archives|Littleton Independent News

Print | E-mail | Comment (No comments posted.) | Text Size

Flooded with knowledge


Students from Denver Academy conduct water sample tests Oct. 20 on the South Platte River. Photo by Courtney Kuhlen | ckuhlen@ccnewspapers.com

By Holly Cook
Published: 11.02.09
Cody Lyvere stood on the bank of the South Platte River just north of Dartmouth Avenue with a small vial in hand.

After dropping two tiny gray tablets into the water sample he violently shook the glass tube and waited for the results of a dissolved oxygen test.

“If there’s a lot of oxygen in the water it’s like, yeah, fish can breathe,” said Denver Academy sophomore Phil Matthews. “If there’s not a lot, it’s bad for the fish.”

The dissolved oxygen test was only one of many basic indicator tests Denver Academy students completed at the Littleton Englewood Wastewater Treatment Plant as part of the fifth annual World Water Monitoring Day, Oct. 20.


World Water Monitoring Day is an international education and outreach program that builds public awareness and involvement in protecting water resources around the world by engaging citizens to conduct basic monitoring of their local water bodies.

The Water Environment Federation encourages communities to raise water quality awareness from March 22 to Dec. 31 each year.

“We want to expose kids to their impact on overall water quality so that they might take the easy steps to protect it,” said Littleton Englewood Wastewater Treatment Plant chemist Steve Mustain.

He continued by explaining how water treated in the plant eventually moves to places like Thornton, where it becomes residents’ drinking water.

“Yes, the South Platte is a river running through town but it’s also used for drinking water and supports aquatic life.”

Public awareness of the impending world water crisis is an important prerequisite to create a responsible citizenship capable of improving world water management, according to the Journal of Applied Environmental Education and Communication.

The world water crisis has been called one of the largest public health issues of our time.

Nearly 1.1 billion people (roughly 20 percent of the world’s population) lack access to safe drinking water.

The lack of clean, safe drinking water is estimated to kill almost 4,500 children per day.

“It would be important to know about your water quality if you lived in Mexico or Costa Rica,” said sophomore Nick Evans, while testing the PH balance of the river water.

“Especially if you’re drinking from a tap.”

But it’s important even in Colorado, added Evans’ classmate Lauren Allen.

According to the World Water Day organization, the problem isn’t confined to a particular region of the world.

A third of the Earth’s population lives in “water stressed” areas and that number is expected to rise dramatically over the next two decades.

For example, by 2030 communities along the front range will need 630,000 aquatic feet of new water supply. And most of the supply is tied up on the Western Slope.

As a child during the fire of Cuyahoga River in Ohio, Mustain says he never wants to see the South Platte in a similar condition. The Cuyahoga River at one time was considered the most polluted river in the country.

“If we don’t pay attention to what’s going in to our water all of our fish and aquatic plant life will disappear,” Mustain said.

Started in 2002 in the United States, World Water Monitoring Day is celebrated in 50 countries by more than 75,000 participants per year.

It’s the goal of the Water Environment Federation to involve 1 million people in 100 countries by 2012.

It was inspired by the belief that everyone — not just professionals with specialized degrees — can study the natural world and collect meaningful data, trained volunteer monitors spend countless hours in the field making careful observations and measurements.

Results are shared with participating communities around the globe to track emerging trends, through the World Water Monitoring Day Web site.



Submit a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.
*Member ID:
*Password:
Remember login?
(requires cookies)
  Forgot Your Password?
 
Not yet a registered member?
Click here to become one.

Reader Comments

Return to: News « | Home « | Top of Page ^
Sunday
November 22, 2009
Click for Colorado Forecast
localevents
November 2009
Su M Tu W Th F S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30
Sun, November 22, 2009
Event Date:
November 22nd, 2009 - November 22nd, 2009
Event Time:
TBA - TBA
Event Date:
November 22nd, 2009 - November 30th, 2009
Event Time:
TBA - TBA
Event Date:
November 22nd, 2009 - November 30th, 2009
Event Time:
TBA - TBA
Event Date:
November 22nd, 2009 - December 31st, 2018
Event Time:
TBA - TBA
Event Date:
November 22nd, 2009 - TBA
Event Time:
TBA - TBA
Event Date:
November 22nd, 2009 - TBA
Event Time:
2:00am - 5:30am


today'stopads