Community Water Quality Alert

Our Lake Is In Trouble
Here's What We Can Do

Nutrients and sediment from our watershed are degrading water quality. Without action, harmful algae blooms, loss of recreation, and declining property values follow. The good news: affordable solutions exist.

By the numbers

Three facts every resident should know

< 6 ft

Visibility depth at which lake health becomes a concern for swimming, fishing, and daily use

25–50%

Of stormwater management systems (BMPs) in a typical watershed may be malfunctioning silently

$40

Cost of a simple plug that restored one neighborhood BMP from 0% to 85% pollution-trapping efficiency

Water clarity health scale

How clear is your lake — and what does it mean?

Summer visibility Lake condition Suitability Status
6 ft or more Oligotrophic — low nutrient enrichment, clear water Swimming, fishing, all recreation Healthy
3 – 6 ft Mesotrophic — moderate enrichment, some algae growth Most uses OK, monitor closely Caution
1 – 3 ft Eutrophic — heavy enrichment, algae blooms likely Swimming restricted, fishing limited Degraded
Under 1 ft Hypereutrophic — severe enrichment, HAB risk Avoid all contact — toxic algae possible Critical
⚠️

Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) — A Real Risk

When lakes become severely enriched, algae can bloom rapidly and produce toxins dangerous to people, pets, fish, and wildlife. HABs can contaminate drinking water, crash aquatic ecosystems, and shut down recreation for entire seasons. The U.S. EPA warns these blooms can also devastate property values, commercial fishing, and industrial water users.

Root causes

Where the pollution comes from

🏗️

Construction sites

Exposed soil erodes rapidly during rain events, sending sediment directly into streams and the lake. A single uncontrolled site can pollute far beyond its footprint.

🌾

Farms & pastures

Fertilizer runoff and bare soil deliver nitrogen and phosphorus — the primary nutrients that feed algae blooms and choke aquatic life downstream.

🅿️

Parking lots & roads

Impervious surfaces concentrate runoff, carrying oils, road salts, and nutrients into streams. Without functioning stormwater controls, all of it reaches the lake.

🏘️

Rooftops & residential lawns

Residential stormwater carries fertilizers and fine sediment, especially when neighborhood retention basins and infiltration systems are silently malfunctioning.

Community impact

What's at stake if we don't act

Recreation (swimming, fishing)
High
Wildlife & ecosystem harm
High
Property value decline
Significant
Drinking water supply risk
Moderate
Commercial & industrial impact
Moderate

The road to recovery

A proven path to a healthier lake

Step 1 — Weeks

Watershed audit

Map every pollution source in the drainage area. Trace muddy water upstream after storms. Identify malfunctioning stormwater best management practices (BMPs) — the fastest wins are often the cheapest to fix.

Step 2 — Weeks to months

Fix existing BMPs first

A quarter to half of stormwater BMPs in a typical watershed may be failing. Repairing them is the fastest, most cost-effective way to cut nutrient and sediment loads — often for under $100 per site. This single step can be the most impactful action in the entire watershed plan.

Step 3 — Months to 1 year

Reduce all remaining pollution loads

Work cooperatively with landowners, farms, construction sites, and local agencies. Treating sources as "enhancement opportunities" rather than enforcement targets produces faster, more lasting results — bad publicity works briefly; partnership works permanently.

Step 4 — Only after steps 1–3

Dredging & aeration (if needed)

Conventional methods like dredging won't deliver lasting improvement until pollution loads are first reduced — research confirms this clearly. Once they are, these measures can dramatically accelerate lake recovery. Skipping steps 1–3 wastes significant money for short-term results.

Get involved

What our community can do right now

🔍

Walk your watershed

Inspect stormwater ponds and drainage channels after heavy rain. Report muddy outflows or broken basins to your local stormwater agency. You may find the $40 fix that makes all the difference.

🤝

Engage your neighbors

Approach nearby farms, HOAs, and businesses as partners in lake health — not adversaries. The fixes are inexpensive and most property owners welcome the chance to be part of the solution.

📋

Request a formal audit

A professional watershed audit identifies every pollution source, ranks them by impact, and lays out a prioritized, cost-effective action plan. It's the single most powerful first step available.

Ready to protect your lake?

Community & Environmental Defense Services (CEDS) offers free guidance documents, volunteer recruitment training, and in-depth watershed audits. Their cooperative approach has produced dramatic, lasting results in lakes across Maryland and beyond.

Phone
410-654-3021
Learn more at CEDS →