, including the Ohio County Public Service District, is being closely monitored, according to the release.

 

“People can be exposed to the blue-green algae in two ways — either by contact with the skin or by swallowing it,” said Howard Gamble with the Wheeling-Ohio County Health Department. “The basic message for this weekend is, if you see blue-green algae floating in the river, avoid swimming, jet skiing or any other water activity where you might come into contact with it.”

 

Anyone who may be experiencing symptoms related to exposure to blue-green algae, including stomach cramps, diarrhea, vomiting, headache, fever, muscle weakness, or difficulty breathing, is urged to contact their health care provider, particularly if they have been in contact with Ohio River water.

 

Other tips to avoid becoming ill from contact with blue-green algae include:

◦Taking a bath with warm, soapy water after swimming in water that may be contaminated.

◦Don’t drink, cook or shower with contaminated water.

◦Don’t let your pet drink or swim in contaminated water.

◦Use extra caution when children are near contaminated water, as they are more likely to swallow water.

 

Blue-green algae, also known as Cyanobacteria, are a group of photosynthetic bacteria that many people refer to as “pond scum.” It is most often blue-green in color, but can also be blue, green, reddish-purple or brown. Blue-green algae generally grow in lakes, ponds and slow-moving streams when the water is warm and enriched with nutrients like phosphorus or nitrogen. 

 

In certain conditions, blue-green algae can grow very quickly in number. Most species are buoyant and will float to the surface, where they form scum layers or floating mats.

 

Algae blooms can be the result of agricultural fertilizer runoff, sewage overflows and other pollution issues. Some factors that can contribute to algae blooms include sunlight; low-water or low-flow conditions; calm water;warmer temperatures; and excess nutrients (phosphorus or nitrogen). 

 

The primary sources of nutrient pollution are runoff of fertilizers, animal manure, sewage treatment plant discharges, storm water runoff, car and power plant emissions and failing septic tanks.

 

For more information, contact the Wheeling Ohio County Health Department at (304) 234-3682 or the WheelingWater Treatment Plant at (304) 234-3835.

 

Companies Bid Millions to Drill Under State Lands in W.Va.

Companies have bid millions of dollars to drill for oil and natural gas beneath several state-owned lands in West Virginia.

On Friday, the state Department of Commerce opened bids for Marcellus shale fracking under several tracts of land.

Antero ResourceFish s bid about $8,100 per acre, or $2.3 million total, for mineral rights under Jug Wildlife Management Area in Tyler County. Jay-Bee Production Company bid between $5,000 and about $16,300 per acre for different parts of the same land.

Noble Energy bid about $5,100 per acre, or $685,000 total, to drill under Fish Creek and adjacent land in Marshall County.

StatOil USA Onshore Properties Inc. bid $9,000 per acre to drill under part of the Ohio River in Wetzel County.

The state requires an additional 20 percent royalty on what’s extracted.

W.Va., Noble Negotiating Deal for Drilling Under Ohio River

  West Virginia is negotiating a lease with Noble Energy for oil and gas drilling under the Ohio River.

Department of Commerce spokeswoman Chelsea Ruby tells The Intelligencer and Wheeling News-Register that Noble submitted the highest bid to lease a 1,400-acre state-owned tract under the river.

Ruby says Noble has agreed to pay $3,500 per acre to lease the land. She didn’t say what percentage of production royalties Noble will pay the state.

Noble spokeswoman Stacey Brodak declined comment on the deal because it hasn’t been finalized.

The state earlier leased 232 acres under the river to Gastar Exploration for drilling. Both tracts are in Marshall County.

Leasing state land for a drilling technique called hydraulic fracturing, commonly called fracking, is a new venture for West Virginia.

Petition Asks W.Va. Govenor Not to Allow Drilling Under Ohio River

Govenor Earl Ray Tomblin received a petition with 3,820 signatures requesting he disallow horizontal drilling under the Ohio River.

Robin Mahonen, founder of an activist group called the Wheeling Water Warriors, created the petition. It asks both the governor and the head of the state’s Department of Environmental Protection, Randy Huffman, to reconsider plans to permit the horizontal gas drilling under the river. The petition says the risk of contaminating the river is too high considering it provides drinking water for roughly 3 million people in six states.

Groups Oppose Oil, Gas Drilling Under Ohio River

Environmental and citizen groups are urging Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin to rethink leasing land under the Ohio River for oil and natural gas drilling.

In a letter Wednesday, Ohio and West Virginia groups expressed concerns that the state won’t sufficiently safeguard against releases that could harm water supplies.

Groups said more than 5 million people use the Ohio for drinking water.

Until Sept. 25, the state is taking bids on the rights to the reserves below 22 miles of the river. The sections are in Pleasants, Marshall and Wetzel counties.

Eight groups signed the letter. Some include the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, Concerned Citizens Ohio, West Virginia Sierra Club chapter and FreshWater Accountability Project.

The state will require a minimum 20 percent or one-fifth of oil and drilling royalties.

Will fracking waste soon hit the Ohio River?

The U.S. Coast Guard is seeking public comments on a proposal that would allow barges to transport shale gas wastewater.

The waste is a byproduct of the drilling process, and it can include both man-made chemicals and naturally occurring heavy metals and radiation. The waste fluids are currently stored at drilling sites or transported by truck or train to treatment plants and deep underground injection disposal wells. The Coast Guard says some companies want to use barges instead of trucks to move the waste to disposal sites.

One such company, GreenHunter Water, recently purchased an 11-acre barge terminal site in Wheeling that sits along the Ohio River. The company is converting the former gasoline storage facility into a shale wastewater handling and storage site designed to recycle and/or dispose of  gas drilling water.

Phase two of the company’s plans will use river barges to transport waste fluids to various injection disposal sites, but those plans are contingent upon the Coast Guard permitting the transport of fracking waste on inland waterways.

Some environmental groups says the comment period should be longer than 30 days and that the proposal is flawed because it doesn’t mention environmental safeguards. The Coast Guard is accepting comments until Nov. 29. The official title of the proposal is Carriage of Conditionally Permitted Shale Gas Extraction Waste Water in Bulk.
 

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