Why groups remain ‘deeply concerned' about Great Salt Lake
They add that it also highlights the need for more dust monitoring around the lake.
'We often think of the impacts of Great Salt Lake dust on our public health as a far-off, distant future. The reality is that dust storms ... are infiltrating our communities and impacting the air we breathe today,' Jake Dreyfous, managing director of Grow the Flow.
The Great Salt Lake's southern arm is up to 4,193.4 feet elevation, nearly 1½ feet from its low point at the end of the last irrigation season, but a little more than 1½ feet below its peak last year. Its northern arm remains about a foot below the southern section, per U.S. Geological Survey data.
With 8.7 inches of snow-water equivalent still left in the mountains within the lake's basin, nearly half of its peak this year, the lake could make some additional gains, depending on how much of that water ends up in it.
Yet despite its gains, Grow the Flow points out that it remains only about 40% full by volume, leaving hundreds of square miles of lakebed exposed. A cold front that pushed through the region on Sunday visibly kicked up dust, which is often deposited in nearby communities.
That's a problem because — as documented in a Great Salt Lake Strike Team report earlier this year — the dust can create a 'health hazard' from increases in particulate matter concentrations, as well as 'chronic exposures to carcinogenic elements such as arsenic.'
'We're deeply concerned about what the shrinking Great Salt Lake means for our families and communities,' said Carmen Valdez, senior policy associate for the Healthy Environment Alliance of Utah, in a statement on Monday.
State air quality officials aren't surprised by the recent event. They point out that 'unvegetated or disturbed soils' across the state have the potential to release dust in the air during wind events.
Dry lakebeds, such as the Great Salt Lake, pose greater concerns because of the 'small size of the particles' and large surface area to pull from, said Bryce Bird, director of Utah Division of Air Quality.
'The conditions in the spring and summer are favorable for creating large dust events,' he wrote in an email to KSL.com. 'In the spring, the freezing and thawing of surface moisture can loosen the protective crust that may otherwise protect the surface from wind erosion.'
Utah lawmakers ultimately set aside $150,000 in funds this year toward air quality monitoring, including ongoing funding for personnel. But that was below the $650,000 that the Office of the Great Salt Lake requested to help the Utah Division of Air Quality compile an analysis of dust issues by the lake.
Brian Steed, Utah's Great Salt Lake commissioner, said last month that his office intends to help the division acquire the monitors through other means and set up a monitor 'distribution scheme' across communities near the lake or as soon as possible. This would help the state better understand where dust goes when it flies off the lake and other important datasets that can help the state manage dust impacts.
He added that the state has been 'under monitoring' dust compared to other Western saline lakes with similar issues, such as Owens Lake or the Salton Sea in California.
On top of state funding, Bird said the Utah Division of Air Quality received federal grants to acquire more particulate air samplers and 'low-cost' particulate sensors closer to dried portions of the Great Salt Lake. It's unclear how many sensors are needed to monitor its dust, but state officials plan to focus on communities east, north and south of the lake first as they build up a network.
'It would be helpful to have that baseline information,' Steed said. 'People want to know, and people want to know how much of a problem it is. Without those monitors, we don't have a full picture.'
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13 hours ago
Hurricane Erin could bring destruction to East Coast despite not making landfall
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Yahoo
15 hours ago
- Yahoo
Live Weather Updates, August 20: Tracking Hurricane Erin As Coastal Flooding Begins Swamping Homes
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(10:00 a.m. EDT) Jenkinson's Boardwalk Closed From producer Carmen Molina: Jenkinson's Boardwalk at Point Pleasant Beach, New Jersey, closed its access to the ocean until further notice. As the conditions worsen due to the dangerous water conditions and rip tides from Hurricane Erin, the beaches could be fully closed as well, per their announcement posted on Facebook. Some of their events for this upcoming weekend have already been canceled for this week. (09:51 a.m. EDT) Outer Banks Warning: Your Window For Evacuating Is Closing A dire warning this morning from the National Weather Service for people still in areas like Hatteras and Ocracoke Islands. We've told you how we could see some of the worst coastal surges and flooding as the day progresses, so the window to evacuate is closing. (09:37 a.m. EDT) 'Ash Devil' In Wyoming As Red Canyon Fire Rages From senior writer Chris DeWeese: Wyoming's Red Canyon Fire has ballooned to over 177 square miles in size, with 28% containment. As temperatures hit triple digits yesterday, a firefighter captured an incredible scene as an 'ash devil' (a dust devil dark with ashes from the fire) came into view. Watch it here: (09:25 a.m. EDT) Two Other Areas To Watch In The Atlantic Besides Erin From meteorologist Jennifer Gray: Hurricane Erin is definitely the main feature to watch right now in the Atlantic, but don't lose sight on two more areas of interest that are right on Erin's heels. The National Hurricane Center is watching one area in the central Atlantic that is showing signs of potential development. This cluster of thunderstorms could become our next tropical depression as early as later this week or this weekend. Regardless of development, it will create unsettled weather in and around the northern Leeward Islands by Friday. The second area is just south of the Cabo Verde Islands and has a small window of opportunity to develop into a tropical system before conditions become more unfavorable in the next few days. The next name on the hurricane list is Fernand. (09:20 a.m. EDT) New Jersey Beaches Ban Swimming From senior engagement editor Ron Brackett: With Hurricane Erin creating high surf and dangerous rip currents, New Jersey has closed at least 16 beaches to swimming. "We don't want anyone in the ocean," Seaside Heights Mayor Anthony Vaz told the Asbury Park Press. The National Weather Service warned that large, breaking waves of 5 to 8 feet are expected in the surf zone on Wednesday and 7 to 12 feet on Thursday. "Conditions at all beaches will be very dangerous. Extreme caution is advised for any beachgoers," the Weather Service said in a tweet. (09:00 a.m. EDT) No Swimming At New York's Southern Ocean Beaches; NYC Beaches Closed From producer Carmen Molina: Gov. Kathy Hochul directed the Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation to suspend swimming at Long Island ocean beaches due to flooding and rough surf conditions and potential rip tides resulting from Hurricane Erin. 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Winds could gust as high as 30-50 mph at times along the southern parts of New England and the Northeast coast. High surf and coastal flooding will also be a concern as Erin's steady onshore winds will push water toward the coast. High surf advisories are in place along the northern New Jersey coast, extending northeastward to Cape Cod. Waves higher than 10 feet are possible just offshore.


USA Today
20 hours ago
- USA Today
Outer Banks braces for 'sadness and devastation' as Hurricane Erin roars by
The sandy, vulnerable barrier islands on North Carolina's coast may see houses swept away and a vital roadway flooded — yet again. The center of Hurricane Erin will roar past North Carolina's Outer Banks at a distance of less than 300 miles, setting up a vulnerable region for an intense battering as forecasters warn of two-story waves towering in the ocean and storm surge rushing inland that could destroy dunes, threaten beachfront houses and flood roads. The ribbon of narrow, barrier islands is home to tens of thousands of permanent residents, but its population swells during the summer and more than 2 million people visit the region yearly. The Outer Banks' remote beaches, dunes and oceanfront houses, are among the "most dynamic natural landscapes occupied by man," U.S. Geological Survey scientists wrote in 2016. As Erin tracked north, surfers took advantage of the building swells and others evacuated along Highway 12, the sole highway that connects the Outer Banks. Officials warned the road – known to flood even during seasonal high tides – could be impassable for days. Long popular with beach dwellers and tourists for its scenic vistas and remote ambiance, the Outer Banks have more recently become known for the homes on eroded beaches that collapse into the ocean during hurricanes, winter nor'easters and other tidal events. But islanders say the videos can't convey the enormous complexities of the challenges their communities face. Connected by the highway, the islands jut out into the ocean along a narrow point of the continental shelf, making them particularly vulnerable to high water, waves and the powerful forces of the ocean. 'It probably gets the highest wave energy on the East Coast south of Nantucket and Cape Cod,' said Rob Young, director of the Program for the Study of Developed Shorelines at Western Carolina University. 'You can capture waves from so many directions.' As the center of Erin passes about 270 miles east of Cape Hatteras, the hurricane is expected to generate large breaking waves of 8 to 20 feet in the surf zone. Those waves could be on top of a sea surging as much as 4 feet above dry ground, causing erosion and coastal flooding that could go on for days. Outer Banks native Danny Couch couldn't remember when they were last hit with 20-foot waves, but he thinks the waves might be comparable to Hurricane Isabel in 2003, a historic storm that made landfall over the North Carolina coast. Nearly a year ago to the day, Hurricane Ernesto followed a similar path, even further offshore. Within weeks, four houses collapsed. In total, six houses were lost last year in Cape Hatteras National Seashore, federally protected land which stretches for miles along the beaches of this island chain. If another house, or two or three, are lost to the sea in Erin's wake, it's sure to stir up another storm among the residents and property owners over how to address this peril from the sea. Challenges like this are "everywhere," not just on the Outer Banks, Young said. For example, he pointed to communities along the Northeast Florida coast, in Flagler and St. Johns counties, which face similar issues with abandoned homes now surrounded by water during high tide events. Systems are 'out of equilibrium with where the shoreline would naturally be," he said. 'Sought after, treasured and costly' Geologist Orrin Pilkey once wrote that barrier islands – 'the most dynamic real estate in the United States – are the most sought after, treasured and costly.' The islands that became the Outer Banks fringing the North Carolina coast first appeared 15,000 years ago, when sea levels dropped and the nation's shoreline migrated inward from the continental shelf, Young said. Couch was just a boy when he first saw a home fall into the ocean. It was 1968, said the real estate agent and former county commissioner. A few more houses collapsed in the early 1970s, Couch said. Since the 1990s, the pace of collapse has picked up. 'It's not an isolated occurrence anymore, it's the new normal," Couch said. "When you're a kid, watching with your friends, it's exciting,' he said. 'But you're watching someone's life savings headed into the ocean.' Eleven homes have collapsed within the national seashore in Rodanthe since May 2020, according to the national seashore. And it's no longer just houses that were built directly on the beach. Dare County property records show some of the now-threatened homes were originally a few houses off the beach. Erosion from both sides 'There's always been shoreline change,' but not nearly as rapid as what we've seen over the last two to three decades," Young said. "That is a result of sea level rise.' 'Changing sea levels drive shoreline change,' he said. But, he adds: 'It's really important to remember the problem is not shoreline change. The problem is us wanting to be in those places.' As the water is likely to demonstrate as Erin batters the coast, the islands face threats not only from the ocean, but also from the large bodies of water to the west, the Albemarle, Pamlico and Currituck Sounds. Water levels also are rising in those waterways. At the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge, across the sounds from the barrier islands, the land bears visible markers of rising sea levels, such as remnants of a dock that mark where the edge of the land used to be, and scrubby freshwater lowlands that are transitioning to salty coastal marsh. The waterways – also subject to wind and surge – can wash over Highway 12 toward the ocean during storms and high tide events. The islands suffer erosion from both directions, according to a December report from the National Park Service over how to address the impacts of the threatened structures. In some spots, the spit of land that holds the highway can be less than 1,000 feet from sound to sea and shrinking. Officials have been trying to hold the highway in place since it was built, Young said. Protecting it is getting harder and more expensive all the time, he said. Myriad other legal and insurance issues surround decisions about when a private home can be condemned and the rights of property owners and landlords who make money on summer rentals in many of the threatened homes. The issues include debate over whether insurers should pay for a condemned home to be dismantled before it becomes a hazardous waste site with septic lines, siding and shingles washing into the ocean, and conflict over the use of rock revetments and seawalls, which some coastal scientists have concluded make the problems worse in the long run. Shoring up dunes with sand isn't always the solution to beach protection either, and has disrupted natural processes that help to sustain the islands, according to the report. Some communities find their multi-million-dollar beach renourishment projects aren't lasting as long as they'd hoped, Young said. Big storms can wash away tons of sand in a matter of hours. Local, state and federal officials have worked on remedies for decades, including multiple dredging projects and new bridges, but still they wage the battle against sand and sea. Incredible erosion Dare County, home to an estimated yearround population of an estimated 37,000, has paid for its own projects to restore sand to local beaches, Young said. But in Rodanthe, where 11 houses have collapsed in the national seashore since May 2020, he said the county turned down a request to do another beach restoration. 'We're going to have to start having conversations about where we can take a step back from the oceanfront on the Outer Banks," Young said. He makes it clear he's not suggesting the Outer Banks be abandoned. 'It's just that we need to be spending our money in the places that are actually sustainable,' he said, 'and make sure we're not wasting money on places we're going to have to walk away from anyway.' Resident and professional photographer Jenni Koontz documents the change. Through her lenses, she sees the beauty of a glassy ocean and rolling waves and 'the sadness and devastation' that can occur in just one day when rough seas arrive. Some people find it difficult to comprehend the incredible erosion that has taken place and how quickly the sand can disappear, then jump to conclusions when they see viral videos, she said. 'People don't understand the science behind the photos,' she said. She hopes that over time her photos will help bring more attention to the plight of the Outer Banks, and perhaps make a difference for its future. Dinah Voyles Pulver, a national correspondent for USA TODAY, has covered violent weather, the environment, climate change and other news for decades. Reach her at dpulver@ or @dinahvp on Bluesky or X or dinahvp.77 on Signal.