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Ci_ .ti of Paris Stud~, of Lake Crook March, 2001 <br /> <br />enough problem by itself to inhibit the sale of property around Lake Crook. <br /> <br />3.1.6 Water Clarity. While it can generally be acknowledged that Lake Crook is an asset to <br />the City of Paris, can it be likewise acknowledged that Lake Crook is a muddy, turbid body of <br />water, a fact which detracts from its potential beauty? Lake Crook is not the same as the Villages <br />of Lake Palestine, Holly Lake Ranch, Hide Away Lake, Lake Cypress Springs, Lake Ouachita <br />at Hot Springs, Arkansas or any of the more famous regional lake developments. These lakes <br />have clear, sometimes spring fed water. <br /> <br />During public participation meetings, several individuals brought up the subject of dredging Lake <br />Crook. Cleaning an 80-year old lake of siltation is an expensive task. There are essentially two <br />methods which can be used. One is to drain the lake down and allow the bottom to harden to the <br />point where standard earth moving equipment like scrapers, back hoes or drag lines can remove <br />the silt. This may take years given that you must have a dry period for the lake bottom to firm <br />and for silt to be de-watered before it can be hauled off. Further, there is no way of lowering <br />Lake Crook without constructing some alternative pipe spillway, building a siphon, pumping, or <br />breaching the dam. All of these are costly and breaching may be unpredictable. We do not <br />recommend any consideration be given to breaching the dam. <br /> <br />The second method is to use shallow water barge mounted dredges. Whiterock Lake is the most <br />recent success story. This urban Dallas Lake is almost exactly the size of Lake Crook and has <br />nearly the identical square miles of watershed. It also was built in the 1920's. Whiterock was <br />dredged in 1995-1996 at a cost of nearly $14.0 million which included a 17 mile force main for <br />the dredgings to be pumped to an abandoned gravel pit near Duncanville. A similar project was <br />completed two years later on a larger lake for the City of San Angelo. Their dredging project <br />cost a mere $9.5 million but land was available adjacent to the lake on which to pump silt. Based <br /> <br />on these and other dredging <br />projects with which we are <br />familiar, we estimate a dredging <br />project for Lake Crook would <br />cost between $5.0 and $6.5 <br />million dollars. A permit is <br />required from the Army Corps of <br />Engineers and from the TNRCC <br />before dredging can be done. <br />The chief advantage to dredging <br />over lowering of the water level is <br />that use of the lake is continuous <br />even while dredging is taking <br />place.., even for fishing. <br /> <br />Figure 9 Effects of erosion seen on south shore <br /> <br />Page 21 of 45 <br /> <br /> <br />