kegtapr Posted July 25, 2009 Posted July 25, 2009 How come the Ontario shore in Rochester smells so bad?...uggggh that beach near Charlotte....its greenish brown and smells like a Bombay sewage treatment plant. Something to do with the Genesee River meeting the water and the pier cutting of the circulation. At least those are the parts I remember from yearly news reports about it. I was out near Sodus Bay yesterday and the water was clear and odor free.
Whites Bay Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 Yes and no - there are cracks in the dikes from which some are trying to divert and once it is diverted once there will be no end to the diversions. The example you mentioned Nevada is not the immediate danger but communities like NYC & Cincinnati which are outside of Great Lakes basin but want to tap into the water. In Wisconsin the western communities are already starting to fight to have access to the water. Fair enough. "Starting to fight" is one thing. "Succeeding" is another. The legislation that is the Great Lakes Compact started out of an episode in (?) 1997 or 1998 when a company - I believe a Canadian company - started selling water from the Great Lakes to China. That schit got stompted upon in a New York Minute. But it still took 10 years for all 8 states (apologies, Pat Leahy and Vermont, but you don't count with Lake Champlain) and two Canadian Provinces to sign off on the agreement, and to have said agreement passed in the Federal Legistlature of both countries. Okay, so there are a few Wisconsin communities that are pissed off and are going to light the torches and pitchforks and march on the collective capitals to change a law that took a decade for TWO NATIONS JUST TO GET TO THE POINT OF SIGNATURE. Hello, Satan speaking. Not a lot of snow down here, but I'm waiting....... "Libby" - Carly Simon
Whites Bay Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 Something to do with the Genesee River meeting the water and the pier cutting of the circulation. At least those are the parts I remember from yearly news reports about it. I was out near Sodus Bay yesterday and the water was clear and odor free. You're correct. A million years ago I worked a summer job with the Monroe County Environmental Services Department. As a 20-year-old. I got to take water samples from streams and beaches around Monroe County and check them for turbidity and bacterial content. Such a most-excellently-cool job. I was the "Richard" who got to call WBBF and WCMF to close down Charlotte. That's right - ME. I'm the dick that did that to you several decades ago, and ruined so many parties. And I loved it. The reason Charlotte can be such a schit hole is that the piers were designed in a time when no one thought about current flow. The Rochester harbor was designed to allow freighters to move in and out, and to provide shelter during line squalls - not mitigating algal growth. So the piers were built of steel-reinforced concrete with steel plating that interrupted the normal west-to-east current. The result? All that Cladophora piles up on the west beach next to the pier. And rots. It's not as bad as it was back in the 1960s and 1970s with all the dying alewives (Pseudoharengus sp.), but it's still pretty gruesome. Structures like that wouldn't be allowed anymore. Anything that even approximates those piers would have channels built into the to allow cross flow. That won't help Charlotte. It's always going to be downwind from hell because of those piers. Drink up!
/dev/null Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 Buffalo-Rochester-Syracuse: The Buffalo Bills main US fan base. I wonder how Toronto, CN is doing!?! America's Fastest Dying Cities 1. Flint, MI 2. Cleveland, OH 3. BUFFALO, NY 4. Pittsburgh, PA 5. Dyaton, OH 6. Hialeah, FL 7. Toledo, OH 8. ROCHESTER, NY 9. SYRACUSE, NY 10. Jackson, MS http://realestate.aol.com/pictures/finance/dying-cities?pg=1 The only surprise there is a Florida and Mississippi city listed The PA/OH/NY/MI cities on the other hand, there's a reason it's called the Rust Belt
Tcali Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 You're correct. A million years ago I worked a summer job with the Monroe County Environmental Services Department. As a 20-year-old. I got to take water samples from streams and beaches around Monroe County and check them for turbidity and bacterial content. Such a most-excellently-cool job. I was the "Richard" who got to call WBBF and WCMF to close down Charlotte. That's right - ME. I'm the dick that did that to you several decades ago, and ruined so many parties. And I loved it. The reason Charlotte can be such a schit hole is that the piers were designed in a time when no one thought about current flow. The Rochester harbor was designed to allow freighters to move in and out, and to provide shelter during line squalls - not mitigating algal growth. So the piers were built of steel-reinforced concrete with steel plating that interrupted the normal west-to-east current. The result? All that Cladophora piles up on the west beach next to the pier. And rots. It's not as bad as it was back in the 1960s and 1970s with all the dying alewives (Pseudoharengus sp.), but it's still pretty gruesome. Structures like that wouldn't be allowed anymore. Anything that even approximates those piers would have channels built into the to allow cross flow. That won't help Charlotte. It's always going to be downwind from hell because of those piers. Drink up! thanks for the explanation...altho i was there 2 years ago at that beach and the water wasa horrible sewage brown green and the smell would drive off buzzards or large lizards
Tcali Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 Something to do with the Genesee River meeting the water and the pier cutting of the circulation. At least those are the parts I remember from yearly news reports about it. I was out near Sodus Bay yesterday and the water was clear and odor free. i loved sodus bay when i was a young buck.....ahh them nice young chikkies
DieHardFan Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 The truth hurts. The longer the reply the more in denial.
zazie Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 The truth hurts. The longer the reply the more in denial. The world population skyrockets. It is odd that ANY city is dying actually. IMO Buffalo will recover as the world runs out of fresh water. But that may take awhile and if the can lessen the cost of water desalinization, that time may never come. Maybe it is lucky for those who stay, less population is certainly something many other cities badly need.
JPicc2114 Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 So basically all the manufacturing cities...... Everything is going overseas, so if you want a job go to college and get an office job.
TheChimp Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 Could you imagine a WNY like this? Stop the sprawl, and rededicate to the City. Be unified, and maximize the area for what it has. But who am I? Um, someone destined for a career in planning and development for the city of Buffalo, I hope. Heck, I'd move back for that.
PearlHowardman Posted July 26, 2009 Author Posted July 26, 2009 All very interesting responses. But if Buffalo and Rochester are anything like here in Syracuse, the people aren't leaving the cities for the suburbs. They're leaving for North Carolina, Florida, Texas, etc. Sorry!
John Adams Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 The world population skyrockets. It is odd that ANY city is dying actually. IMO Buffalo will recover as the world runs out of fresh water. But that may take awhile and if the can lessen the cost of water desalinization, that time may never come. Maybe it is lucky for those who stay, less population is certainly something many other cities badly need. The third world pop skyrockets. In the developed world, most populations are on the decline. The US population is holding steady because of immigrants.
JohnC Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 Casinos would bring in tourists. It would keep money IN Buffalo. It would boost local business, it would generate revenue, period. Pittsburgh has built a casino, because they see the benefit. Have it all right in downtown. Why incur the cost of all of that infrastructure? I hope you are not using Atlantic City as an example to make your point???? Having Casinos located in one area such as Niagra Falls is a better direction to take rather than having them spread around the region, depleting the customer base of one another.
JohnC Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 Cleveland and Pittsburgh have populations high enough that their respective NFL teams can handle the loss. The combined populations of Buffalo-Rochester-Syracuse don't give the Bills any kind of luxury. The Steelers win because they have quality ownership and organization. The Bills lose because they have poor ownership and an inept organization. No matter what the population base is for these two cities, each gets exceptional fan support.
rpcolosi Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 Buffalo-Rochester-Syracuse: The Buffalo Bills main US fan base. I wonder how Toronto, CN is doing!?! America's Fastest Dying Cities 1. Flint, MI 2. Cleveland, OH 3. BUFFALO, NY 4. Pittsburgh, PA 5. Dyaton, OH 6. Hialeah, FL 7. Toledo, OH 8. ROCHESTER, NY 9. SYRACUSE, NY 10. Jackson, MS http://realestate.aol.com/pictures/finance/dying-cities?pg=1 theres this thing called the suburbs. buffalonians move there
ExiledInIllinois Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 Don't worry, scientists predict that in the next 50 yrs there will be a HUGE fresh water crisis in the USA, especially in the South, Soutwest and West. Places that have huge fresh water lakes sitting next to them like Buffalo, Cleveland, Toledo, Detroit, Rochester, etc.. are poised to make giant comebacks when the populations and large businesses move towards that direction. I know what you said about populations moving TOWARDS the water... That we will have to wait and see. Yet, will put added stress on a very fragile ecosystem where water seems to be dwindling (even through a lake like Lake Michigan seems to be rebounding with higher water levels for the first time in about 10 years). For the people who think that the water will move towards them, fat chance IMO. Do you think Canada and states like Michigan... They (especially Michigan) already piss and moan and throw up every obstructionist barrier against Illinois. Like I said a ton of times... Water only leaves the Great Lakes forever in mass in TWO places... The St. Lawrence and at Chicago. At Chicago that level is set around 3,600 CFS by the US Supreme Court. I even heard rumors that diversion might be cut down to ZERO by 2020 for stuff like navigation.
Mr. WEO Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 How come the Ontario shore in Rochester smells so bad?...uggggh that beach near Charlotte....its greenish brown and smells like a Bombay sewage treatment plant. Took my son to Detroit Auto Show this winter. That is the strangest town I have ever been to. Saturday Morning. Noon. Downtown. No one around. Street level shops vacant. Whole buildings--right downtown, 20 stories---abandoned. Stayed at the GM tower hotel. Beautiful view of the city. No cars on the street on Saturday night. There was this massive old hotel seen from the highway to and from the airprot on the edge of town---just an empty hulking structure. No windows intact. It was very strange. I live on the Lake Ontario. Smells fine and a beautiful sunset (on the water) shines into every room in my house every nite. Awesome.
ExiledInIllinois Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 The water's going nowhere. Last year, amidst absolutely zero fanfare (thank God) the Great Lakes Compact was passed and signed into law. The water of the Great Lakes can only be used by those COUNTIES in those states which border the lake, and which are part of the drainage basin. So, for example, Lake Ontario water can't even be diverted to Sullivan or Rockland Counties. I'm sitting here looking at a beautiful bay in the Eastern Basin of Lake Ontario.....and it's going to be here forever. NOT watering some goddamn golf course in Nevada. Not true to a certain point. At work everytime I open the gates to the controlling lock to let a vessel downbound, I divert about 2 millions gallons of water (about 1 million gallons per foot of head or difference between Lake Michigan and our lower pool (Lockport pool). On a busy Sunday... We are locking every 15-20 minutes NON-STOP... That can be about 60 lockages a day... Cut that in half and that is how much we are approximately diverting of the Great Lakes never to return. Nice thing about Lake Ontario is that the water elevations are controlled through the SeaWay... Ontario hasn't really seen the decline in water levels the others have seen... Yet, that can be a bad thing... The lakes have been going through cycles like this for thousands of years... And sometimes the lakes need that "regeneration." Right now Lake Michigan has been int he + elevation (zero being the lake's elevation off of mean sea level datum) for the better part of this year... Actually, this is the first time it has done that in about 10 years!
zazie Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 All very interesting responses. But if Buffalo and Rochester are anything like here in Syracuse, the people aren't leaving the cities for the suburbs. They're leaving for North Carolina, Florida, Texas, etc. Sorry! It's cold up there. And you are not required to stay, it is not soviet era siberia. I had a buddy from South Carolina there a few yeare ago in the winter and he was astonished anyone would stay, why would they? I do understand why people stay in those cities, but he had a point too. And that is the point that is being taken by more and more Buffalonians, Rocherterians, Clevenders, et al. It will get worse, before it gets better, the population declines. Hopefully the cities will adjust appropriately to being smaller. I guess they will have too.
ExiledInIllinois Posted July 26, 2009 Posted July 26, 2009 Yes and no - there are cracks in the dikes from which some are trying to divert and once it is diverted once there will be no end to the diversions. The example you mentioned Nevada is not the immediate danger but communities like NYC & Cincinnati which are outside of Great Lakes basin but want to tap into the water. In Wisconsin the western communities are already starting to fight to have access to the water. Which is rightly so. Only place I can see it (more diversion) actually get through the system. Of course a big factor is that Lake Michigan is the only lake that is 100% United States... Yet, Lake Huron is at the same elevation... And Superior's flow through the Soo (Sault Ste. Marie) can be kept in check... Unless the water in Superior starts getting really high. Again... Michigan would make a holy stink about any further diversion say by a state like WI... Just as they have been fighting with Illinois for better half of the last 100 years. Will we witness a tragedy of commons when it comes to certain stuff like this??
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