What we do on land does not stay on land. The choices we make on what we do on our property can impact the waters nearby as rain and runoff pick-up and move pollutants from their point of origin to our waterways. In a time of climate change when precipitation is highly variable these pollutants are more likely to affect our local and regional water quality.
Join the LRWP for two Teacher Professional Development Workshops, offered in partnership with the New Jersey Climate Change Learning Collaborative and the New Jersey Department of Education.
On both Monday June 23 and Tuesday August 12 we will tour New Brunswick infrastructure and landscape and take a boat trip on the Raritan River to learn more about how we monitor water quality in general and pathogen monitoring more specifically, and about solutions to divert the pollutants from our waterways. These full-day workshops will be followed up with a webinar (August 14th, 4PM EDT) to explore instructional resources related to the Lower Raritan watershed, and water quality monitoring.
Out of respect for Juneteenth, the fifth Pathogen Monitoring session occured on Tuesday, June 17 instead of a Thursday. Each week during the summer, from May to October, the Lower Raritan Watershed Partnership and Rutgers Cooperative Extension of Middlesex County run a volunteer-based monitoring program along the Raritan River. We collect water quality samples at six non-bathing public access beach sites, provide our samples to the Interstate Environmental Commission for analysis in their laboratory, and report the results to the public. Our mission is to share this data with the community and partners to ensure the safe use of the Raritan river for all.
Our lab results for water quality samples taken on Tuesday, June 17, 2025 show Enterococcus bacteria levels exceeding the EPA federal water quality standard of 104 cfu/100mL at two of our monitoring sites this week. Problem sites are indicated by red frowns on the map and chart which includes: Riverside Park (Piscataway) and 2nd Street Park (Perth Amboy). Green smiles on the chart and map indicate the sites with bacteria levels safe for recreation, and include the following: Rutgers Boathouse (New Brunswick), Raritan Bay Waterfront Park (South Amboy), Ken Buchanan Waterfront Park (Sayreville), and Edison Boat Launch (Edison Township).
Pathogens/Enterococci levels are used as indicators of the possible presence of disease-causing bacteria in recreational waters. Such pathogens may pose health risks to people coming in primary contact with the water (touching) through recreational activities like fishing, kayaking or swimming in a water body. Possible sources of bacteria include Combined Sewer Overflows (CSOs), improperly functioning wastewater treatment plants, stormwater runoff, leaking septic systems, animal carcasses, and runoff from manure storage areas.
Our goal in reporting these results is to give residents a better understanding of the potential health risks related to primary contact during water-based recreation. If you are planning on recreating on the Raritan this weekend, make sure to stay safe and wash up after any activities!
Ashley and John inspect the water from the boat dock at Riverside Park. Photo credit: Art Allgauer.
According to a member of the public who spoke with LRWP volunteers, a hazmat team recently investigated a diesel fuel spill in Edison’s Mill Brook. Photo credit: Art Allgauer.
A family of Canada geese (Branta canadensis) relax at Ken Buchanan Waterfront Park. Photo credit: Art Allgauer.
Sofi studies the pebbles and shells that washed up on South Amboy’s shoreline. Photo credit: J.M. Meyer.
A stray cat hides in the grass along the fence bordering Raritan Bay Waterfront Park. Photo credt: J.M. Meyer.
Thursday, June 12th marked the fourth week of Pathogen Monitoring and one week since a pile of feces, sanitary products, and sediment was discovered a few hundred feet from the Robert N. Wilentz Elementary School’s playground. Every Thursday during the summer, from May to October, the Lower Raritan Watershed Partnership and Rutgers Cooperative Extension of Middlesex County run a volunteer-based monitoring program along the Raritan River. We collect water quality samples at six non-bathing public access beach sites, provide our samples to the Interstate Environmental Commission for analysis in their laboratory, and report the results to the public on Friday afternoons. Our mission is to share this data with the community and partners to ensure the safe use of the Raritan river for all.
Our lab results for water quality samples taken on Thursday June 12, 2025 show Enterococcus bacteria levels exceeding the EPA federal water quality standard of 104 cfu/100mL at three of our monitoring sites this week. Problem sites are indicated by red frowns on the map and chart which includes: Riverside Park (Piscataway), Edison Boat Launch (Edison Township), and Ken Buchanan Waterfront Park (Sayreville). Green smiles on the chart and map indicate the sites with bacteria levels safe for recreation, and include the following: Rutgers Boathouse (New Brunswick), Raritan Bay Waterfront Park (South Amboy), and 2nd Street Park (Perth Amboy).
Pathogens/Enterococci levels are used as indicators of the possible presence of disease-causing bacteria in recreational waters. Such pathogens may pose health risks to people coming in primary contact with the water (touching) through recreational activities like fishing, kayaking or swimming in a water body. Possible sources of bacteria include Combined Sewer Overflows (CSOs), improperly functioning wastewater treatment plants, stormwater runoff, leaking septic systems, animal carcasses, and runoff from manure storage areas.
Our goal in reporting these results is to give residents a better understanding of the potential health risks related to primary contact during water-based recreation. If you are planning on recreating on the Raritan this weekend, make sure to stay safe and wash up after any activities!
A dead fish, likely a mullet (Mugilidae), floats on the water at Rutgers Boathouse. Photo credit: Frank Dahl.
Slow-moving Atlantic horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphemus), like this one spotted in South Amboy, provide stable surfaces for barnacles to grow on. Photo credit: Frank Dahl.
Seagulls admire the view in Sayreville. Photo credit: Ashley Fritz.
Frank explains his work as a LRWP volunteer to a bather in Perth Amboy. Photo credit: J.M. Meyer.
The team returned to the pile of waste in Perth Amboy and found most of the feces had been removed. Sanitary products and sediment remain. Continue to check our website for updates on the situation. Photo credit: J.M. Meyer.
By Danielle Bongiovanni, LRWP 2025 Science Communication Intern
On Saturday, May 10, dozens of volunteers worked together to fill nearly 100 garbage bags with litter removed from the Green Brook. The Lower Raritan Watershed Partnership (LRWP) led the fifth annual multi-site clean-up alongside the Americorps New Jersey Watershed Ambassadors (NJWA), the Union & Somerset County Clean Communities Programs, the Mayor’s Alliance for a Cleaner Green Brook Waterway, and the Central Jersey Stream Team. The sites stretched across eight participating municipalities: Dunellen, Green Brook, Middlesex Township, Plainfield, South Plainfield, Watchung, Scotch Plains, and Bound Brook.
Volunteers originated from beyond those municipalities’ borders, inspired by how all watersheds are connected and impact each other. Piscataway resident David Dunham has participated in clean-ups with his son for nearly a decade, several of which focused on the Green Brook. Repeat visits have yielded visible progress.
“In general, [the Green Brook] was in much better shape than some of the other times we’ve been over here. It’s nice to come back to the same spot and be able to compare,” Dunham said. “It’s a good sign, we’re heading in the right direction.”
Still, volunteers picked up plenty of trash. Dunham recounted collecting “small bottles, cans, wrappers that had come off of some bottle at some point. Nothing too out of the ordinary until we got to the very end, and then we found a kitchen sink.”
Other notable items collected throughout the day included tires, stereo equipment, mattresses, and a wheelbarrow. The majority of trash present consisted of everyday litter such as plastic bottles, beer cans, and broken glass — little items discarded without thought for how quickly they pile up.
Several tires were found and removed during the clean-up. Photo by Danielle Bongiovanni
Volunteers found a variety of macroinvertebrates amidst the trash, and the seven Watershed Ambassadors in attendance eagerly provided identification. At McCoy Park in Dunellen, Kaitlyn Pinto and Emilie Wigchers, who normally cover Watershed Management Areas #7 (Arthur Kill) and #4 (Lower Passaic, Saddle) respectively, pointed out clam shells, worms, snail eggs, and midge fly larvae.
The Green Brook’s ecosystem is dominated by pollution-tolerant organisms. Pinto and Wigchers note their presence to determine the brook could be healthier. Watershed Ambassadors promote environmental stewardship with the hope of making areas like the Green Brook suitable for pollution-sensitive macroinvertebrates like gilled snails or mayflies.
Watershed Ambassadors Kaitlin Pinto (middle) and Emilie Wigchers (right) identified macroinvertebrates living on a lawn chair removed from the Green Brook. Photo by Danielle Bongiovanni
“This is a great partnership between Watershed Ambassadors and LRWP, and it’s not just the clean-up. They do a bunch of other stuff too, and we do fun stuff like the litter trap monitoring and the eel monitoring and all these cool things. It all ties into that theme of protecting water quality in the state, so it’s a really good connection to have,” Pinto said.
The theme of collaboration in pursuit of healthier watersheds was strong, with members of organizations with similar missions coming out to support the LRWP. Mark Lesko, founder of the Highland Park Ecology and Environmental Group (HPEEG), made time to participate despite running clean-ups for the HPEEG on the first and third Saturdays of each month.
Lesko reflected on the impromptu clean-up that cemented his dedication to environmental stewardship. “My first one was more than a decade ago. My daughter and I were in Johnson park looking for salamanders in a stream, and she said, ‘Daddy, look at all the trash…’ So we started cleaning it and all these kids that were at picnics came down and started cleaning it with us, and that day, I started my group,” he said.
The Green Brook clean-up ran from 9:30am – 12:00pm and was followed by a public demonstration of the Bandalong Bandit Litter Trap and the final eel monitoring session of the migratory season. Dunellen Mayor Jason F. Cilento, who participated in the clean-up, thanked the Dunellen Department of Public Works for routinely emptying the litter trap.
Dunellen Department of Public Works employees waded into the Green Brook to empty the Bandit Litter Trap. Photo by Danielle Bongiovanni
Like Dunham, Cilento noted how less trash is collected at each clean-up, indicating a cultural shift away from littering and toward respecting natural spaces. Cilento praised the other participating municipalities and organizations for their roles in making visible progress protecting a watershed dear to his childhood. “I grew up playing in these woods and this water and everything,” he said.
Although no glass eels or elvers were observed at the monitoring session, the crowd witnessed a tessellated darter and a variety of macroinvertebrates emerge from the eel mop. Volunteers went home tired and in need of showers, but satisfied from a day of good hard work.
by Danielle Bongiovanni, J.M. Meyer, and Jocelyn Palomino
Our sampling on Thursday, June 5th began the second month of the Pathogen Monitoring 2025 season. Every Thursday during the summer, from May to October, the Lower Raritan Watershed Partnership and Rutgers Cooperative Extension of Middlesex County run a volunteer-based monitoring program along the Raritan River. We collect water quality samples at six non-bathing public access beach sites, provide our samples to the Interstate Environmental Commission for analysis in their laboratory, and report the results to the public on Friday afternoons. Our mission is to share this data with the community and partners to ensure the safe use of the Raritan river for all.
Our lab results for water quality samples taken on Thursday June 5, 2025 show Enterococcus bacteria levels exceeding the EPA federal water quality standard of 104 cfu/100mL at two of our monitoring sites this week. Problem sites are indicated by red frowns on the map and chart and include: Riverside Park (Piscataway) and Rutgers Boathouse (New Brunswick). Green smiles on the chart and map indicate the sites with bacteria levels safe for recreation, and include the following: Edison Boat Basin (Edison), Ken Buchanan Waterfront Park (Sayreville), South Amboy Waterfront Park (South Amboy), and 2nd Street Park (Perth Amboy).
Pathogens/Enterococci levels are used as indicators of the possible presence of disease-causing bacteria in recreational waters. Such pathogens may pose health risks to people coming in primary contact with the water (touching) through recreational activities like fishing, kayaking or swimming in a water body. Possible sources of bacteria include Combined Sewer Overflows (CSOs), improperly functioning wastewater treatment plants, stormwater runoff, leaking septic systems, animal carcasses, and runoff from manure storage areas.
Our goal in reporting these results is to give residents a better understanding of the potential health risks related to primary contact during water-based recreation. If you are planning on recreating on the Raritan this weekend, make sure to stay safe and wash up after any activities!
The low water level at Riverside Park reveals the eroded bank and forces the dock ramp to rest on the ground. Photo credit: Rose Lawless.
John and Ashley record data under bright skies at the Edison Boat Basin. Photo credit: Rose Lawless.
The nice weather provides a clear view of the landfill across from the Edison Boat Basin. Photo credit: Rose Lawless.
Low tide at Ken Buchanan Waterfront Park reveals bricks left over from Sayre & Fisher Brick Company Sayreville manufacturing plant, which closed in 1970. Photo credit: Rose Lawless.
An Atlantic horseshoe crab (Limulus polyphemus) left a piece of molted shell behind on the bank in South Amboy. Photo credit: Rose Lawless.
Anchored boats bob on gentle waves at Perth Amboy. Photo credit: Rose Lawless.
In Perth Amboy, the team encountered a large pile of dredged sediment, sanitary products, and feces a few paces from the Robert N. Wilentz elementary school playground. The liquid leaking from the pile flowed directly into an outflow pipe leading to Raritan Bay. NJDEP is now aware of the situation; please check our website in 1-2 weeks for further updates. Photo credit: J.M. Meyer.