• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
CLICK HERE to support the watershed by becoming a member today!

KRWC

  • KRWC
  • Interactive Resources
    • All About the KRWC, AOCs, PCBs, and a Cleaner Kalamazoo River
    • Keeping Tabs on the Kalamazoo
    • Test your Knowledge of the Kalamazoo River Watershed
    • Am I in the Kalamazoo River Watershed
    • Virtual Tours of the Kalamazoo River
    • KRWC Summary of 2023 Eat Safe Fish Guide
  • Learn
    • Beta – Kalamazoo Information Navigators – KazooInNators
    • What’s a Watershed?
    • Explore Our Rivers
      • Kalamazoo River
      • North Branch Kalamazoo River
      • South Branch Kalamazoo River
      • Battle Creek River
      • Rabbit River
      • Other Recreation
    • Natural Places
    • What are the Problems?
    • Kalamazoo River Mussels
    • Plans
    • Rain Gardens
    • Four Townships
      • History
      • Documents
    • Data Dashboards
      • Fish Contamination Dashboard
      • Sediment & Soil Dashboard
      • Phosphorus Dashboard
    • Marshall Megasite Statement
  • Act
    • Residents
    • Local Governments
    • Educators
    • Volunteer
    • Cleanup on the Kalamazoo River
  • Support
    • Donate Online or by Mail
    • Shop
    • Become a River Giver Now
    • River Givers & Supporters
    • Watershed Benefactors
    • Volunteer
  • Programs & Events
    • Paddle Events
    • Calendar of Events
    • Kalamazoo River Youth Experience
    • Konnect with the Kazoo
    • Trash Free Waters
    • Master *Rain* Gardener
  • About
    • Mission and Vision
    • Who We Are
    • What We Do
    • In The Community
    • Contact
  • Shop
    • Shop
    • Cart
    • Checkout
  • Información en Español
    • Misión y Visión
    • Quienes Somos
    • ¿Que es una Cuenca?
    • Explorar
    • Eventos
    • Krazy para el Kazoo
    • ¿Que son las problemas?
    • Contacto
    • Apoyar y Donar
    • Más Recursos en Español

General Watershed Info

February 5, 2013 By Doug McLaughlin

Phosphorus TMDL meeting and Kalamazoo River 319 project kick-off

The Lake Allegan/Kalamazoo River Phosphorus Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) Implementation Committee will meet on the morning of February 21 at 9:00am at the Kalamazoo Water Reclamation Plant, 1415 N. Harrison Street. Download a copy of the meeting agenda.

This meeting will serve as the kick-off meeting for the Watershed Council’s 319 project. The purpose of the project is two-fold: 1) to provide stormwater management assistance and educational outreach to non-regulated communities in the Lake Allegan TMDL watershed, and 2) to use bacterial source tracking methods to better understand the sources of pathogens in Davis Creek. At this meeting we will focus on how communities will be selected for stormwater management assistance and what level of commitment is required of participating communities. Read the web post for more information about the project.

Click here to read background information on the TMDL.

Filed Under: General Watershed Info, Phosphorus TMDL

December 21, 2012 By Doug McLaughlin

River history & renewal

A History of Exploitation and Degradation

During the 1800s, people used the abundant water resources of the Kalamazoo River for waterpower, navigation, and fisheries, among another uses. Hydroelectric dams built along the river provided power as early as 1900, with seven dams along the main river and over 100 in the overall watershed by the 1930s. Later the river became crucial for the development of manufacturing, including the paper industry. Unfortunately the river was also used to dispose of wastes, resulting in dramatic degradation of water quality. In 1953 a photo of a massive fish kill on the Kalamazoo River was featured on the cover of Life Magazine, and public reaction contributed to the awakening of the U.S. environmental movement. Contamination of fishes with PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) led to the designation of the lower river as a federal Superfund Site in 1990. The history of industrial and sewage contamination as well as growing recognition of the PCB contamination problem resulted in the widespread impression of the river as unsanitary and worthless.

Renewal of the River

The condition and appearance of the river are greatly improved now. Diverse fishes and clams are back, and the water is safe for recreation. Point sources of pollution from sewage and industrial activity are treated before being discharged into the river due to federal and state regulations. Increasing attention is paid to more diffuse sources of pollution such as stormwater runoff and groundwater pollution. Waterfront property in urban areas is being redeveloped for other purposes, and natural floodplain forests are recovering.

However, fish consumption advisories remain in effect and options to clean up contaminated sediments are still being deliberated, and though little action has been taken so far, actions are accelerating. There are many projects and many partners currently involved in watershed management detailed on this website.

The Kalamazoo River Watershed Council believes that everyone has a say and a stake in watershed management. Rivers and streams are no longer viewed as places to dispose of waste, and these days, communities up and down the Kalamazoo River Valley are increasingly viewing their rivers and streams as valuable natural assets to be protected and celebrated. Indeed, the water quality of the Kalamazoo River system has steadily improved over the past three decades, and fishes and mussels are returning to reaches where they had been eliminated. The future will surely see much more attention to restoration of our rivers and streams, making this an exciting time for the region.

Filed Under: General Watershed Info

December 21, 2012 By Doug McLaughlin

What is watershed management?

Did you know you live in a watershed? You might live in the Kalamazoo River Watershed. The watershed is defined as all the land that drains into the Kalamazoo River, which in turn drains to Lake Michigan and then on through the Great Lakes. Much of the rain falling in the watershed moves across the land and through the groundwater towards rivers, lakes, and wetlands.

There are approximately 400,000 watershed residents. The watershed communities include ten counties, 19 cities, 11 villages, and 107 townships between Hillsdale County and the City of Saugatuck. Communities in the watershed are connected by human infrastructure, green infrastructure, surface water, and groundwater.

Hundreds of people are managing land and water in the watershed. Long-term, big picture analysis, planning, and action at the watershed scale provide people with an understanding of how their actions and uses of land, even on their property or in their neighborhood, impact their water resources between their front door, streams, the Kalamazoo River, and the Great Lakes. That is watershed management! It is people, the decisions they make, and how they value their water resources. So please, get informed, and get involved!

Filed Under: General Watershed Info

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3

Primary Sidebar

Be a River Giver

Make a donation to support water conservation. You can make a secure donation using a major credit card. Or visit our support page to mail your donation.

Give Now

Subscribe to Newsletter

* = required field

Search

Footer

  • Shop
  • Cart
  • Checkout

Contact Us

(269) 447-1580 – Office

(269) 350-6158  – Executive Director’s Cell Phone (this is the best way to contact the KRWC quickly)

1523 Riverview Drive, Suite A
Kalamazoo, MI 49004

Contact Form

Follow us

  • facebook
  • twitter
  • instagram

Copyright © 2025 Kalamazoo River Watershed Council · Admin Log in