SAXTONS RIVER — In time for the summer recreation season, the Connecticut River Watershed Council (CRWC) and 16 partners have launched the 2016 Connecticut River water sampling program.
Water samples are tested for E. coli bacteria as an indicator for all types of pathogens that could potentially make people sick. River users can visit the “Is It Clean?” web page located at www.ConnecticutRiver.us to find bacteria test results at more than 147 river access and recreation sites in Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and northern Connecticut.
Samples are typically collected at each site weekly or bi-weekly and test results are posted online 24 hours later, through early October.
“When weather gets warm, people head to our rivers to cool off and have fun, and they want to know if our rivers are clean. The data tells us that it is a good idea to stay out of the water for 24-48 hours after a heavy rain, because bacteria levels could be high,” CRWC Lower River Steward Alicea Charamut said in a news release.
Charamut added that “heavy rain is often the cause of high bacteria levels. Bacteria can spike after a storm due to combined sewer overflows and polluted storm-water runoff from urban, suburban, and agricultural areas.”
CRWC Massachusetts River Steward Andrea Donlon said that cities and towns along the river are making significant investments to reduce pollution to our rivers and this has made “a tremendous difference” in water quality.
“We want people to be able to explore and enjoy this wonderful resource,” Donlon said. “Our rivers are certainly much cleaner than they used to be, but it makes sense for river users to pay attention to this information so they know when it's clean for swimming or boating.”
Water sample results are color-coded and map-based to offer guidance about whether the water is clean enough for swimming and boating. Results are a snapshot of river conditions at the moment the sample was taken, but give river users information they can use to make informed decisions and prevent potential illness. The website provides bacteria data for the Connecticut River and more than 20 tributaries.
The water sampling project is in its ninth year.