Lauren Kuehne, a research scientist in the Freshwater Ecology and Conservation 
Lab at the University of Washington, shares this Frontiers Focus on the 1972 
Clean Water Act and a review of progress and trends in freshwater assessments 
since the passage of this groundbreaking law, from the May 2017 issue of ESA 
Frontiers.

Read online 
http://www.esa.org/esablog/research/extreme-makeovers-clean-water-edition/

Stories of transformations are fascinating - especially about deserving people 
that just want a shot at a better quality of life. Many people have watched, or 
at least know of, the reality TV show Extreme Makeover, in which ordinary 
people receive dramatic Hollywood interventions. Extreme Makeover: Home Edition 
was even more popular.
Which is why the timing might be right for a new series, Extreme Makeover: 
Clean Water Edition, where each episode focuses on the positive transformations 
of US lakes and rivers since passage of the Clean Water Act of 1972.
The first episode would certainly be the story of the Cuyahoga River in 
Cleveland, a river that caught fire multiple times in the 20th century. The 
last fire, in 1969, ultimately helped push passage of the Clean Water Act three 
years later. Today, the Cuyahoga River keeps meeting benchmarks for clean 
water, including the recent return of pollution-sensitive sport fish like 
walleye.

Similar radical transformations have taken place across the country in places 
like Lake Washington, by Seattle, Wa., Lake Pontchartrain in New Orleans, La., 
and the Mississippi River near Twin Cities, Mn. These extreme makeovers, which 
are well within memory, are examples of where the Clean Water Act has provided 
regulatory mechanisms and framework to meet standards not only for water 
quality but also fishing and swimming.
In the May issue of Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, my co-authors and 
I review the 40+ years of progress and trends in how the condition of our 
lakes, streams, rivers, and wetlands have been assessed since passage of the 
Clean Water Act. Evaluating the progress related to this game-changing 
environmental legislation and looking to the future to keep up with water 
quality improvements and conservation is especially timely given the current 
administration's focus on review and rollback on EPA regulations.
Extreme Makeover: Clean Water Edition has all the elements of a great series: 
despair, struggle, and the chance for a better future. It's up to all of us to 
decide where that future is going.

Lauren M Kuehne, Julian D Olden Angela L. Strecker, Joshua J Lawler, David M 
Theobald (2017) Past, present, and future of ecological integrity assessment 
for fresh waters. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 15(4): 197-205, doi: 
10.1002/fee.1483

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