Feature - Mill Creek Improvements Benefit Communities Downstream
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One of Westmoreland County’s natural treasures, Mill Creek, recently got even better after some much-needed improvements to stabilize its streambank and slow the amount of sediment entering this exceptional waterway.

This important tributary of the Loyalhanna Creek that supplies drinking water for some residents of Ligonier Township and affects water quality in Latrobe, New Alexandria, and communities downstream, was identified by the Westmoreland County Commissioners last fall as one of 21 separate conservation projects to be funded under the state’s Growing Greener II County Environmental Initiative.

It is the first stream-stabilization project to be completed under that initiative, which also includes funding for new trails and recreation areas, farmland and open space preservation, and other projects to improve the quality of life in Westmoreland County.

Mill Creek is one of the last remaining high-quality recreational resources in the Ligonier Valley, according to an extensive report prepared in 2004 by the Forbes Trail Chapter of Trout Unlimited.

The group’s 2004 conservation plan for the watershed identified the creek’s outstanding qualities – its pristine beginnings in Laurel Mountain and the fact that it is a viable fishery for nearly its entire length. “Mill Creek is one of the last remaining high-quality recreational resources in the Ligonier Valley,” the report determined.

Trout Unlimited also noted Mill Creek’s few but significant trouble spots, including the site where Hannas Run enters the stream just below the community of Oak Grove. Here, the report said, bank erosion is perhaps “the most severe of any area in the entire watershed,” and deemed this site the “number one priority” for remediation.

When the flow of Hannas Run struck the eastern side of Mill Creek, there wasn’t much to stop it. The lack of streamside trees and vegetation, along with Mill Creek’s six-foot-high, almost-vertical banks of soft, loamy soil, meant this site was extremely vulnerable to erosion, with the loose soil polluting the stream and degrading water quality from this point on. The severe erosion from this site was carried downstream, and was a major contributor to the high volume of sediment that regularly builds up where Mill Creek crosses Route 30, just west of Ligonier -- an area that frequently has to be dredged to prevent flooding.

To solve the problem, the Westmoreland Conservation District, the Forbes Trail Chapter of Trout Unlimited, the Loyalhanna Watershed Association, the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy, the Youth Conservation Corps, the Fish and Boat Commission, Outside In, the Boys Brigade Camp Association, and the local landowners joined forces and took a cue from nature.

“A large log had fallen into the stream against the east bank of Mill Creek and was helping to deflect the force of Hannas Run. So we added eight more like it – configuring these nine logs in groups of three, and anchoring them at an angle that would deflect the flow of the water from Hannas Run,” explained Rob Cronauer, watershed specialist for the Westmoreland Conservation District. This is one of the first times this “log deflector” approach has been used to improve a stream in Westmoreland County.

The remediation team also added a large mass of tree roots and 100 tons of stone to take the force of the water flowing in from Hannas Run, and planted 100 live willow branch cuttings to help stabilize the vulnerable, 200-foot section of Mill Creek’s streambank, which they also re-graded to reduce the severity of its slope.

James Schmidt, who with his wife, Twila, owns a cottage along Mill Creek, observed the work in progress. “On a Thursday morning, [the work group] converged in the vicinity of our back yard. When they left on Friday, it was a new place. It was a tremendous accomplishment in a short amount of time. We are grateful to all who worked there, and for the funds that helped to make this project a success,” he wrote in a letter to Westmoreland County Commission Chairman Tom Balya.

This fall, the work group hopes to put the finishing touches on the job by planting 20 six-foot-high young trees to bring even more stability to the streambank.

The Westmoreland County Board of Commissioners, working with the Westmoreland Conservation District last fall, identified five other water-quality projects to be done for streams in the county -- in Allegheny Township, New Kensington, Mount Pleasant Township, Derry Township, and Donegal Township.

“The projects we identified for funding in Westmoreland County address many of the concerns our residents told us were important to them when we did the county’s comprehensive plan,” said Commissioner Chairman Tom Balya, who also serves on the Board of Directors of the Westmoreland Conservation District. “These improvements will benefit all of us – our quality of life, our environment and our economy.”


9/22/2007

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