u/Miaj_Pensoj

Spotted in southern Indiana
▲ 262 r/Indiana

Spotted in southern Indiana

Indiana truly is the middle finger of the South.

u/Miaj_Pensoj — 21 hours ago

Description from the video:

>Syracuse, New York gets its drinking water directly from Skaneateles Lake. No filtration plant, no treatment beyond chlorination... and it has worked perfectly for 130 years. Then in 2024, the lake recorded 145 confirmed harmful algal blooms. The year before: 19.

This episode is about what changed, what the science actually shows, and what 165,000 people probably don't know about the water coming out of their tap.

Environmental scientist Ally and Finger Lakes local covers the full story: the strange mechanism shaking phosphorus loose from the lakebed, the research from Syracuse University and SUNY ESF happening right now, the gaps in the watershed management plan, what you should and shouldn't do if you have a private intake, and a cautionary reference to Toledo, Ohio — where 400,000 people lost safe tap water for three days in 2014. Toledo had a filtration plant. It still failed. Syracuse doesn't.

This is not a scare piece. The finished drinking water tested clean in 2024. But the trajectory is worth understanding before it becomes a crisis instead of a question.

u/Miaj_Pensoj — 23 days ago