March 23, 2005
Volume 35, Number 87
Office of the SecretaryContact: Steve Williams, Ecological Restoration ,
phone: (302) 739-4403
or Maria Taylor, Public Affairs Office, phone: (302) 739-4506
Gov. Minner and DNREC Showcase Pike Creek Stream
Restoration Project at Three Little Bakers
Governor Ruth Ann Minner joined Department of Natural Resources and
Environmental Control Secretary John A. Hughes today at the ceremonial
groundbreaking for Delaware’s largest stream restoration project. Hughes
officially ‘cut the ribbon’ on this project by climbing in an excavator and
scooping up a clawful of dirt along Pike Creek near the Three Little Baker’s
golf course. The Governor and Secretary Hughes were joined at the symbolic
groundbreaking by all the major partners in this landmark project which will
stabilize the severely eroded banks and restore health to a 4,000-foot
section of a major creek in the Christina watershed. The project partners
and guests got a first hand look at the work which is now actually in
progress. The originally scheduled groundbreaking on March 8 was postponed
due to high winds and snow.
Governor Minner expressed her pleasure saying, “I applaud the Three Little
Bakers, a private landowner, for setting a very important example of
voluntary environmental stewardship. They have committed funding and
enthusiasm along with their land, to an ecological restoration project that
improves our state’s green infrastructure.” The governor emphasized that
“voluntary environmental stewardship on private lands is extremely important
in Delaware because 80 percent of the state’s land base is privately owned.”
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the primary funding partner for
the project was represented by Donald S. Welsh, regional administrator for
EPA's mid-Atlantic region. Welsh remarked, “I am extremely gratified to see
EPA’s grant dollars at work just as we intended them, in a project that will
use exemplary state-of-the-art techniques to breathe new life into the
stream, its aquatic inhabitants, its shoreline habitat and improve water
quality in the White Clay Creek Watershed, which is a source of drinking
water for thousands of families in Delaware.”
Secretary Hughes thanked EPA and the many other funding partners –Three
Little Bakers, owners of the property; the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s
Natural Resources Conservation Service; Delaware Department of
Transportation and the New Castle Conservation District. According to
Hughes, “The only way we can be successful in environmental improvement
projects like this is to have generous and cooperative partners who are
firmly committed to the goals of the Governor’s Livable Delaware and Green
Infrastructure initiatives.”
Stephen N. Williams, DNREC’s Ecological Restoration coordinator who
spearheaded this project, pointed to the erosion saying, “These eroded
stream banks are palpable and visible evidence of Pike Creek’s degradation,
but there is a less visible problem – excessive amounts of sediment in the
streambed and water column – which destroys habitat and challenges the
survivability of macro-invertebrates and fish species like trout.” Williams
went on to list several unique environmental features of Pike Creek that put
it on a priority list for restoration: Pike Creek is part of the White Clay
Creek Wild and Scenic River system; it serves as a source-water stream for
public drinking water supplies in New Castle County; it is one of only a few
trout put-and-take stocked streams in the Delaware; it is capable of
providing a habitat corridor in an area of dense development; and it is a
potential migration corridor for endangered bog turtles.
The Pike Creek Restoration Project will re-establish a natural pattern and
geometry to the channel which will eliminate the excessive erosion. Native
trees and shrubs will be planted on the stream banks and in the floodplain
to shade the stream and help stabilize the channel. Forested wetlands will
be created in the floodplain to slow floodwaters and increase the diversity
of the aquatic ecosystem. All of these “fixes” will help to make Pike Creek
more ecologically friendly.
Three contractors have been employed in this project. Biohabitats Inc.
prepared the design plans and will provide guidance and oversight, Meadville
Land Services Inc. is the construction contractor and Ecological Restoration
and Management, Inc. will do the landscaping and plantings. Total cost of
the project is $781,000. The project is expected to be completed by this
summer.
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