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NEW YORK: Itโ€™s Now Safe to Eat (Some) Fish From This Famously Polluted Brooklyn Canal

January 18, 2017 โ€” Attention, New York City tourists: Thereโ€™s a new water attraction in town.

That is, if youโ€™re brave enough to risk the historically polluted waterway of Brooklynโ€™s Gowanus Canal. A new public health assessment from the New York State Department of Health suggests that the famously inhospitable canalโ€”which runs for 1.8 miles through parts of the hip tree-lined neighborhoods of Park Slope, Cobble Hill, and Carroll Gardensโ€”is now safe for leisure activities like kayaking and even a spot of recreational fishing.

โ€œBecause of many years of discharges, storm water runoff, sewer outflows and industrial pollutants, the Gowanus Canal is one of the nationโ€™s most extensively contaminated water bodies,โ€ the report admits, referencing its history as a channel for barges starting in 1853 and an outlet for sewage and industrial wastes.

That said, things seem to be cautiously looking up for the Canal. While the report noted the presence of hazards like fecal coliform bacteria and chemicals like benzopyrene, which is related to increased cancer risks, ultimately the Department of Health concluded that โ€œrecreational boatingโ€ and โ€œcatch and release fishingโ€ shouldnโ€™t be harmful to peopleโ€™s health. They still donโ€™t recommend taking a full-body dip or dunking your head any time soon, though.

Further, if you do plan to consume the local marine species that inhabit the waterway, there are some definitive guidelines: stay away from the eels and white perch, and only feast on needlefish, bass, and perch once a month, max. (And women under the age of 50 should stay away from the seafood altogether.)

But come hot city summers, itโ€™s likely residents and visitors will start taking advantage of the canal, thanks to this reportโ€™s (admittedly tepid) assurances of improving health and a plan to invest up to $500 million in its restoration in future.

Read the full story at Travel & Leisure

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