Riverkeeper Team
Data from the first round of this year’s sampling in six Hudson River tributaries is available at riverkeeper.org/citizen-data. Note that results presented here are a snapshot in time, and are not indicative of water quality today; we encourage the public to explore the historical data as one way to make informed choices about where and when to enter the water. Click the map below to explore the results, or click through to find data about any of these tributaries:
19 sites,
45 miles
9 sites,
25 miles
17 sites,
43 miles
21 sites,
64 miles
13 sites,
10 miles
16 sites,
8 miles
Spotlight: Catskill Creek
Sampling at the Old Stone Bridge in Leeds
Data collected on May 22 is giving us our first look at water quality in the Catskill Creek upstream of South Cairo. Our ongoing partnership with Catskill Creek Watershed Awareness Project at Cornell Cooperative Extension continues into its fourth year, and we’re now working with more citizens to sample 34 additional miles in the Catskill Creek watershed in Greene, Albany and Schoharie counties. The sample taken at the Old Stone Bridge in Leeds was one exception to generally low fecal contamination observed on May 22. In 2012, a Department of Environmental Conservation enforcement resulted in the disconnection of an illegal septic hookup. High counts persist. It’s not clear why.
Riverkeeper’s citizen sampling program is recognized by the Clinton Global Initiative as a Commitment to Action – a plan for addressing a significant global challenge.
GET INVOLVED
Riverkeeper is recruiting more citizen scientists to join our sampling teams on the Esopus Creek, Catskill Creek and elsewhere. For information, contact Jen Epstein at jepstein@riverkeeper.org.
LEARN MORE
Learn more about Riverkeeper’s Water Quality Program:
Albany, Tuesday, June 18
Croton-on-Hudson, Saturday & Sunday, June 21-22
Read “How’s the Water Where You Live?” in Riverkeeper’s 2014 annual journal.
Related campaigns
Water quality monitoring
Riverkeeper is the go-to source for information about the quality of the water along the Hudson River and its tributaries
Remediating and preventing contamination
Cleaning up decades of pollution and preventing more requires scientific understanding, targeted legal action, and sustained advocacy
Spill prevention and preparedness
Working to protect the Hudson and its communities from the threats posed by anchor strikes and spills