|
|
|
|
Rehab of South Platte may restore fisheries |
|
Monday, December 26, 2011 09:23 |
|
By Bruce Finley, The Denver Post
South-metro leaders and a growing number of fishermen are pushing to let the South Platte be more of a natural river as it flows down from the mountains through the Denver area.
They're planning to rechannel the river, revegetate and bring in boulders to rehabilitate the wide, shallow waterway into a deeper, meandering river that could sustain significantly more fish. Not just wily big-mouth bottom-feeders — but trout.
Enhancing the South Platte, proponents contend, will lead to a healthier metro economy.
"We are the custodians of the river. It is incumbent upon us to keep that river a viable, healthy source for the ecology of the area, the wildlife, migratory birds and for the community," Littleton Mayor Debbie Brinkman said. "We're not doing this for economic reasons. There may be an economic benefit."
The Littleton City Council this month voted unanimously to move ahead with an ambitious revitalization project that will let the heavily dammed South Platte behave more like a natural river but still be controllable because of its urban setting.
Read about a $4 million project run by South Suburban Parks and Recreation to restore a stretch of the river and its banks, and how that could improve the river's overall ecology.
|