EPA REPORT
CARD ON CHARLES RIVER SHOWS WATER QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
Contact: Alice Kaufman, Press Office, 617-918-1064
Forrelease: April 23, 1998; Release # 98-4-28
BOSTON - The New England Office of the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, joined by state and local officials, environmental groups,
and community activists, today issued the agency's annual report
card on the Charles River, giving the river a "C" for 1997, a modest
improvement over 1996.
EPA's New England Administrator John P. DeVillars announced the
results at a news conference to kick off "Charles River Kids Day,"
an agency-sponsored event on the Esplanade to honor Earth Day and
"Take Your Child To Work Day." EPA launched the Clean Charles 2005
Initiative in 1995.
"We have a long way to go, but we're on the right track for a fishable
and swimmable Charles River by Earth Day 2005," DeVillars said.
DeVillars and Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection
Assistant Commissioner for Resource Protection Arleen O'Donnell
also announced $25 million in interest free loans to municipalities
in combined federal and state dollars to abate pollution on the
Charles.
EPA's Deputy Administrator Fred Hansen traveled from Washington
to join the celebration and announce $1 million in additional funds
for scientific work on the Charles. These funds will be used to
identify ongoing sources of pollution. Part of this money will also
be devoted to developing more advanced methods for sampling water
for pollution and informing the public about the quality of water
in the river.
Volunteers attending the event began posting placards announcing
EPA's new report-a-sheen hotline and water quality flagging program
throughout the watershed as part of the event.
"The volunteers who have joined us today are just the most recent
recruits in an army that is working hard to make the Charles fishable
and swimmable by Earth Day 2005," DeVillars said. "The 10 municipalities
of the lower Charles, the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority,
the Massachusetts Executive Office of Environmental Affairs, the
Massachusetts DEP, the Metropolitan District Commission, Charles
River Watershed Association, Save the Harbor/Save the Bay, and other
citizen and environmental activists are all pulling together to
restore and protect this urban emerald. We are all grateful for
their efforts."
"The Charles River partnership is an excellent example of a watershed
community-based approach for protecting and restoring a precious
water resource," said EPA Deputy Administrator Fred Hansen. "It
is exactly what the president and EPA Administrator Carol Browner
had in mind when they launched the Clean Water Action Plan earlier
this year."
Data collected by the Charles River Watershed Association during
1997 showed that the river met boating standards 70 percent of the
time and swimming standards 34 percent of the time. While those
results represent only modest progress compared to 1996 -- when
the river received a "C-" -- it was a dramatic improvement over
1995, when boating standards were met just 39 percent of the time
and swimming standards just 19 percent of the time.
"There is no question that the Charles is getting cleaner," said
Robert Zimmerman, executive director of the Charles River Watershed
Association. "This is due to the efforts of EPA-New England, the
Massachusetts DEP, MWRA, Boston Water and Sewer, the Cambridge Department
of Public Works and all of the communities that line the river.
It's also due to the hundreds of volunteers who take water quality
samples for us and a dedicated staff at CRWA."
"The Charles River is a tremendous resource and it really does
improve the quality of life," said Bruce Berman, BayWatch director
at Save the Harbor/Save the Bay. "It's great to see the EPA, the
state, citizens and the political leadership of most of our cities
working together to improve the quality of water in the Charles."
DeVillars said he expects additional water quality improvements as
EPA builds upon its five-point action plan for restoring the river.
The following actions will be taken in the year ahead:
- Enforcement/Technical Assistance: On May 1, EPA will launch
an intensive enforcement sweep of potential pollution sources
along the river. The sweep will be conducted by a dozen EPA field
inspectors who will make unannounced visits to universities, hospitals,
manufacturing facilities and other potential pollution sources.
The initiative comes two months after EPA mailed warning letters
to 200 major facilities along the river, encouraging them to make
sure their operations were in compliance with environmental laws.
In a parallel enforcement effort focusing on bacterial contamination,
10 communities on the lower Charles River are continuing to make
progress identifying problem storm drains and illicit hookups
that are polluting the river. By investigating storm drains and
tracking down illicit connections, the communities already have
eliminated one million gallons per day of contaminated flow into
the river. EPA has also requested that various state agencies
with storm drains discharging into the river investigate their
discharges for possible pollution. When this effort is completed
by June 30, all publicly-owned stormwater discharges into the
lower Charles will have been investigated. EPA's enforcement efforts
are being supplemented by an aggressive technical assistance program.
The activities include an outreach program to assist 1,000 auto
repair and service facilities on pollution prevention techniques
and a trade show on innovative stormwater management technologies
scheduled for June 4 at the Cambridge Hyatt Regency. EPA also
has established a hot line for reporting chemical and other spills
into the river. "Report-a-sheen" signs are being posted all along
the river, beginning today.
- Stormwater Management: EPA is working with each of the 10 lower
Charles communities to develop state-of-the-art stormwater management
programs by July 1998. Among other features, the plans will guide
communities in storm drain maintenance, street sweeping, development
regulations and catch-basin cleaning. To assist the municipalities,
EPA has convened a Clean Charles Stormwater Subcommittee, bringing
all 10 municipalities, state agencies and federal experts together
to share ideas. EPA will fund a consultant to fine tune these
plans and make sure they are using the most innovative and cost
effective technologies available. Another action bolstering pollution
abatement efforts by communities was the announcement by EPA and
the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, awarding
more than $25 million in zero-interest loans to communities in
the Charles River Watershed. The State Revolving Fund was established
with federal dollars and a minimum of 20 percent matching state
dollars. "These loans of combined federal and state dollars will
make the river cleaner and they'll also save Charles River communities
millions as they address stormwater issues, illicit hookups and
other pollution problems," DeVillars said.
- Combined Sewer Overflow Controls: Billions of dollars have been
spent to construct a new sewage treatment plant on Deer Island,
yet millions of gallons of mixed sewage and stormwater continue
to spill into the Charles through combined sewer overflows, or
CSOs. To address this problem, the MWRA has proposed a CSO plan
that will greatly reduce the number of CSO discharges. The plan,
now under discussion with EPA, will result in at least an 80 to
85 percent reduction from current discharge levels, and a 98 percent
reduction from 1988 levels.
- Scientific Research: The $1 million of new federal funding will
support additional scientific research about the river. Building
off years of data collection by the watershed association and
other groups, EPA has convened a Clean Charles Water Quality Subcommittee
comprised of state, federal, municipal and environmental group
representatives. Using $500,000 of EPA money, this group is designing
a watershed study to examine the health of the river, focusing
on areas of high environmental value such as potential swimming
beaches. The two-year study will also measure levels of sediment
contamination in the river and pinpoint areas where aggressive
stormwater controls would be beneficial. EPA is also investing
$520,000 through its beaches program to develop more advanced
scientific methods for analyzing pollutants in water and communicating
those results immediately to the Boston-area public. This project,
which will focus on Boston Harbor beaches and the Charles River,
is funded through a new EPA program called EMPACT - Environmental
Monitoring for Public Access and Community Tracking.
- Public Education and Outreach: EPA has provided another $60,000
to the Charles River Watershed Association for a water quality
and sampling program that will produce timely data about the condition
of the river. Beginning this summer, color-coded flags will be
posted at boathouses along the river to inform the public about
water quality on any particular day. Following today's news conference,
volunteers, including children attending the event fanned out
across the Esplanade, posting Report-A-Sheen-Hotline posters at
boathouses and stenciling "Don't Dump" messages on storm drains
next to the river. Children also learned about water quality sampling,
stormwater, oil spill cleanup technologies and model sailboat
racing. The kids event was coordinated by EPA-New England, the
U.S. Coast Guard and the Boston Water and Sewer Commission.

METADATA
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TITLE: EPA Report Card on Charles River Shows
Water Quality Improvement
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IDENTIFICATION NUMBER: N/A
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ABSTRACT: The New England Office of the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, joined by state and local officials,
environmental groups, and community activists, today issued
the agency's annual report card on the Charles River.
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PURPOSE: Public Information
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ORIGINATOR: Regional Administrator's Office
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PUBLICATION DATE:4/23/98
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ACCESS CONSTRAINTS: N/A
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AVAILABILITY: N/A
a. Distributor:
b. Order Process:
c. Technical Prerequisites:
d. Automated Linkage:
e. Downloadable Files:
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COVERAGE: N/A
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TIME PERIOD OF COVERAGE: N/A
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POINT OF CONTACT FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Alice Kaufman, Press Office
Office of the Regional Administrator
EPA Region 1, New England
JFK Kennedy Building (RAA)
Boston, MA 02203
617-918-1064
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RESPONSIBLE PARTY:
Alice Kaufman
617-918-1064
Press Office
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DATE OF CREATION: 4/23/98
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AGENCY SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION: N/A
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EXPIRATION DATE: 12/05/98
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