Water Quality Forum

Beaver Creek Watershed Initiative

 

 

Beaver Creek Links:

Beaver Creek Watershed Overview:  http://knoxcounty.org/stormwater/pdfs/beaver_creek_overview.pdf 

Beaver Creek Watershed Assessment Draft:  http://knoxcounty.org/stormwater/pdfs/beavercreek_draft.pdf

Beaver Creek Green Infrastructure Plan:  http://knoxcounty.org/stormwater/pdfs/beavercreek_draft.pdf

Beaver Creek Watershed Association:  www.beavercreekwatershed.org

History and Current Affairs

Beaver Creek Plan 2007-present

Recently, we introduced you to the Beaver Creek Watershed in north Knox County. We ended by telling you that Beaver Creek had been assessed by the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation. TDEC determined that the creek no longer met all of its designated uses, such as supporting aquatic life and wildlife and providing drinking water and recreation, and placed it on its 303d list of impaired streams. A short time later, in 1999, the Water Quality Forum decided to put together a team of its members to address the problems of Beaver Creek. This group became known as the Beaver Creek Task Force.

Initially, the BCTF conducted an assessment of the Beaver Creek Watershed to inventory resources and to identify problem areas. After a round of public meetings the data was assembled into a report and published in 2003. This study will help Knox County plan more effectively for flood control, water quality, and the allocation of land for open space, recreation, and trails. As a part of the assessment process a FEMA flood study was commissioned by The Knox County Department of Engineering, Stormwater Management Division for the creek. The results of this flood study were used to adopt a new Stormwater Ordinance for Knox County in 2000 that expanded the no build/no fill zone in the Beaver Creek floodplain. The assessment report is also being used as an educational/outreach tool by the Task Force and has been distributed to local and state leaders.

To view a draft a draft assessment of Beaver Creek by the WQF task force click here .

Also in 2003, the BCTF assisted in the formation of the Beaver Creek Watershed Association and is partnering with them on a number of educational and restoration projects. At the same time the Task Force obtained a grant from the Tennessee Valley Authority that was used to hire a Watershed Coordinator for Knox County to primarily focus on the Beaver Creek Watershed.

BCTF partners have published a 16 page tabloid on Beaver Creek that was distributed to stakeholders as inserts in local newspapers. BCTF partnered with the University of Tennessee Water Resource Research Center to get the Adopt-A-Watershed Program into six watershed high schools and middle schools; and partnered with the Hallsdale Powell Utility District with its traveling environmental education program for elementary schools in the watershed.

BCTF has turned its recent focus to preparing a comprehensive Watershed Restoration Plan, assisting TDEC in its data collection for the TMDL for Beaver Creek, and looking for restoration opportunities in the watershed. In the summer of 2004 the BCTF presented a proposal to the Tennessee Stream Mitigation Program to restore a five-mile reach of Beaver Creek. The $500,000 project was accepted and is now in its beginning stages.

Another recent Task Force project has retained the University of Tennessee School of Architecture and Design to prepare a Green Infrastructure plan for the watershed. This plan will identify those areas best suited for preservation as natural areas, parks, and other open space applications. It will also identify the land best suited for development. The Green Infrastructure plan will be promoted for use as a planning tool for Knox County and other agencies involved in the watershed.

Through its current and future efforts the Beaver Creek Task Force envisions the Beaver Creek Watershed as a desirable place to live, with its beautiful vistas and open spaces protected, its waters wadeable and fishable, and its floodplain returned to its natural function of storing waters during high flows. It envisions vibrant communities that are distinct in history and culture yet united by the valley corridor. Communities will have access to Beaver Creek and its tributaries to recreate and reflect so that they may be better able to appreciate its ecology and be inspired to preserve and protect it through their own actions.

To see stream gage data from USGS click here look at Upper TN River.


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Beaver Creek Meeting Results in the Decision to Form a Watershed Association

Forty residents of the Beaver Creek Watershed met with the Beaver Creek Task Force Thursday and ultimately decided to form a Watershed Association. People from Gibbs, Halls, Powell and Karns voiced their concerns about the deteriorating condition of Beaver Creek and talked about possible solutions.

 

The primary concerns of the ...more

 
Students Work to Help Create the Powell Greenway Mosaic

Thanks to all the hard work of artist Jessie Calder of Strawberry Plains, Sherrie Hardin from the CAC AmeriCorps Water Quality Team and a group of dedicated Powell High Ecology students, the new Powell greenway now shines! It also glistens and glimmers as the sun hits an incredible glass mosaic that Jessie Calder designed as a focal point for the greenway. 

Located in front of Powell High School, it was only natural that the students be involved in the project. And with the support of Karen Nolt, Knox County Greenway Coordinator, who spearheaded the project, the pieces of this project just fell together. Knowing that the ...more

 
AmeriCorps Water Quality Team Walks Beaver Creek in Proactive Search of Potential Problems

You never know what oddities of nature you may find while walking along the scenic banks of North Knox County’s Beaver Creek.  Kristin Orr was puzzled when she recently discovered a doghouse perched on top of a four-foot high manhole cover.  “The only thing I could figure, is that it was a circus trick dog in a former life.”

Orr is part of the CAC AmeriCorps Water Quality Team that is assisting Hallsdale-Powell Utility District in their efforts to locate problem areas and potential leaks along the main sewer line trunk that runs along the creek.  As ...more

 
Halls High Forestry Class Award-Winning Project

Congratulations to Mike Blankenship's Forestry Class on receiving a state-wide water quality award -- WaterWorks -- for their assistance with the Beaver Creek Riparian Seedling Distribution Project conducted this past winter.    As a participant in the Knox County Adopt-A-Watershed Program, this class was challenged to participate in a project that would help to protect their school's watershed and then work hand-in-hand with their community partners to accomplish it.  They successfully met this challenge by assisting the Beaver Creek Task Force Partners in processing (labeling, bundling...) over 3,000 seedlings for distribution as well as creating an awesome brochure that educated ...more

 
Middle Schoolers work to restore Beaver Creek

On Saturday, March 13, around 90 people—60 students from Halls Middle School and 30 community volunteers—worked to restore a section of riparian zone along Beaver Creek. Over 800 trees and shrubs were purchased for the project. Prior to planting day, the students participated in ...more

 
Eighth graders from Powell take part in “Kids-in-the-Creek”

On April 23, the Beaver Creek Task Force coordinated a "Kids-in-the-Creek" event for Powell Middle School. Approximately 60 eighth grade students from Bob LaVoie's classes participated in the service project designed to give the young people a real "hands-on" experience. Learning is also easier when it's connected to a memorable activity.

The Powell Middle School Watershed Club—trained by the AmeriCorps Water Quality Team on watershed assessment activities—assisted with the event.

TVA, the CAC AmeriCorps Water Quality Team, Knox County Stormwater Program, Hallsdale Powell Utility District, Tennessee Water ...more