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     The  Federal Government's  water pollution control program is carried on by the Depart-
ment of  Health,  Education, and  Welfare  under  authority  of  the  Federal Water Pollution
Control Act, (33 U.S.C. 466 et. seq.). The program is administered in the Midwest by the
Department's  Region V office, which  is located  in Chicago,  Illinois.  This office serves the
States of  Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin.
     The  Federal water pollution  control program is a cooperative  one,  involving the closest
coordination with interstate, state  and local agencies. It provides both technical and financial
assistance  to  states and  local  agencies,  develops  comprehensive water  quality management
programs, supports basic  and  operational  research  and  employs enforcement measures, in
situations where  these are needed. A major activity of the Region V office at the present time
is  the  administration of grants for water  pollution abatement.

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                Protecting
                WATER QUALITY
                in the Midwest
    I r i»i
       A Report on Water Pollution Control Activities in Region V, Division

       of Water Supply arid Pollution Control, Public Health Service
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                  June 1963
       U. S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE
                Public Health Service
                  Region V
           433 West VanBuren Street, Chicago 7, Illinois

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                               WATER RESOURCES IN REGION V

     The States  of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin encompass one of the richest water
areas in the world.  On its borders are the greatest source of fresh water anywhere, the Great Lakes, plus
the Ohio River and  the upper Mississippi River.

     Even though these  five  states  possess  these  enormous  fresh  water resources, the Midwest  is not
immune to the threat of a water shortage.  If this comes,  it will not be  a  shortage of water  itself, but
of clean water.
NEED FOR  A CLEAN  WATER PROGRAM

  The  public has been  prone to assume  that  water,
the natural  resource most taken for granted, will  be
available for use forever.  This assumption is subject to
serious question when one considers that today  water
has become the  Nation's  Number One natural resource
concern.  Pollution,  resulting from  the  ever-expanding
economy and population,  demands the development  of
an effective program for  water quality management.

  The danger signs in the Midwest are already evident —
• The entire flow  of a major river is used and re-
  used almost four times before a large metropoli-
  tan center takes its share for water supply.
• Hundreds  of  miles of another boundary  water
  have had serious taste and odor problems which
  have tainted  fish flesh and affected municipal
  water  supplies.
• Diversion of lake water is  the  subject of major
  litigation  among the various Lake States.
• In the five states of Region  V, $140 million is the
  indicated  need to build municipal waste treatment
  plants.

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CONTROLLING  POLLUTION BY
BUILDING TREATMENT PLANTS

  The building of municipal and industrial  waste treat-
ment works  is  one of  the most  important  elements in
the effective control of water quality. Congress, in pass-
ing the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, recognized
this fact by providing for  Federal grants to assist muni-
cipalities in financing the construction  of  local  sewage
treatment work. This act provides individual grants up to
30^ of eligible project  costs with a maximum grant of
$600,000 for any single project.  (The  recently  passed
Accelerated  Public  Works Act provides grants up  to
50% of eligible costs for projects in economically  de-
pressed areas.)

  Fiscal  Year 1963  in  Region  V was  the  most active
year since the sewage treatment works construction pro-
gram was started in  1956.  Grant offers, contract awards,
sewage treatment  plants placed in operation, and miles
of stream improvement all  reached record high levels.

  A summary of all grants made during  the Fiscal Year
1963 up to  April 4,  1963 is given in the  following table.


                                                                                       6f T J6


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         GRANTS TO MUNICIPALITIES DURING FISCAL  YEAR  1963
             FOR  SEWAGE TREATMENT WORKS  IN  REGION  V
STATES
ILLINOIS
INDIANA
MICHIGAN
OHIO
WISCONSIN
REGION V TOTALS
PROJECTS
60
22
24
27
39
172
ELIGIBLE PROJECT
COSTS
$14,255,110.09
11,338,620.18
24,058,669.82
15,138,782.66
5,922,815.11
$70,713,997.86
FEDERAL GRANT
OFFER
$ 4,759,602.28
2,380,929.65
9,124,534.63
3,817,343.80
1,695,301.83
$21,777,712.19
                                                                              T
   Accelerated Public Works supplemental funds appro-
priated by Congress for Fiscal Year 1963, added to the
original appropriations, probably  will result in an esti-
mated total of 285  grants tendered.  These grants will
generate almost  $96 million in eligible project construc-
tion costs.

  During the fiscal year, there have been an average of
300 active projects; 200 field  payment inspections;  85
sewage plants placed in operation; and over 1200 miles
of stream improvement. The growth  of the program in
terms  of funds and  sewage treatment works projects is
illustrated in the following graph.
       SEWAGE TREATMENT WORKS CONSTRUCTION GRANTS PROGRAM IN REGION V
                 FROM 1956-1963  SHOWING  FISCAL YEAR APPROPRIATIONS
                                AND NUMBER OF PROJECTS
      1963
      1962
 Average
 for 5 years
 (1956-1961)
                             $31,000,000 Est.
                            285 Projects Est.
                                      \  Reflects increase
                                      \  under Public Works
                                      (  Acceleration Act
                                                                        of 1962
     $10,980,000
     98 Projects
$6,820.000
                                                  Reflects 1961 amendment to Act
                              p „      „     ,
                 federal Water Pollution Control
80 Projects  (              Act of 1956

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BASIC  DATA —
STUDIES — PLANS
                                                                         """•I
   The best  approach to  any major problem  is to learn
as much as possible about the subject.  Basic data collec-
tion is the fundamental operation for any water pollution
control program.  Studies  provide  specific information
for a wide variety of needs in  enforcement or planning
comprehensive water quality programs.  Such programs
serve as flexible tools to  make the maximum  use  of our
water resources.

   Basic  data  programs in Region  V  include not only
inventories of water supplies and municipal  and  indus-
trial waste treatment facilities  in each  State, but  also
water quality  data on a  continuing basis from 17 stra-
tegically located sampling stations in Region  V.  These
stations are part of the National Water Quality Network,
which provides long-term quality trends for the Nation's
major  watersheds.

   Basic information on the effects  of recreational uses
on the water quality of an  impounded water supply  is
the subject  of special studies on reservoirs  near Indi-
anapolis and  Bloomington,  Indiana.
INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION
  International treaty  obligations  on  boundary waters
are exercised through  the  International  Joint Commis-
sion.  The Public Health Service mans a field unit located
at Detroit, Michigan, which is engaged in sampling and
monitoring the international  boundary  waters  in  this
area.  Reports are made twice yearly to the Commission's
Technical Advisory Board  on  Control  of  Pollution of
Boundary Waters.

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l;fJ*ll?f/J:
l/ifffe**'-',,,
  In the winter of 1962-1963. the e\es  of  the  Nation
were focused on the upper Mississippi River where major
soybean and petroleum  oil  spills fouled over 130 miles
of stream, killing or disabling thousands  of  ducks. The
Governors  of  the  States of  Minnesota and  Wisconsin
requested  and  received  assistance from the  Department
and  a  technical team  surveyed the stretch  and made
recommendations for immediate and long-term corrective
measures.
                                                                                   INDUSTRIAL WASTES
  A major pollution study now underway is the Detroit
River-Lake Erie Project which was established last year
as the result of a  joint Federal-State Enforcement Con-
ference on  pollution  of  the  navigable  waters of the
Detroit River, Lake Erie and their tributaries within the
State of Michigan.

  As a measure of activity, some 12,000 samples of all
types have been collected and over 50,000 analyses have
been made since the Project's inception last summer. The
information   gathered  will  be  used to  determine the
extent of  pollution, identify principal sources of pollu-
tion, determine the effect of this pollution on water uses,
and to develop a program for improving water quality.
                                                                                   DETROIT  RIVER-
                                                                                   LAKE  ERIE  PROJECT

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 GREAT  LAKES-ILLINOIS RIVER BASINS  PROJECT
  Perhaps the most significant and widely known water
pollution  abatement  study  undertaken  by  the  Public
Health  Service  is the Great  Lakes and Illinois  River
Basins Project.  This is a  7-year $13  million compre-
hensive water quality management program specifically
authorized by the Federal Water  Pollution Control  Act
for  those  watersheds.

  Work  on the Illinois  River Basin is esentially com-
plete. A total of over  12,000 samples have been collected
at the 65  stations on this  watershed  and  over  90,000
analyses have been made.  Very specialized and sophis-
ticated techniques and equipment  have  been used, such
as continuous dissolved oxygen recorders,  carbon filters
to gather  organic  materials,  and  intensive industrial
waste sampling  programs.  Additionally, many special
studies have been made and others are  in progress now.
These studies include  a plankton  algae  study and enter-
ovirus studies.

  This activity has produced a great mass of data which
is analyzed through the  use of digital  computers.  The
results are now being evaluated by the various scientific
specialists on the Project staff.

  The work done thus  far  on the Illinois  River Basin
has formed a base line for a major study of Lake Michi-
gan  which is now underway. During the past  year,
almost  15,000  samples from  474 stations in the Lake
were  collected.  Some 400,000 analyses were made  on
these  samples by the end of Fiscal Year 1963.

   To  study  the  Lake, a navy of ten  large specially-
equipped  boats  were used.  Four  of these boats, in ad-
dition to  collecting  water  and  bottom  samples, were
used to set out and service meters, which are measuring
the currents  in  the Lake in  order  to  determine waste
dispersion patterns. To date,  12  stations involving  40
current  meters have been placed.   Several meters have
been  retrieved and data has  been  obtained  from  the
memory systems in the individual meter capsules.

   Water quality management reports are being prepared
for each  basin,  and in addition, a series of special re-
ports  have already  been published and  submitted to the
Justice  Department for use  in the  Supreme Court Hear-
ings  on Lake Michigan Diversion at  Chicago.

   Although major emphasis is currently on Lake Michi-
gan,  the  development of a water  quality management
program  for  Lake  Erie is  already  underway.  A field
office  and  laboratory has been established at Cleveland,
Ohio  and  sampling was begun on the  Lake this  spring.
The other Great Lakes will each in turn be programmed.
The present  plan is to proceed from Lake Erie to Lake
Ontario to Lake Huron, and  finally to Lake  Superior.
                                                       I   ..

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        APPLIED  RESEARCH  FOR  WATER  POLLUTION  CONTROL
          The Regional Program is making significant applied
        research contributions. Enterovirus studies on the Illinois
        River, pesticides studies in Michigan, and  field  testing
        of such sophisticated  bacteriological indicators  of pollu-
        tion as fecal streptococcus and fecal coliforms are a few
        examples of activities now being carried on. This is  in
        addition to the basic research program in water  pollution
        control underway at the  Public  Health Service's Robert
 \. Taft Sanitary Engineering Center in Cincinnati and
on contract with various  universities, colleges,  and re-
search establishments throughout the country.
  A  further  indication  of the importance of scientific
studies in this Region was emphasized with the announce-
ment  in January by the Secretary of Health, Education
and Welfare that Ann Arbor, Michigan had been selected
as the site  of a  Regional Water Quality Laboratory.
••*»

                                                               1


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ENFORCING  POLLITION CONTROL
  Although main  pollution situations can  lie resolved
through  informal  means, in certain instances a  formal
enforcement  action  is the  only  recourse.  Enforcement
activity in Region V involves such major metropolitan
areas as  Detroit and St. Louis with water resources for a
total of almost 6  million people being directly affected.

  Some  20  actions  have  been taken  throughout  the
country under the provisions of Section 8 of the Federal
Water Pollution  Control  Act,  as  amended.  Both in-
terstate and  navigable  waters are  included  within  the
definition of this  article.  In  addition, Section 9 of the
Act includes  specific reference to the Secretary's respon-
sibility to cite Federal Agencies, having jurisdiction  over
installations causing pollution, in any summary of a  con-
ference pursuant to interstate or navigable stream action.

  To date, three  enforcement actions—all in  the  con-
ference stage—have  been called in this Region.  Progress
in pollution abatement  has been significant where these
actions have  been  taken.
  • The Mississippi River and the St. Louis metropolitan
    area in Missouri and Illinois.

  • The Mississippi  River  and  the  Clinton, Iowa and
    Quad  Cities area in Iov\a and Illinois.

  • The Detroit River  - Western Lake  Erie  and  the
    Detroit metropolitan area in Michigan.

  In  both  Mississippi  River actions, progress may  be
measured in the millions of dollars earmarked for treat-
ment  plant construction—$95 million in  St. Louis—$6
million  in  Clinton. Iowa. While the  Detroit River-Lake
Erie action is under  intensive study, it is becoming ap-
parent that the combined efforts  of the various agencies
involved are producing results with significant improve-
ment  noted- in water  quality  for critical  areas.

  Of  2200 Federal installations  located in  the Region,
211 discharge treated or untreated wastes into the surface
streams.  An evaluation  program is underway for all such
installations.

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 THE  CITIZENS  ROLE
   During the past year, there has been much evidence of
a growing public concern in the Mid-West with problems
of water quality.  Civic, women's, and conservation groups
in many communities have shown their determination to
stand behind local and state  water pollution control pro-
grams and to  support them.

   An outstanding example of citizen interest was  a TV
documentary.  "The  Majestic Sea," a production of the
local CBS outlet in  Chicago.  This 30-minute film  high-
lighted  the  water  problems  in the Chicago area.  It
utilized to a significant  degree  on-camera comments by
Public  Health  Service representatives.  A similar  docu-
mentary for the Detroit Metropolitan Area is presently
being developed by  the  local CBS-TV  outlet  in  Detroit
and is  expected  to report in depth on the activities  of
the Detroit River-Lake Erie Project.

   In like fashion, several articles have appeared on the
national scene one of them was  in the Saturday Evening
Post which published, "The Great Chicago Water Steal."
A widely reprinted article, "Aerial Photos—New Weapon
Against  Pollution" appeared in Chemical Engineering.
In each,  the activities of the Regional program were re-
viewed at length.
  Newspapers have also given much coverage to various
aspects  of water  pollution abatement, particularly the
Great Lakes and Illinois River Basins Project.  A note-
worthy example was an article by Russell Lynch  of the
Milwaukee Journal  which  was  reprinted and  has  re-
ceived wide distribution.

  Personal contacts are made through  presentation of
prepared talks  and films by various staff members to a
great variety of organizations interested in the  cause of
clean water. These presentations  have been made  to na-
tional conventions such as  the American Society of Civil
Engineers and the National Conference of Plant Mainte-
nance Engineers and to State, Regional and local meetings
of such groups as the Illinois Public Health Association.
and the Izaak  Walton League of America.  Regional staff
personnel have participated in sewage treatment  works
dedications  and  appeared  before local  service groups
like Lions and Kiwanis Clubs to encourage the citizens
interest in clean water.

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     Over 36,000,000 persons live in the five  mid\\estern  States of Illinois,  Indiana, Ohio,
Michigan, and Wisconsin. However, in 1962 it took 11-year old  Lisa Funsten  of Wilmington,
Illinois to make the most  persuasive, most telling appeal for water pollution abatement and for
the protection of Mid-Western waters.

     In a letter written to President Kennedy, which was  widely  reprinted  by  news  services,
young Miss Funsten wrote about the Kankakee River:

               "/ would  like to tell you about our river.  We live on it and  it's a
            nice river, but it's pretty dirty.  Nobody respects it.  They throw their
            garbage in the river and everything. I ivould like to know if you would
            talk to somebody to clean it."

     Miss Funsten's letter received  a quick reply from H. W. Poston, Regional  Program Direc-
tor of the Public Health Service's water pollution control  program.  "The Federal  govern-
ment and the  State of Illinois," Mr. Poston wrote, "shares Lisa's  interest in the Kankakee and
in clean water.  The Kankakee is included in  one of the principal water quality studies.  The
results of this study will  assist the  State of Illinois in developing the best possible program for
users of the Kankakee River. Your State has taken an active interest in the quality of the Kan-
kakee  River and is taking steps to enforce the clean-up of the river."
GPO 802-432-2

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                       \s
                         ^\<  x\,
                        • •<,-*>' a. V
                                                                   Pioneer Press
                                                                  Washington Bureau   \
                                                                WASHINGTON-A federal
                                                                      ,   .  __.;ii v» a a i n
                           X*
                    Ul  TO  KEEP
                          iE
EPORT CITES  PR    __
OLLUTION FOR  MSD i, M** «-i
)EATH OF FISH
3alth  Service Says

  7 Million Killed

Washington, May 27 (UPD —
we than 7 million fish were
led last year by factory and
.y wastes  and  agricultural
isons dumped  into the na-
m's rivers and lakes, the pub-
 health service  reported to-
y-
Based on  reports from 36
jtes and the district of Co-
Tibia, the service said about
e-fourth of those killed were
me fish, two-thirds were for-
e fish,  and one-tenth were
ish fish.
/lost of the 7,118,000  fish
;re poisoned in rivers, the
rvice said. It blamed domes-
•  sewage  for  the greatest
mber of deaths. The service
id 53 per cent  of the con-
mination in lakes and rivers
me from  factories, 45 per
nt from local communities.
   Chief Cause in 1961   ^
Agricultural poi
chemical
:o a
                                                              iIlsHc^""" 	
                                                              work on the upper Mississippi
                                                                 r today investigating the
                                                                 P°llution whictl has killed
                                                              thousands of ducks.
                                                                The team-composed of a
                                                              public health  service sci»~
                                                              tist,  two  engine**-
                                                              biologist--"
                                                                     M
                       ties for  Delay Are
                       Cited.
                                                                                                 ace
 The  Metropolitan  S^
trict is making satisfail
gress in its Mississippi I
lution  abatement proi'
the Federal govern,
watch  the project clos
sure its completion if
Public Health  Servi(jj
»oid today.       ,,
 Peter Kuh, attorne; Except
senvec's chief  enforcmarks
ticer,  told a meetings
health and pollution ira
and MSD officials
could  expect continue^,^
scrutiny because it is '
city in the nation witho
treatment facilities.
 Kuh, of Washington, said h
MSD  had made "real progress
to  date. He cautioned, however
that because national water re-
sources could  reach a critical
state  by 1980,  the Government
is  prepared to  take punitive ac-j
tion in any of 18 areas subject JnJj-
the  Federal  Water  " ""~
Area's   Anti-Pollution
                      Meet   U.  S.  Goa
                                    Eff or
                                                            Reports from area official
                                                                                    'ton Box Board Co. is p
                                                                                    reject to reduce solids
                                                                                    Vent and cut flow by
                                                                                      Morton said, and a
                                                                                       under way to prep.
                                                                                       '{V,of the works. Co
                                                                                       Vstart  this fall,
                     X""lrnl Act    '    ..    NGO>V'      r
                     U^M^&rf^
                        \\o\v      f ?
                                          .ffe
                                          s&2^
                                                    thieson Chemical
                                                    d a treatment p
                                                       Mill plant,
                                                       y of reduct
                                                      ste discharge
                                                      5t property.
                                                      \Vs Collection
                                                       \ ion to the
                                                        'rn in East
                                                          by Olin

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