&EPA
United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
Office of Water
(4204)
Washington, DC 20460
EPA 832-F-00-002
April 2000
        Funding Shellfish Restoration and Remediation Projects with the
        Clean Water State Revolving Fund
The Problem

Shellfish filter the water to feed and can extract and
concentrate microorganisms  many  fold  over the
concentrations in the water.  Since shellfish are often
eaten raw, the quality of the water they are harvested
from must be of pristine quality. The principal point
source factors responsible for harvest limitations for
shellfish growing areas  are wastewater treatment
plants  and combined  sewer overflows, boating
activities and marinas, industrial facilities, and the
direct discharge  of untreated sewage.  Nonpoint
source factors are urban runoff, malfunctioning on-
site septic systems, agricultural and feedlot runoff,
and wildlife. These sources are generally consistent
with the information reported to the National Oceanic
and  Atmospheric  Administration  in the   1995
National Shellfish Register and in the Environmental
Protection Agency's 1998 National Water Quality
Inventory Report to Congress. According to the EPA
Report,  these  sources have  resulted in shellfish
harvesting criteria not being met in 27% of surveyed
state waters.

Shellfish Projects and  the  Clean Water  State
Revolving Fund
The Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF)
programs in every state and Puerto Rico work like
banks. Federal and state contributions are used to
capitalize or set up the programs.  These  assets, in
turn, are used to  make low or no-interest loans for
important water quality proj ects. Funds are repaid to
the CWSRF's over terms as long as twenty years.
Repaid funds are then recycled to fund other quality
projects. These CWSRF resources can help augment
the financial resources currently available to fund the
following   types  of  shellfish   restoration  and
remediation projects:

       / Urban runoff
       / Wastewater treatment plants and
           combined sewer overflows
       / Nonpoint agricultural runoff
       / Malfunctioning septic systems
       / Pumpout stations for marinas and boating
          facilities
                          / Restoration of shellfish habitat including
                             reef structure

                   Capacity of the CWSRF
                   JN ationally, the CWSRF has in excess of $30 billion in
                   assets (includes loans already made and current funds
                   available to make loans).  Currently, the CWSRF is
                   funding approximately  $3 billion in water quality
                   projects each year.
                     Since 1989, the CWSF program has funded over
                     1200 nonpoint source projects, investing more
                     than $840 million to clean up polluted runoff.
                   Getting a Project Funded
                   The Clean Water Act (CWA) of 1987 authorized the
                   CWSRF to  fund publicly  owned  treatment works
                   (§212),  nonpoint source (§319), and estuary (§320)
                   projects. As stipulated in §603(c) of the CWA, §212
                   projects must be publicly owned to receive CWSRF
                   funds. Nonpoint and estuary projects, however, do not
                   have this restriction.  Included in a long list of eligible
                   CWSRF loan recipients for NPS and estuary projects
                   are  community groups,  individuals,  agricultural
                   associations  and nonprofit  organizations.  Since the
                   program is managed by the states, project funding
                   varies according to the priorities, policies,  and laws
                   within each state. Eligible applicants also vary by state.
                   Contact  your state's  CWSRF, NPS,  or  Estuary
                   program for details (see end of next page).

                   Sources of Loan Repayment
                   liacli state must approve a source of loan repayment as
                   part  of the application process.  Though finding a
                   source of repayment may prove challenging, it does not
                   have to be  unnecessarily  so.   Many users  of the
                   CWSRF have demonstrated a high degree of creativity
                   in identifying sources of loan repayment.  The sources
                   of repayment need not come from the project itself.
                   Some possibilities include:
                           • Fees paid by developers on other lands
                           • Recreational fees (fishing licenses, park
                           entrance fees)

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       Stormwater management fees
       Wastewater user charges
       Donations or dues made to nonprofit
       groups and associations
Learning by Example
 1 he City of Port Townsend, Washington used a
$500,000 loan from the CWSRF to purchase the
Winona Wetland  and safeguard valuable shellfish
beds.  The  CWSRF funds will be  used for land
acquisition  and related  activities  to preserve the
Winona Wetland, its buffers, and the critical drainage
corridor between Winona Wetland and the Chinese
Gardens  Lagoon.  This wetland is part of a larger
system of wetlands discharging into Puget Sound.
Des Moines, Washington used a $223,000 loan
from the  CWSRF to purchase a badly degraded
wetland area and to prepare a design  of a sediment
trap/pond facility.  The project will serve a dual
purpose of providing flood protection by containing
Stormwater runoff, and acting as a preliminary filter
by removing suspended solids.   The removal  of
sediment and heavy metals will be  protective  of
shellfish in Puget Sound.
 1 he following are examples  of shellfish projects,
that while funded as grants under Section 319, would
be potentially eligible for loans from the CWSRF.

 1 he town of Harwich, Massachusetts is using a
Section 319 CWA grant for remediation of a storm
drain at the  town wharf.   The  project will
demonstrate the use of the "Storm Treat Systems"
(mention of  this  technology  does  not  imply
endorsement by EPA)  remediation  technology  to
restore shellfish beds in a coastal environment.
In Port Fourchon, Louisiana,  Louisiana State
University  utilized an innovative natural sand/soil
bed in an upwelling injection field to remove fecal
coliforms and reduce the environmental impact  of
wastewater.  The effluent had been  threatening local
oyster beds.
 1 he Three Rivers  RC & D Council, Inc. has
installed constructed wetlands as an alternative to the
conventional septic  tank  system to  address the
pollution of nearby shellfish beds in Escambia Bay,
Florida.     The  wetlands   replace   improperly
functioning septic systems and provide an alternative
where soil conditions cannot support septic systems.
A rock and reed filter beds system with chlorination
was  utilized by the Jackson County  Board  of
Supervisors in the Bangs Lake region of Mississippi to
retrofit  conventional  on-site  septic  tanks.    The
malfunctioning sewage system had been contributing to
the fecal coliform levels responsible for the closure of
local shellfish growing waters.

Challenges Ahead
JiPA has been encouraging the states to open their
CWSRF's  to  the  widest variety  of water quality
projects, while addressing high priority  projects in
targeted watersheds.  Improvements in water quality,
based on the filtering capacity of shellfish, may justify
the use of funding shellfish restoration projects under
Section 319. Use of CWSRF funds to move the outfall
of treatment plants from shellfish growing areas to less
threatening sites also has potential. Those interested in
cleaning up polluted runoff  should  seek out their
CWSRF programs, gain an understanding of how their
state program works, and participate in the annual
process that determines which projects are funded.

For more information on the CWSRF, or for a
program representative in your state, please
contact:

The Clean Water State Revolving Fund Branch
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW (Mail Code 4204)
Washington D.C. 20460
Phone: (202) 260-7359 Fax: (202) 260-1827
Internet: http://www.epa.gov/OWM
             Clean Water
             State Revolving Fund

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