- Colin Powell entertains, educates UD audience
- Tesla CEO champions sustainable energy, space exploration
- Small Business Development Center honors Gary Simon
- Top speakers to discuss creating new economies for Delaware and the nation
- UD in the News, Nov. 6, 2009
- For the Record, Nov. 6, 2009
- Additional Maroon 5 tickets to go on sale for UD students Nov. 9
- UD professor testifies about offshore wind for legislative hearing
- Delaware Army ROTC team competes in Ranger Challenge
- Association for Computing Machinery cites UD student
- UD profs discuss Nobels in chemistry, literature, economics
- Blue Hen alums return to UD for Homecoming
- UD alum Christopher Christie elected governor of New Jersey
- UD survey on technology amenities in hotel rooms
- Gamma Sigma Sigma supports Crohn's and Colitis Foundation
- University's 'Chunksters' get set for Chunkin
- University hosts conference on ethics of climate change
- Solar panels latest in green technology at UD dairy farm
- UD Library Special Collections on the road
- UD pre-service students assist with Teachers of Science newsletter
- UD honors 2009 Presidential Citation recipients
- Starburst galaxy sheds light on longstanding cosmic mystery
- Blue Hen Leadership Program offers students opportunities
- Ellen Wise joins College of Education and Public Policy as director of development
- Alumni Relations seeks volunteers for reunion class committees
- Information on Chrysler site work posted
- More News >>
- Nov.18: Delaware seeks CAA Blood Challenge title
- Nov. 9-10: Conference to focus on creating new economies for Delaware, the nation
- Nov. 9: Blue Hen basketball rally planned
- Nov. 10: Preconception health fair set in Trabant
- Nov. 11: Science Cafe returns to Newark
- Nov. 11: Dan Rich to speak on the role of universities in a global economy
- Nov. 11: Annual Step-n-Stroll show set at The Bob
- Nov. 11: Pompeii revisited during past three centuries
- Nov. 12: 'Shakespeare First' to feature lecture by James Shapiro
- Nov. 13: Project MUSIC Day to host elementary students
- Nov. 13: Student-organized ONE event to focus on poverty, hunger, disease
- Nov. 13: DuPont CEO Ellen Kullman to give talk at UD
- Nov. 14: Blue Hens tailgate tent set for Navy game
- Nov. 16: New opening act for Maroon 5 concert announced
- Nov. 17: UD students plan rally to open Relay for Life season
- Nov. 18: College of Education and Public Policy to host first expo
- Nov. 18: National Superintendent of the Year to visit Delaware
- Nov. 19: UD plans Geospatial Research Day
- Nov. 19: Darwin Lecture considers the origins of art
- Nov. 20: Tarburton to speak at Friends of Agriculture Breakfast
- Sept. 30-Nov. 18: School of Nursing offers fall research lecture series
- Oct. 23-Nov. 13: UD to host international art show in Second Life
- Oct. 14-Nov. 18: Art, history experts to offer gallery talks
- Oct. 11-Nov. 29: International Film Series offered Sundays at Trabant
- Sept. 9-Dec. 2: 'Assessing Obama' series to feature faculty, national speakers
- Sept. 9-Dec. 2: 'Research on Women' fall lecture series announced
- Sept. 18-Dec. 18: Library's 'Lion Awakes' exhibition looks at reggae, Marley
- Sept. 26-May 1: Take in an opera at the Met with UD matinee tickets
- More What's Happening >>
- UD calendar >>
- UD's Winter Faculty Institute kicks off Jan. 5
- Student anchors, videographers compete for spot at 82nd Academy Awards
- LMS Committee explores focus for the future
- State offers UD faculty, staff free health risk assessment
- Upgrade to Windows 7 available for UD students
- CAS Research Institute invites 'integrated semester' proposals
- CAS Research Institute invites visiting scholar, artist proposals
- Oct. 20-Nov. 10: UD announces long-term care open enrollment
- More Campus FYI >>
11:45 a.m., Dec. 5, 2008----Although the health of the Delaware River and Bay is improving on some fronts, a number of troubling trends remain in this historic waterway that provides drinking water to millions in the Mid-Atlantic region, among other services, and harbors a diversity of wildlife.
That's the conclusion of a major “state of the basin” report developed over the past three years by a multi-state research consortium led by the University of Delaware.
The effort, a collaboration of the University of Delaware, Cornell, Penn State, and Rutgers, was coordinated by Gerald Kauffman, professor of watershed policy and director of the UD Institute of Public Administration's Water Resources Agency.
Kauffman co-presented a “report card” of the Delaware River Basin's health at a press conference on Friday, Dec. 5, at the John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge at Tinicum, near the Philadelphia Airport.
The event was hosted by the Delaware River Basin Commission and the Partnership for the Delaware Estuary, the two agencies that funded the study.
“We have a tremendous resource that we need to keep healthy,” Kauffman said prior to the event, noting that the Delaware River Basin supplies drinking water to 15 million people, including Philadelphia and New York, and is home to the largest freshwater port in the world.
“We are seeing a revival of the shad and striped bass fisheries,” Kauffman noted, “and bald eagles are making a comeback.”
Bald eagles nested in South Philadelphia last year, the first in more than 200 years.
While it was deemed one of the most polluted rivers in the world in the 1950s, with no oxygen in the water in the summer at Philadelphia, the Delaware River has now exceeded the “fishable standard” of 5 milligrams of dissolved oxygen per liter in the region that flows by the city.
Kauffman attributes the improvement in water quality to environmental policies such as the federal Clean Water Act, signed into law by President Richard M. Nixon in 1972, and President John F. Kennedy's signing of the compact that created the Delaware River Basin Commission (DRBC) and its holistic approach to watershed management in 1961.
However, fish consumption advisories remain on 4,000 miles of streams, Kauffman noted, and the pesticides atrazine and metolachlor have been detected in eight of ten of the basin's streams.
The Atlantic sturgeon, a fish that was prolific in the estuary in the 1800s, and the red knot, a migratory shorebird, are approaching extinction, according to the report, with no sturgeon caught in 2005.
Moreover, between 1996 and 2001, the Delaware River Basin saw a loss of habitat of 70 square miles--25 acres per day--as former farmland, wetland, or forest became developed.
What is needed to stem these troublesome tides and steer ahead on the course to improvement?
“JFK had the right idea when he signed the DRBC compact in 1961 as the best way to manage the interstate Delaware River watershed,” Kauffman said. “One of his wisest public policy moves was appointing the governors of each state as DRBC commissioners, thus ensuring that water resources are being addressed at the highest levels in state government.”
According to Kauffman, watershed-based governance structures such as the DRBC and the Partnership for the Delaware Estuary offer “our best hope” to continue improving the health of the Delaware and its tributaries in four states.
“Significant challenges lie ahead in restoring the river and estuary that will require market-based investments in watershed projects such as planting new forests, reducing farm manure, and cleaning up hazardous waste and mine drainage sites,” Kauffman said.
“The current economic drought provides unprecedented incentives to develop creative financing mechanisms to restore the river to fishable and swimmable status as required by Nixon's Clean Water Act,” Kauffman said. “The Delaware River is the economic engine of the Delaware Valley. It will be worth continued investment in infrastructure from the public and private sectors to continue this remarkable Delaware River revival.”
Download the full report from the UD Institute of Public Administration Web site.
Article by Tracey Bryant


