By Curtis Minter
THE PROBLEM!
Imagine walking past a body of water in the heart of Gowanus,Brooklyn thinking nothing of it. Until your viciously smacked by the petrifying smell of the infamous Gowanus Canal. Then you take a look at the water and you see an oily sheen pass through the water. Your eyes land on the greenish black bubbles being emitted from the sewage stained water. After this you might ask why or how could any water get like this, this polluted... Well the companies that produce the items that you enjoy like flour mills and cement works could be swimming into that body of water right now.
How did this happen?
The pollution of the Gowanus Canal started almost rapidly after the Canal was first made in the mid 1800s there are factors that contribute to the pollution of the Gowanus Canal. The Canal was first polluted from Combined Sewage Overflow also known as CSO and Industrial Dumping. According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s website: “Combined sewer systems are sewers that are designed to collect rainwater runoff, domestic sewage, and industrial wastewater in the same pipe. Most of the time, combined sewer systems transport all of their wastewater to a sewage treatment plant, where it is treated and then discharged to a water body. During periods of heavy rainfall or snowmelt, however, the wastewater volume in a combined sewer system can exceed the capacity of the sewer system or treatment plant. For this reason, combined sewer systems are designed to overflow occasionally” And the water after the treatment plant gets full the sewage gets discharged into the Gowanus Canal . Also according to the Olmstead environmental resources “industrial solid waste is defined as waste that is generated by businesses from an industrial or manufacturing process or waste generated from non-manufacturing activities that are managed as a separate waste stream. Businesses that utilize manufacturing or industrial processes, or that are service or commercial establishments, are likely producing industrial solid waste. Also when the ink factories used to dump waste in the Canal the water turns different colors such as red and purple which obviously shows that the industrial dumping is a problem.
Why Should you care?
Though I bet you are asking why should I care about this problem you are probably saying that this has nothing to do with me and this won't affect me at all. But if you have any type of emotion in your heart you would care about the animals that end up in the in Gowanus canal like saltwater fishes and sometimes even dolphins that can't survive in the toxic water of the Gowanus canal or even some of of the people that walk past the Gowanus canal and have to smell its petrifying odor we should be the ones to make a change and clean the Gowanus canal,beautify it
The Solution!
But there is ways to stop some of the pollution such as building walls from businesses. If the government were to build a wall between the canal and the businesses on the canal it would make the canal a not so easy dumping ground and would force the businesses to find another place to dump their waste or dispose of it properly. Also another way that you could help purify the water is to place plants in the canal since some plants act as sponges and soak up some of the sewage in the Canal and make the canal a lot less dirty. These ways could beautify the Gowanus Canal and purify it in general.