Tell Beech Mountain Town Council: Fix Your Pipes. Save Our River.

Action Expired

The Town of Beech Mountain’s Town Council has announced that they will hold a workshop session on the Watauga Water Intake Project on February 25. Will you contact the Town Councilmembers below to build our collective voice in opposing this proposal?

The proposal would take 2 million gallons of water a day from the Watauga River during times of drought by installing a water intake. When the Town of Beech Mountain last tried this in 2013, Watauga County residents and Commissioners were united in rejecting the water grab to protect trout and the businesses that depend on them, our natural heritage and the future of the Watauga River.

This proposal would reclassify the Watauga River, opening it up to any number of water withdrawals and increased development. We also know that as of October 2018, Beech Mountain is still losing 150,000 gallons of water from leaky pipes per day – or 47% of Beech Mountain’s annual water use. Yet Beech Mountain has recently increased funds for the Watauga Water Intake Project to $2.15 million in this budget cycle. The Town shouldn’t take on an expensive water intake when almost half of the water supply is currently leaking.

The Watauga Riverkeeper believes Beech Mountain Town Council should pursue alternatives, like fixing existing infrastructure and assessing the feasibility of groundwater wells and a rainwater catchment system, before applying for the intake. Take action to protect the traditions of the Watauga River

Keep Reading
GreenRiverkeeperLiveStakes

MountainTrue River Debris cleanup teams launch streambank restorations

Excavator moves pipe onto a barge sitting on the French Broad River

MountainTrue completes large technical debris removal on whitewater section

A bald eagle with chicks in its nest

Save the Endangered Species Act

Lake Santilah

Keep Public Lands in Public Hands

Hellbender underwater

Speak Up to Protect Our Mountain Streams, Wetlands, and Rivers

EPA CWA rollback blog featured image

EPA’s proposed changes to “waters of the United States” will hurt water quality, lessen flood protections in the Southern Blue Ridge