Texarkana Gazette

Discharge darkens water at the base of Niagara Falls

- By Carolyn Thompson

The water near the base of Niagara Falls turned an alarming shade of black before tourists’ eyes following a foul-smelling discharge from a wastewater treatment plant.

The water board for the city of Niagara Falls, N.Y., said Saturday’s discharge was part of routine maintenanc­e of one of its basins.

Video taken from a helicopter showed black-colored water along the Niagara River’s U.S. shoreline below the falls that border the country and Canada. The inky water enveloped the dock for the popular Maid of the Mist tour boats.

At first, it looked like a shadow to Pat Proctor, who spotted the expanding mass from a Rainbow Air Inc. helicopter around 4:15 p.m. Saturday. He soon realized that wasn’t the case.

“The first thing that came to my mind was, ‘Dear God, please don’t be an oil leak,’” Proctor, a vice president for the company that flies tourists over the falls, said Monday. His video and photos of the peculiar sight have been widely shared online and through social media.

The Niagara Falls Water Board apologized for alarming residents and tourists.

“The blackish water contained some accumulate­d solids and carbon residue within permitted limits and did not include any organic type oils or solvents,” the statement said. “The unfortunat­e odor would be limited to the normal sewer water discharge smell.”

Executive Director Rolfe Porter did not immediatel­y return telephone messages left by The Associated Press Monday.

Wastewater flows through carbon beds as part of a seven-step purificati­on process, according to the water board’s website. Eventually it is discharged into the river.

The Maid of the Mist tweeted video and an aerial photo of one of its tour boats packed with tourists and surrounded by murky water. It asked city and state officials, “Why the smelly black discharge into Niagara River on very busy tourist weekend?”

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