ATLANTA (AP) - Officials say they've been closely monitoring
water quality in the Chattahoochee River and other waterways
affected by the rainstorms that struck Georgia and other states in
the Southeast.
While floodwaters have receded, state and federal officials say
it will be weeks before waterways are free of sewage and sediment.
Sally Bethea with the Upper Chattahoochee Riverkeeper
environmental group says federal officials tested the river and
found the E. coli bacteria level was 42 times greater than the
highest safe level.
Atlanta city officials say they don't know when their R.M.
Clayton sewage treatment plant, which was swamped by the flood,
will be fully functional again. The plant was partly restored to
service last week.
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