The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No contaminat­ions in ponds, testing shows

Some fear residual pollutants from old golf course near Lake Lanier.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

New water testing conducted at a controvers­ial former golf-course site near Lake Lanier found no trace of pollutants such as pesticides and arsenic.

Former irrigation ponds at the site of the old Lanier Golf Course — on which developer Danny Bennett and his partner hope to build more than 300 homes — have been the focus of contention in Forsyth County for several months. Commission Chair Laura Semanson and a handful of neighbors have pushed for more testing of water in and around the ponds, which they fear could contain high levels of pesticides and heavy metals left over from golf-course days. The ponds are not far from Lake Lanier, which provides drinking water to most of metro Atlanta. Semanson has expressed concern that developers disturbing an earthen dam in the area could result in water and soil from the ponds leeching into the lake.

Jacobs, the engineerin­g consulting firm that serves as Forsyth’s “water quality consultant,” tested water from the site on Jan. 9 after officials determined that the county’s stormwater management program and regulation­s from the Environmen­tal Protection Agency allowed them to complete such testing. A summary of the results was posted on the county website on Tuesday.

They reportedly found that all “pesticide, herbicide and semi-volatile organic compounds” tested for were “below detection limit.” Arsenic was, too. Semanson said she wasn’t sure what happens next. She called the testing “very limited in scope” and said soil in the area should be the real target.

“It did not address the soils, which is key, especially considerin­g they appear to have moved from the ponds to the lake,” Semanson said.

According to a statement from the county, ordinances and the county attorney have determined that Forsyth “does not currently have the authority to conduct soil testing on private property.”

Bennett, meanwhile, questioned the legality of the county even testing water on the property. The developer — who last week filed both a lawsuit and an ethics complaint against Semanson — contended that the testing should have been completed using water downstream, if at all, and not on his property. Bennett has maintained that he has completeda­ll environmen­tal testing required by law.

“The water sample was taken from the discharge of a water pump that was drawing water from the absolute bottom of the irrigation pond,” Bennett wrote in a statement to the AJC. “The sample showed all parameters being ‘below detection limits’ so the false narrative beingspun by Commission­er Semanson and the neighbors to stop my developmen­t is now debunked.”

They reportedly found all ‘pesticide, herbicide and semivolati­le organic compounds’ tested for were ‘below detection limit.’ Arsenic was, too.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Former irrigation ponds at the old Lanier Golf Course — on which developer Danny Bennett and his partner hope to build more than 300 homes — have been the focus of contention in Forsyth County.
CONTRIBUTE­D Former irrigation ponds at the old Lanier Golf Course — on which developer Danny Bennett and his partner hope to build more than 300 homes — have been the focus of contention in Forsyth County.

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