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Saturday, August 30, 2014

For passenger pigeons, flight from abundance to extinction was short | The Kansas City Star

Friday evening, people gathered to remember Martha.
She was a star in her day. Scarlet eyes and peach-colored breast. Head held high.
Toward the end of her life, people lined up to see her — a glimpse for the ages.
But a hundred years ago Monday, Martha died alone, like she’d been waiting for the room to finally clear. A stroke, they say. She was 29, or somewhere around there.








Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/news/local/article1328007.html#storylink=cpy


For passenger pigeons, flight from abundance to extinction was short | The Kansas City Star

Friday, August 29, 2014

Arkansas Reduces Air Toxics with EPA Grant

EPA Press Release:

Arkansas Reduces Air Toxics with EPA Grant  
                                          
DALLAS – (Aug. 29, 2014) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) awarded $501,837 to the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ) to administer the state’s pollution prevention and control program. The program includes ambient monitoring, planning, permitting and compliance activities.

ADEQ will also monitor for major pollutants, identifying major and minor sources of air pollution that may be impacting Arkansas. This will help Arkansas residents live healthier and breathe more easily.

For more than forty years, the Clean Air Act has cut pollution as the U.S. economy has grown. It has also lowered levels of six common pollutants -- particles, ozone, lead, carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide and sulfur dioxide -- as well as numerous toxic pollutants. The progress of the Act reflects efforts by state, local and tribal governments; EPA; private sector companies; environmental groups and others.

For more info on the progress of the Clean Air Act visit: http://www.epa.gov/air/caa/progress.html#pollution 

Additional information on EPA grants is available at http://www.epa.gov/region6/gandf/index.htm 

Connect with EPA Region 6:
Activities in EPA Region 6: http://www.epa.gov/aboutepa/region6.htm 

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Thursday, August 28, 2014

Louisiana Included in EPA Assessment of Nation’s Coasts

EPA News Release:

Louisiana Included in EPA Assessment of Nation’s Coasts

DALLAS – (Aug. 28, 2014) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recently awarded $485,000 to the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF) for testing water quality along the state’s Gulf Coast. The sampling results will contribute to EPA’s National Coastal Conditions Assessment (NCCA).

The NCCA is a survey of our nation’s coastal waters which EPA and state partners conduct to provide regional and national estimates of water quality along U.S. coasts and the Great Lakes. As part of the survey, LDWF will sample water and sediment from 97 sites along Louisiana’s coastline and estuaries.

This sampling will be part of the 2015 NCCA. EPA and its state partners have completed several such surveys since 2001, using statistical sampling to gauge the condition of water quality, sediment quality, fish tissue contaminants, and the ecosystems of coastal and estuary beds. Scientists, researchers, and federal, state, and local environmental officials use the results of the surveys to compare these conditions across the country and over time.

The NCCA supports the goals of the Clean Water Act to protect rivers, lakes, bays, wetlands, and coastal waters. Streams and wetlands benefit communities by trapping floodwaters, recharging groundwater supplies, removing pollution and providing habitats for fish and wildlife. Families and farms located downstream understand the importance of healthy headwaters upstream. One in three Americans get their drinking water from public systems that rely on seasonal and rain-dependent streams. EPA is taking public comment on a rule to help protect our Nation’s waters. For more information please visit: www.epa.gov/uswaters.


Connect with EPA Region 6:
Activities in EPA Region 6: http://www.epa.gov/aboutepa/region6.htm 


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Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Illinois EPA Refers Olympic Oil Ltd. to Attorney General for Enforcement

Illinois.gov - Illinois Government News Network (IGNN) - Search the News Results

Moldova's Agriculture Minister Visits USDA for Round of 'Conservation Talks'

USDA Blog Post:

Members of the Moldovan Ministry of Agriculture and Food Industry listen to a USDA presentation on no-till and minimum-till management programs during a meeting at the Agriculture Department. NRCS photo.
Members of the Moldovan Ministry of Agriculture and Food Industry listen to a USDA presentation on no-till and minimum-till management programs during a meeting at the Agriculture Department. NRCS photo.
Moldova’s minister of agriculture and food industry, Vasile Bumacov, recently visited with USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) to learn more about no-till and minimum-till systems – and how the agency supports farmers wanting to implement them.
NRCS briefed Minister Bumacov on technical and financial assistance programs that promote the use, by American farmers, of no-till and minimum-till systems, where crops are grown with little soil disturbance and the soil is kept covered with crop residue to conserve soil, water and energy. The assistance from NRCS provides U.S. farmers guidance and funding in putting these systems to work.
“In addition to the conservation benefits, no-till and minimum-till systems add to the overall energy efficiency of the entire farming operation, saving fuel and labor,” said Terrell Erickson, NRCS’ director of Ecological Sciences Division and meeting host.
Conservation methods like continuous no-till or minimum-till, crop rotation and cover crops are keys to building healthy soils. At the same time, these methods minimize potential problems, including soil erosion, wind erosion, degradation of soil and energy consumption. NRCS promotes a wide variety of cropping practices as part of a systems-approach to sustaining and improving natural resources.
“The Minister expressed his interest and support of no-till and minimum-till systems,” said Erickson on the outcome of the meeting.
Moldova’s economy relies heavily on agriculture, but soil erosion is a serious problem and has caused declines in harvests. Three-fourths of Moldova’s land is used for agriculture.
With international support from groups like World Bank, USAID and Global Environmental Facility, Moldova is working to strengthen agricultural lands, including improving topsoil and unstable ground. Bumacov and NRCS’ meeting highlights a shared and continued priority to bring positive environmental changes through conservation practices.
Moldova is a landlocked country in Eastern Europe northeast of Romania. The best-known product and number one export from Moldova is wine. Fruits and vegetables – especially apples – are among the top five of Moldovan agriculture exports. The agriculture and food processing sector make up about 40 percent of the country’s gross domestic product.
NRCS has a long history with partners in other countries starting with the early days of the agency. Over the years, NRCS has gained access to technology developed in other countries and obtained data that increases understanding of natural resources management. NRCS has also provided technical assistance to other countries that vastly improved natural resources conservation, which has aided in the transition from subsistence to sustainable food security.

How Do Wildfires Impact Our Drinking Water? | 2014-08-26 | Pollution Engineering

In recent decades, wildfires of unprecedented magnitude and severity have increased in frequency, raising concerns about impacts on local natural resources such as water. Water Research Foundation (WRF) andCanadian Water Network (CWN) recently released a new report that offers a comprehensive look at the state of knowledge around this subject and the potential for mitigating the impact these wildfires can have on water supplies. 



How Do Wildfires Impact Our Drinking Water? | 2014-08-26 | Pollution Engineering

Monday, August 25, 2014

Verizon’s Fifth Annual Ashburn, Va., Recycling Rally Set for Sept. 18

ASHBURN, Va. – For the fifth year, Verizon employees will gather in the parking lot of the company’s Ashburn campus to collect unwanted electronics and other material for recycling. This year’s Recycling Rally will be from 7:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Sept. 18. 



Verizon’s Fifth Annual Ashburn, Va., Recycling Rally Set for Sept. 18

Thursday, August 21, 2014

EPA Proposes to Include Southern Maine in the Federal Reformulated Gasoline Program

EPA News Release:

News Release
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
New England Regional Office
August 21, 2014
Contact: David Deegan, (617) 918-1017
EPA Proposes to Include Southern Maine in the Federal Reformulated Gasoline Program
BOSTON – EPA is proposing, at the request of the State of Maine, to require the sale of reformulated gasoline (RFG) in York, Cumberland, Sagadahoc, Androscoggin, Kennebec, Knox and Lincoln counties in southern Maine starting in June 2015.
“The use of RFG in many areas of New England has contributed to cleaner air in the Region,” said Curt Spalding, regional administrator of EPA’s New England office. “We are pleased that Maine also wants to implement this measure in its southern counties.”
The purpose of the federal RFG program is to improve air quality in certain areas through the use of gasoline that is reformulated to reduce motor vehicle emissions that lead to the formation of ground-level ozone. Ground-level ozone can cause breathing problems, aggravate asthma and other pre-existing lung diseases, and make people more susceptible to respiratory infection.
States which are designated by EPA as part of the Ozone Transport Region, such as Maine, can “opt-in” to the program. RFG is currently used in 17 states, including Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and southern New Hampshire, and the District of Columbia.
In 2013, the State of Maine enacted a law establishing the use of RFG in the southern Maine counties beginning May 1, 2014. The Maine legislature subsequently postponed the requirement for sale of RFG until June 1, 2015. EPA is proposing that sale of RFG be required for refiners, importers, and distributors by May 1, 2015, and for retailers and wholesale purchasers-consumers by June 1, 2015.
Maine’s request to opt-in to the RFG program was in response to an industry group’s interest in having a common fuel throughout many areas in New England. Maine DEP’s Air Bureau Director, Marc Cone expects that this initiative will continue to enhance protection of Maine citizens by minimizing ozone precursors and maintain attainment of the ozone federal air quality standard.
More information:
-    EPA is requesting comments regarding whether there will be sufficient capacity to supply RFG to the seven Maine counties by the prescribed deadlines. Comments on EPA’s proposal and sufficiency of RFG capacity will be accepted for 30 days beginning when the proposal is published in the Federal Register. Information about submitting comments is available at www.regulations.gov .
-    Proposed RFG rule for Maine and related documentshttp://www.epa.gov/otaq/fuels/gasolinefuels/rfg/regulations.htm#opt
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U.S. Recovers Over $2.8 Million in Settlement after Fraudulent Transfer of Assets

EPA Press Release:

U.S. Recovers Over $2.8 Million in Settlement after
Fraudulent Transfer of Assets

Owner of Maryland and Delaware gas stations attempted to transfer assets before agreeing to pay $2 million penalty for violating underground fuel tank safeguards
  
PHILADELPHIA (August 21, 2014) -- The owner of a chain of gas stations located in Delaware and Maryland has paid $2,889,351 to the United States in settlement of a federal lawsuit filed to undo the owner’s fraudulent transfer of assets just prior to agreeing to pay a court-sanctioned $2 million penalty for violating underground fuel tank regulations.

The government’s settlement with Robert M. Duncan, of Dover, Del and several corporate entities under his control, includes the original penalty plus nearly $900,000 in interest, additional penalties, and attorneys’ fees and costs. The Justice Department filed the lawsuit and settlement documents in federal court in Delaware, on behalf of the Environmental Protection Agency.

According to officials from EPA and the Justice Department, this case underscores the government’s commitment to protect both the environment and taxpayers from those who attempt to evade responsibility for environmental violations.

“This case involved serious, well-documented violations of regulations that protect our communities from the threats to public health and the environment posed by underground fuel leaks,” said Shawn M. Garvin, Regional Administrator of EPA’s Mid-Atlantic regional office.
“Allowing Duncan Petroleum to shirk its responsibility would be unfair to countless gas stations and other fuel tank owners who willingly comply with the required safeguards.”

“This case should send a clear message that EPA and the Justice Department takes seriously our duty to enforce environmental laws, and pursue appropriate remedies, including monetary penalties, against violators,” said Charles M. Oberly III, U.S. Attorney for the District of Delaware. “Defendants who fraudulently convey assets to avoid paying penalties should expect to pay a far greater amount, including additional penalties, interest, and attorneys’ fees.”

The settlement announced today ends a decade of administrative and judicial proceedings by EPA and the Justice Department against Mr. Duncan, Duncan Petroleum Inc., and affiliated entities.

In September 2004, EPA filed an administrative complaint against Duncan Petroleum, citing violations of federal regulations designed to detect and prevent leaks of petroleum and other hazardous substances from underground storage tanks (USTs) at five Maryland gas stations.

That complaint was settled in a February 2006 consent agreement which imposed a $65,000 penalty, and required measures to ensure continuing compliance with UST safeguards.
After the company failed to carry out the compliance measures, EPA inspected 13 additional Duncan Petroleum gas stations, documenting UST violations at each facility.

In December 2008, after providing multiple opportunities to settle this matter, the United States filed a civil action against Mr. Duncan and Duncan Petroleum. After two days of jury trial, the claims were resolved in August 2010 by a stipulated order, agreed to by Mr. Duncan, requiring payment of a $2 million penalty by December 15, 2010.

Mr. Duncan failed to pay the agreed penalty, claiming an inability to pay. After analyzing his financial information, the government discovered that six months prior to trial, Mr. Duncan conveyed assets worth about $10 million to several LLCs, trusts, and foundations under his control.

In August 2011, the U.S. filed a new complaint against Mr. Duncan and affiliated parties, seeking to void these asset transfers pursuant to the Federal Debt Collection Procedures Act. On the eve of trial in March 2014, Mr. Duncan stipulated that the United States had sufficient evidence to establish that most of the transfers were fraudulent, and the United States agreed to delay proceedings to permit Mr. Duncan to settle his liability by selling and refinancing assets.

As of August 6, 2014, the United States has received total payments of $2,889,351.41, which includes $2 million penalty imposed in 2010, plus interest, as well as attorneys’ fees and costs exceeding $450,000, and daily stipulated penalties exceeding $300,000.

Public Meeting on Alabama Plating Superfund Site Set for Monday in Vincent, Alabama

EPA Press Release:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 21, 2014


Public Meeting on Alabama Plating Superfund Site Set for Monday in Vincent, Alabama

Contact information: Danielle Jackson, (404) 562- 9182 (Direct), (404) 562-8400 (Main), Jackson.Danielle@epa.gov

ATLANTA – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Alabama Department of Environmental Management (ADEM) will host a public meeting for the general public on Monday, August 25, 2014 at the Vincent Middle High School auditorium in Vincent, AL from 6:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. to discuss the proposed cleanup plan for the Alabama Plating Superfund Site.

EPA’s proposed cleanup plan for the site consist of remediating the Site, located approximately one mile northeast of Vincent at the intersection of U.S. Highway 231 and County Highway 60 . EPA and ADEM representatives directing cleanup activities will select a final remedy after viewing and considering information submitted during the 30 day public comment period.

EPA in conjunction with the state may modify the Preferred Alternative or select another response action based on new information or public comments.

Who: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Alabama Department of Environmental Management

What: Public Meeting on Proposed Cleanup Plan for Alabama Superfund Site

When: August 25, 2014/ 6:00 p.m.- 8:00 p.m.

Where: Vincent Middle High School Auditorium
42505 Highway 25
Vincent, AL 35178

For additional information about the meeting or if you have information related to the site or cleanup activities, please contact: Remedial Project Manager Scott Miller, (404) 562- 9120, miller.scott@epa.gov or Community Involvement Coordinator Kyle Bryant, (877) 718- 3752, ext. 29073, Bryant.kyle.@epa.gov

More information about the Alabama Plating Superfund Site:

Connect with EPA Region 4 on Facebook: www.Facebook.com/eparegion4

And on Twitter: @EPASoutheast





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TODAY: EPA Administrator Media Call to Release Findings on Urban Air Toxics

EPA Press Release:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEAugust 21, 2014

TODAY: EPA Administrator Media Call to Release Findings on Urban Air Toxics
WASHINGTON – Today, at 11 a.m. EDT, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Gina McCarthy will hold a media conference call to release the second and final Integrated Urban Air Toxics (IUAT) Report to Congress. The call will focus on the progress EPA has made and our work with state, local and tribal agencies to help communities understand, prioritize and reduce exposures to toxic pollutants in their local environments, particularly in overburdened areas.

WHEN: Thursday, August 21, 11 a.m. EDT

WHO:  Gina McCarthy, EPA Administrator

WHAT: Press conference call on the EPA Urban Air Toxics Report to Congress

HOW: Members of the media interested in participating should dial-in ten minutes prior to the beginning of the call at 10:50 a.m. Participants will be asked to provide their name, affiliation and email. Also, when the call opens up, the operator will provide instructions on how to ask a question. To participate, please call 877-887-8949 and give the conference ID number 91548601. The name of the call is “New Findings On Urban Air Toxics Press Call.”

***THIS CALL IS FOR CREDENTIALED NEWS MEDIA ONLY***

R193

Double-Crested Cormorant

From USFWS National Wildlife Refuge System:




One gulp! That’s all it takes for this double-crested cormorant at John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge at Tinicum, PA, to swallow dinner. These long-necked birds are adept divers, grabbing fish and swallowing them whole. Thanks to Scott Kemper, a member of the Friends of John Heinz, for this photo.http://on.fb.me/1BtfiQH

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

U.S. EPA and SF Environment recognize Quesada Gardens Initiative for environmental work in San Francisco’s Bayview Hunters Point neighborhood

EPA Press Release:

RELEASE DATE: August 20, 2014
CONTACT: Suzanne Skadowski, 415-972-3165, skadowski.suzanne@epa.gov

U.S. EPA and SF Environment recognize Quesada Gardens Initiative for environmental work in San Francisco’s Bayview Hunters Point neighborhood


SAN FRANCISCO – Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the San Francisco Department of the Environment (SF Environment) presented an Environmental Award to the Quesada Gardens Initiative in recognition of the grassroots organization’s decade of work to address environmental issues in the San Francisco Bayview Hunters Point neighborhood.

“The Quesada Gardens Initiative has transformed an ordinary neighborhood street into community food gardens and neighborhood gathering spaces,” said Jared Blumenfeld, EPA’s Regional Administrator for the Pacific Southwest. “EPA’s Environmental Awards recognize people and groups like Jeffrey Betcher and Quesada Gardens who are committed to protecting public health and improving our communities.”

EPA and SF Environment presented the award to Jeffrey Betcher, co-founder of the Quesada Gardens community organization. Quesada Gardens began more than 10 years ago on the 1700 block of Quesada Avenue in San Francisco’s historically underserved and environmentally challenged Bayview Hunters Point neighborhood. Mr. Betcher, a neighborhood resident, worked with his neighbors to transform the street into a series of community food gardens, public art displays and gathering spaces.

“Thanks to the leadership of Jeffrey Betcher, and through the hard work and dedication of the Quesada Gardens Initiative community, Bayview families are enjoying the beauty and bounty of community gardens,” said Debbie Raphael, SF Environment’s Director. “Jeffrey is a leader who nurtures social connections and community relationships. His hard work is helping families thrive while building a vision of a greener Bayview.”

The Initiative has engaged several hundred volunteers in garden projects, involving thousands of volunteer work hours. These gardening and beautification efforts have not only improved the neighborhood, but have also helped build relationships among neighbors and strengthen the local community. This is evident in the Bayview Footprints online newsletter, which serves as an online community hub for the neighborhood.

“I am grateful that scrappy neighbors in the heart of Bayview are being acknowledged for joining together to change a place many had given up on,” said Jeffrey Betcher, Quesada Gardens Initiative’s Executive Director. “This award is evidence our friends in the environmental movement understand that the physical and social environments are fundamentally linked, and that improving one requires attention to the other.”

Quesada Gardens includes the Baybloom Backyard Gardens projects, the Bridgeview Teaching and Learning Garden, the “Bayview Is…” mural and Quesada Gardens Community Mural and Gathering Space. Mr. Betcher was nominated for the environmental award by Dr. Toye Moses, Executive Director of the Southeast Community Facility Commission.

Learn more about Quesada Gardens at: http://www.quesadagardens.org/

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EPA and Savannah State University Sign a Memorandum of Understanding

EPA Press Release:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
August 20, 2014
EPA and Savannah State University Sign a Memorandum of Understanding
Contact Information: Danielle Jackson, (404) 562-9182 (Direct), (404) 562-8400 (Main), Jackson.Danielle@epa.gov
ATLANTA - Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Savannah State University (SSU) will enter into a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to enhance interdisciplinary research, incorporate appropriate environmental content in all academic curricula, and focus on public outreach to raise public awareness. As a part of the MOU, EPA will commit to enhance the university’s environmental policy, laws and management in order to protect and promote environmental resources
Through this MOU, EPA Region 4 is in support of SSU’s efforts to train and provide research experiences for undergraduate and graduate students in the areas of environmental and mathematical sciences which are pertinent to the mission of the EPA. EPA supports the University’s efforts to become the flagship model of an academic institution that is environmentally sustainable in its campus infrastructure, its environmental policy, its engineering science and public health curriculum, and its community outreach. 
Connect with EPA Region 4 on Facebook: www.facebook.com/eparegion4
And on Twitter: @EPASoutheast
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Settlement Ensures that New Bedford Company Adheres to Measures to Control Air Pollutants

EPA Press Release:

News Release
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
New England Regional Office
August 20, 2014
Contact: David Deegan, (617) 918-1017
Settlement Ensures that New Bedford Company Adheres to Measures to Control Air Pollutants
BOSTON – EPA and the U.S. Department of Justice have lodged a Consent Decree with the U.S. District Court of Massachusetts, resolving alleged Clean Air Act violations by Coyne Textile Services of New Bedford, Mass.
Under the Decree, Coyne will meet stringent emissions limits for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from its industrial laundry operations. The company will apply for a state permit amendment establishing limits on its VOC emissions.
EPA and DOJ alleged that Coyne’s excess emissions of VOCs have contributed to the formation of ground-level ozone in Massachusetts, and required strict emission limits from 1994 to the present. Coyne will also pay a penalty of $50,000.
More information:
-    Review the consent decree http://www.justice.gov/enrd/6492.htm
-    Enforcing the Clean Air Act (http://www2.epa.gov/enforcement/air-enforcement)
-    Report a Violation (http://www2.epa.gov/enforcement/report-environmental-violations)
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U.S. EPA Serving as On-Scene Coordinator in Emergency Response to Ohio River Oil Spill

EPA Press Release:

Media Contacts: Francisco Arcaute, 312-898-2042, arcaute.francisco@epa.gov
Phillippa Cannon, 312-353-6218, cannon.phillippa@epa.gov

U.S. EPA Serving as On-Scene Coordinator in Emergency Response to Ohio River Oil Spill

CHICAGO (August 19, 2014) – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is serving as the Federal On-Scene Coordinator for the emergency response to an oil spill that occurred last night when approximately 3500 gallons of diesel fuel was released into the Ohio River from Duke Energy’s Beckjord power plant. Twenty-four hour operations are underway to contain and clean up oil along a 12 mile stretch of the Ohio River immediately upstream from Cincinnati.
“U.S. EPA, the U.S. Coast Guard and Ohio EPA quickly mobilized and are taking a series of steps to minimize the damage this spill does to the Ohio River and surrounding communities,” said U.S. EPA Incident Commander Steven Renninger. “U.S. EPA is on the scene to ensure the leaked oil is contained and cleaned up as quickly and effectively as possible.”
U.S. EPA has established a unified command with the U.S. Coast Guard, the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency and Pierce Township. U.S. EPA is directing response efforts carried out by Duke Energy. Under the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, U.S. EPA has the responsibility for inland oil spills.   
Boom was deployed in the Ohio River to contain the spill. Sheen extends approximately 12 miles from Duke’s plant down the Ohio River toward Cincinnati. The U.S. Coast Guard closed 15 miles of the river to vessel traffic.
As a precaution, the Greater Cincinnati Waterworks and the Northern Kentucky Water District each closed drinking water intakes on the Ohio River. The Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission is conducting water sampling on the river.
For updates on the response to this oil spill, go to www.epa.gov/region5/newsevents/duke-energy-spill/

DOE Awards Cooperative Agreement to the Southern States Energy Board

DOE Awards Cooperative Agreement to the Southern States Energy Board

UGA Student wins National Water Quality Challenge Award

EPA Press Release:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 19, 2014
UGA Student wins National Water Quality Challenge Award
Contact Information: Dawn Harris Young, EPA, (404) 562-8421 (Direct), (404) 562-8400 (Main), harris-young.dawn@epa.gov
ATLANTA – Today the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that James Wood, a Ph.D. candidate from the University of Georgia located in Athens, Ga., was one of seven undergraduate and graduate student winners for Phase 1 of the National Aquatic Resource Surveys (NARS) Campus Challenge.  The award was based on Wood’s proposal to assess major trends in river plants and measure the bioaccumulation of heavy metals in highly urbanized watersheds.
Announced in February, the NARS Campus Challenge encourages students to develop proposals for research projects that find innovative ways to use NARS data about the condition of the nation’s rivers, streams, lakes, and coastal areas.  The challenge recognizes exemplary research in the area of water quality and ecosystems.
“The National Aquatic Resource Surveys are helping our states and tribes effectively and accurately monitor the ecological condition of our surface waters, which in turn helps EPA better target program efforts to meet our Clean Water Act goals," said Nancy Stoner, Acting Assistant Administrator for EPA’s Water Office. “These students are working to protect America’s surface water resources and bring to this challenge energy, innovative perspectives, and cutting-edge knowledge.”
The National Aquatic Resource Surveys are a series of statistically representative surveys conducted by state, tribal and federal partners about the condition of the nation’s waters using core indicators and standardized lab and field methods. In addition to providing national assessments of key water body types such as coastal areas, rivers and streams, lakes, and wetlands, NARS also helps to improve the states’ capacity for water quality monitoring and assessment.
The other winners of the Phase 1 awards are:
Anna Palmer, SUNY-Purchase, New York, for her proposal to use statistical analyses for assessing  socio-economic factors related to water quality;
Lauren Reuss, University of St. Thomas, Minnesota, for her proposal to develop a new system for identifying the condition of shallow lakes and factors that affect the quality of lake condition such as land use, lake size and depth;
John Lombardi, SUNY-College of Environmental Sciences and Forestry, Syracuse, New York, for his proposal to combine citizen science data with National Lakes Assessment (NLA) data.
Kelly Heber and Lain Dunning, Ph.D. candidates, MIT, Massachusetts, for their proposal to link between stakeholder communities and coastal ecosystem health;
Kevin Meyer, Ph.D. candidate, Iowa State University, Iowa, for his proposal to estimate land use effects on water quality using spatial econometrics;
Amanda Winegardner, Ph.D. candidate, McGill University, Canada, for her proposal to explore biological  diversity changes across the U.S.; and
The Phase 1 winners each received an award of $2000 for their proposals. After completing their proposed work, these students may apply for Phase 2 of the NARS Campus Research Challenge. The Phase 2 winners will be awarded $5000 each.
More information on the National Aquatic Resources Surveys Campus Research Challenge is available at:
More information on the National Aquatic Resources Surveys is available at:
Connect with EPA Region 4 on Facebook: www.facebook.com/eparegion4
And on Twitter: @EPASoutheast
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