Decades of neglect predate fish die-off in Fremont’s Lake Elizabeth

The death of 1,000 fish in Fremont’s Lake Elizabeth shocked residents and drew widespread news coverage this month.

But in reality, the problems at the city’s 83-acre lake go much deeper — and stretch back decades.

The city maintains the die-off was simply a result of the heat, but Joyce Blueford, president of the Math-Science Nucleus — a nonprofit organization that works to restore local watersheds — said Fremont and the Alameda County Flood Control and Water Conservation District, which mostly owns Lake Elizabeth, have failed to maintain it.

“You have a lot of problems. It shouldn’t be this bad,” Blueford said. “This is negligence.”

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