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Boaters: We'll keep coming
BY SHANNON RUSSELL | [email protected]
Lowered water levels at Lake Cumberland won't deter some area residents from frequenting the lake - as long as the environment remains safe and they can get their boats in the water.
Last Monday, federal authorities announced plans to decrease the lake's water level to alleviate pressure on a weakened Wolf Creek Dam in Kentucky's Russell County. Seepage in the dam's foundation has triggered fears about the dam breaking, causing flooding.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is lowering the lake by 10 feet. Cumberland will remain at 680 feet through the year, and the corps' Nashville District will re-evaluate water level next September or October. Normal pool levels are 723 feet in the summer, making the adjusted level 43 feet lower during that time.
Bill Peoples, chief of public affairs at the corps' Nashville office, said the staff is looking at a mitigation plan for adding extensions to all boat ramps. He said there are 48 boat ramps at the lake, and 40 will be unusable for the duration of the recreation season "unless something is done to them."
Peoples said there is authorization and federal funding to extend 10 ramps, including seven at marinas.
"We're putting together a plan for the other 30," Peoples said. "They're owned by other entities ... and we're looking for a way to assist them in funding."
There isn't a timetable for the extensions yet, Peoples said.
Loveland resident Jim Durham, owner of StriperFun Guide Service and a 42-year boater at Lake Cumberland, has been studying the situation for his weekly fishing report. His advice? Don't panic.
Durham said the lake's winter level is roughly the same as the lowered level, so the shift is currently slight.
Fishing boats can always be launched from alternative locations as long as their owners have four-wheel drive, he said.
If there's a silver lining, it's that lowered levels will decrease debris, Durham said.
"(Normally) debris gets pushed to the shore, and water comes up and picks up the wood off the banks. Now the water isn't going to rise to pick it up," Durham said.
Durham estimates the lake will shrink to half its size, roughly 35,000 acres. He described that area as "still huge."
Crescent Springs resident Chris Zimmer agrees. The decreased lake area may prevent boaters from docking in some coves, and gathering spots will have to move, but Zimmer doesn't expect the lake's shrinkage to stop recreation.
"At the end of the day, it's still going to be a big lake," Zimmer said.
While questions remain - like potential crowding on the lake, or economic effects on Cumberland businesses - many Cumberland fans, such as Randy Eibel of Lakeside Park, say they won't stay away. Eibel, who vacations and boats on the lake with his wife, Sandy, said "it's pretty hard to tell" how changes will affect lake-goers.
Leslie Meier just hopes the area remains safe. She and her husband, Mike, former Edgewood residents who live in Nashville, are among the lake's 4.7 million-plus visitors each year.
"If we can't boat for a summer, that would be a shame," Leslie Meier said. "But safety is a number one priority."



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