Volunteer Water Champion: Scott Ruth
When the watershed coordinator working on a big grant improving the quality of Signal Mountain streams left WaterWays for a job at TVA, one very special volunteer came to the rescue. Scott Ruth’s tireless commitment to the project led to long hours talking to and negotiating with landowners, working with local plumbers, ensuring leaking septic systems were fixed, advising grad students and volunteers, painting trees purple, and all other activities in between.
His dedication to this project and the overall mission of WaterWays made Mr. Ruth an absolute shoe-in for this year’s Volunteer Water Champion.
The goal of the project was simple: Improve the water quality of Shoal Creek and the tributaries of Middle Creek, but the implementation was not so simple. Under Mr. Ruth’s leadership, WaterWays provided septic system fixes and maintenance, helped people reduce the stormwater runoff from their yards, tested the water looking for appropriate abandoned mines to treat the waste from, met and negotiated with local landowners, several of whom were not happy see WaterWays staff and volunteers since the previous abandoned mine project removed forest land. The finished project led to the installation of several wetlands and wetland vegetation to treat the runoff flowing from abandoned mines.