Updated

Traveling 170 miles by plane -- as opposed to an automobile -- to deliver a brief speech and pose for photographs is a good gig, if you have the means.

Even though it’s nowhere near an efficient cost-savings measure for most people, Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation Commissioner Bob Martineau did just that this week, according to a state memo.

Specifically, Martineau chartered the state airplane to travel to Athens, Tenn. to announce a three-mile section of the Oostanaula Creek was open to the public for the first time since 1984.

The creek, according to state officials, closed 31 years ago because of problems with E. coli.

TDEC spokesman Eric Ward referred all questions about the costs of the trip to Tennessee Department of Transportation officials, who oversee the plane.

TDOT officials did not immediately respond Thursday or Friday to phone messages and emailed questions about the trip’s costs or the plane itself.

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