Lake Lanier Info

  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size
  • Increase font size

Why Lake Lanier's Anniversary Became a Disaster

ImageBy rights this should have been a triumphant year for those of us who live and work around Lake Lanier.

The lake entered its 50th year as the focus of a $5.5 billion dollar industry and we got ready to celebrate its importance to North Georgia. Throughout the summer good news kept on coming:

How Did 2007 Go So Wrong?

The problems started in August when the lake started to drop and it continues to drop a foot per week. The consequences for the area have been catastrophic:

  • ImageSonny Purdue's tournaments were canceled.
  • Businesses around the lake are in a "devastating, depressing" situation with revenue drops between 30% to 90% in many places.
  • Lake Lanier Canoe and Kayak Club continued to lose important events and prestige because of a lack of local funding.
  • The Dragon Boat Festival threatened to move elsewhere because of a lack of local support and LLCKC leadership.
  • The Lighted Boat Parade was canceled due to low water levels and safety issues.
  • The local housing market began to suffer because of the low water levels and the nationwide credit problems.

What is Being Done?

The sad truth is very, very little. After five years in office, Sonny Purdue has failed to put together a coherent plan and has resorted to praying and lawsuits. The Corps of Engineers is sending out mixed messages about how much water remained, initially saying that only 80 days water were left before claiming that several months more supply was available. Local authorities are not doing much more than asking people to cut back on water and expressing a lot of regrets about how they should have started building reservoirs years ago.

What needs to be done?

  • Immediately develop a plan to deal with the next drought. In all likelihood the next drought will be in 2008. Meteorologists are predicting a warm, dry winter and we have no reason to expect that rainfall will help us escape from this hole. We need Sonny to spend his time planning and financing new reservoirs rather than pulling publicity stunts.
  • ImageReassure developers that the water levels will rebound. Companies are planning to pour millions of dollars into our economy and create thousands of jobs. They need to know that the reason for them coming here - the lake - is valued and supported as an economic engine.
  • Local government support to attract and keep events on the lake. Make it a priority to reschedule the Go Fish tournaments, keep the Dragon Boat festival and give the LLCKC the resources it needs to not only stop losing events but start attracting more. Yes, we should look at spending more tax dollars on boosting the tourist economy.
  • Recognize that the lake is North Georgia's highway. Atlanta's wealth comes from its location in the heart of Georgia at the intersection of i95, i85 and i20. Shut down the highways and you shut down Atlanta's economy. The same is true of North-East Georgia. Lake Lanier is so important to the regional economy that allowing the lake to fall more than 10 feet below full pool has a similarly catastrophic effect.
Lake Lanier's 50th anniversary could still be recognized as a great year - one in which we realised the dangers to the lake and started to solve them. Do our local and state leaders have the vision to save Lake Lanier? We'll find out over six months which are going be the most important in the lake's 50 year history.
Comments (6)add comment
...
written by BOB , November 14, 2007

IT'S REALLY VERY SIMPLE, THE lake level..AFTER LAKE LANIER IS FULL, THEN WHATEVER COMES IN IS WHAT SHOULD GO OUT...LAKE LANIER SHOULD NOT BE USED TO EXTEND THE WATER USAGE IN NEIGHBORING STATES..ONCE THE CUP IS FULL. WHERE IS THE JUSTIFICATION TO EMPTY IT? WHERE IS THE JUSTIFICATION TO USE IT AS A RESERVIOR TO FEED MUSSLE FISH WHEN SOON THERE WILL BE NO MORE WATER ANYWAY?..INSTEAD OF ALLOWING WHATEVER FISH THERE ARE TO ADJUST TO SIMPLE ECOLOGICAL SITUATIONS, WHO ARE WE TO FORCE WATER UPON THEM, WHEN IF THE LAKE HAD NEVER BEEN BUILT THEY WOULD HAVE HAD TO MOVE ON ANYWAY..MAKES NO SENSE..WHO HAS THE BETTER LAWYER???

...
written by Mike , November 14, 2007

This problem can be solved with a low country boil and fish fry. We boil the mussels and fry the sturgeon.

After dinner we can drink a few beers and march down to the governors mansion and tell Sonny how much we love him.


...
written by Dennis Morgan , November 15, 2007

It's truly a sin what happening to our lake. The intended purpose was flood control, now we have to provide water for other states and keep their mussels wet?? Every day I cross the Chattahoochee and so much water is being released it's overflowing the banks and erosion is causing large trees to uproot and fall into the river. Why are we as an intelligent society letting this happen?
We are going to be very sorry!!


...
written by Dave , November 15, 2007

Mike I like your low country Idea.


...
written by Bill Martin , November 20, 2007

Seems like the talk here centers around the economic damages. Extinction is the word here: For people. This is just the beginning of the natural consequences of egregious misuse of natural resources in North Georgia for decades -- and a cautionary tale for the rest of the country. Perhaps if every adult in Georgia bought ten gallons of gasoline and burned down four houses, that would be a step in the right direction. But I'm only joking. Keep praying. The best is yet to come.

...
written by Gene Horne , November 21, 2007

Lanier has a very tiny watershead as a percentage of the entire region. Lanier is sort of like a car battery that is being used to jump start all of the other dead watershed batteries in the region during this drought. Ultimately can't work if the drought continiues. Sheer madness by the authorities.


Write comment
busy
 

Register / Login

Bookmark Us

 
 

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement