Wolf Creek and its tributary French Ravine are considered “impaired waters” by the Clean Water Act due to contamination with fecal bacteria, but WCCA is working with state and local partners to help solve this problem.

When neighbors of WCCA’s Peabody Creek habitat restoration site contacted us this summer about a nearby sewer leak upstream from Grass Valley’s Condon Park, we contacted the City and will continue to follow up until the water is safe and healthy. Our similar advocacy a few years ago helped result in repairs to several leaking sewer lines.

In south county, when a WCCA water quality monitor noticed a new smell at her creek site this year, we notified the County and followed up to make sure the failed septic system was quickly remedied.

To help focus additional solutions on the bacteria sources responsible for the majority of pollution throughout the watershed, the State Water Board reached out to WCCA last year for recommended locations for collecting creek water samples, based on our 20 years of creek monitoring. They then analyzed the DNA of fecal bacteria found in Wolf Creek and several tributary streams.

The DNA results published this year identify ruminants (grazing animals such as cattle, sheep, goats, and deer) as the source of the vast majority of fecal bacteria occurring south of downtown Grass Valley.

WCCA is thus beginning to reach out to the agricultural community to discuss win-win opportunities to reduce ruminant bacteria in the creek, while continuing our advocacy and collaboration with the City and County for solutions to sewer and septic leaks.

In the watershed maps above, circles with red and gray “pie” portions show what portion of the summer had unhealthy levels of bacteria at the creek locations tested by the State Water Board for DNA. The Wolf Creek Trail site lacked problematic bacteria, but every other tested site had unhealthy bacteria counts from grazing animals for 25-100% of the summer weeks. These sites include the downstream reaches of French Ravine, Rattlesnake Creek, South Wolf, Cherry Creek, and four locations along Wolf Creek. Maps excerpted from the Water Board’s recent report, available in its entirety at this link.