Glenwood road, Pine Island, NY

Wallkill River Flooding Threatens Black Dirt Region Again

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By Peter Lyons Hall

The Wallkill River has been the source of historic flooding for decades, including the disastrous combination of Hurricane Irene and Tropical Storm Lee in 2011. It flows northeast through two states, from its source in Lake Mohawk in Sparta Township, New Jersey, to a point 27 miles later, where it enters New York near the northeastern edge of Warwick, joined by the Pochuck Creek, carrying waters from both Vernon and the Wawayanda Creek in Warwick, often resulting in the flooding of low-lying areas that include the Black Dirt agriculture region.

Recent snows and rainfalls have again raised the attention of both farmers and residents to the need to continue efforts to control the river’s volume as it swells beyond the riverbanks along its meandering path toward Kingston. Autumn rainfall around Orange County averages about 12 inches, but this past season the area received over 30 inches from July to September. Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Ulster and Westchester counties received 29-33 inches of rain in the 120 days ending Sept. 30, according to NYS Mesonet, the state’s Early Warning Weather Detection System. 

On top of that a recent snowfall on January 6, 2024 dropped over a foot of snow onto the Town of Warwick and nearby region. Milder temperatures, however, melted most of the snow within 48 hours, while two subsequent rainstorms delivered additional several inches of precipitation to an already rain-soaked soil.

“Fortunately when the soil is cold and the sod fields are dormant they normally survive being flooded. Soils don’t go dormant, however. Farm fields can absorb water until saturation point but all this rain has made it beyond that,” according to Leonard DeBuck, a sod grower in Pine Island, whose property has been partially submerged in recent weeks. DeBuck believes that the Orange County Soil and Water Conservation District, who has spearheaded this effort with support from various entities, needs to expand the Bench Project that was begun in October 2016. At that time then New York State Sen. Metzger had secured a $400,000 State and Municipal Facilities Capital (SAM) grant for the third phase of the ongoing Wallkill Floodplain Bench Project to prevent flooding of farmland in the Black Dirt region. The bench actually lowers the river bank, allowing high flows to escape to the bench which conveys the flood flows – keeping them off the adjacent fields. But the river’s rise continues to threaten sensitive farmland in Orange County.

In 2021 reports from local farmers and landowners combined with observations by Orange County Soil and Water Conservation District staff indicated that the work already completed from the Pochuck confluence to County Route 1, had provided enhanced flood protection to agricultural fields near the project. The currently proposed work would extend and enhance the protection provided by the first three phases of the floodplain bench project. 

The proposed project, according to the joint application form in 2021, would involve “creating floodplain benches on both sides of the Wallkill River by excavating down to the approximate bankfull elevation. The benches may be favored to one or the other side of the river depending on current alignment of the river, limits of existing easements, location of existing improvements such as roads, better quality soils, and other relevant factors. Throughout much of the proposed project area this will result in cuts of 3 to 5 feet. Removed soil will be used in two primary ways: 1) placement on adjacent agricultural fields to replenish topsoil and improve drainage characteristics; and 2) export from the floodplain for various uses such as the soil aggregate market or for general fill purposes.” The project’s Phase 1-3 was begun near the Merritts Island region of the Wallkill, where the river’s tributaries include Rutgers Creek and Black Walnut Creek.

”Black Walnut Island Channel is actually the original route of the Wallkill before the Cheechunk Canal was built in the 1930’s. It now functions more like a drainage ditch, draining in two directions – back into the Pochuck to the south, and into Quaker Creek in the north,” revealed Kevin Sumner, Orange County Soil and Water Conservation District Manager. Notably the project’s scope included an exhaustive review of the potential impact upon any endangered species living in the affected area, as well as wetlands, but the determination concluded that the project could be safely conducted.

According to Sumner the second half of 2023 has presented some highly unusual, if not unprecedented, wet conditions. “The flooding has, in my view, had more to do with repeated rainfall events on continuously saturated soils than with extreme single events. It is therefore difficult to compare recent flooding extents/severity to what would be happening without the measures that have been completed since 2016. But we still believe that the measures have reduced the levels and duration of flooding. Over the next several months, my office will be refining our Wallkill/Black Dirt flood mitigation plans for the next five years in consultation with our engineers and a local steering committee.”

“The timing of the flooding has been fortunate for many farms,” said Chris Pawelski, owner of Ornery Onion farm in Goshen, “because it did not happen during the growing season. Had this occurred during the spring we would be facing another serious loss.”

The Wallkill is fed by 69 tributaries and drains 382 square miles, nearly half of Orange County, as it flows for 40 miles before reaching Ulster County. Along its path lie 22 towns, villages, and cities drained wholly or partially into the Wallkill. In Ulster County, the river continues for 26 miles before merging with Rondout Creek near Kingston, before heading out to the Hudson River. The total watershed takes up about 785 square miles of New York State alone There are also at least 16 public access points, and the river is frequently used for boating and fishing.

According to the Watershed Alliance (founded to restore the Wallkill River to its prime, to act as the voice of the river, and to advocate for the restoration of its entire watershed, using whatever means we find necessary), the Wallkill River has also experienced periods of documented Harmful Algae Blooms (HABS). In August 2015, a HAB in New Paltz was reported to NYSDEC, and confirmed by visual assessment north of Montgomery. The bloom was confirmed with high toxins with visual and photographic evidence, microscopic analysis by scientists associated with the Wallkill River Watershed Alliance, and through both microscopic and toxin analysis by the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, in collaboration with the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation.

Climate change and subsequent alterations in weather patterns have challenged many of the conservation activities which have been in progress in the Wallkill River Watershed for decades. Unpredictable precipitation levels have made historic measurements of flood levels nearly obsolete. The river requires sustained monitoring in order to balance the requirements of farmers, residents, fishing, boating, and recreational activities. The Wallkill feeds many groups, but it’s our collective responsibility to ensure that its quality remains protected so that we can continue to benefit from its presence.

BlackDirtFlooding-03 Wallkill River Flooding Threatens Black Dirt Region Again
DeBuck Sod Farm, Pine Island, NY