905R77113
        IMVIRONMEIMT MIDWEST
  Iff
•^- xv
              £*M

-------
         jllo, from the 650 people who work for you at the Midwest Office
     of U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
       The Midwest  Office works to protect environmental quality in six
     states—Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin.
     That's a big part of America—containing one fifth  of  the nation's
     population and one fourth of its manufacturing activity.
       This  is  the  fourth edition  of "Together"—our  annual  report.
     It covers 1976-1977, years marked by some real progress in cleaning
     up the  air and  water, but also marked  by new  problems such as
     toxic substances, large spills, some  backlash to environmental  pro-
  ,   grams and final chapters in some large pollution cases like Reserve
     Mining and U.S. Steel Gary.
       The report you are reading  is  something  of a first. It is the first
     report to try and summarize environmental quality here in the Mid-
* ,   wesj, and the issues we are tackling.
 "^   Together^", is divided  into two sections. Part  I describes
 %-Jkipiental quality here while Part II tells you how Region V is organized.
       Thank you.

                     *%*'
                     *f Xl
                     1 WP;

-------
ENVIRONMENTAL  QUALITY  REVIEW
  Imagine driving down the highway and seeing bill-
boards with the ominous warning "Breathing May Be
Hazardous to Your Health". It sounds far-fetched,
but  might well  come to pass in a futuristic society
were it  not for the efforts by EPA to  clean up the
nation's air.
  Our air is polluted. For years we've stood idly by,
ignoring  the noxious gases, toxic substances, and
particulates released in the name of "progress".
  What's so serious about air pollution? Consider the
health effects.  Possible increases in  cancer, lead
poisoning, and asthma are Just a few of the problems.
There are six major pollutants—each with its own list
of associated health drawbacks.

             The Pollutants...

SULFUR OXIDES: Most are produced through com-
bustion  of coal or fuel oil. Sulfur oxides leave their
mark through the discoloration  of plants, they eat
away at iron and steel, and can dissolve marble.
When it comes  to the human body, sulfur oxides can
aggravate asthma, lung and heart disease, and cause
reduced lung function in children.
TOTAL SUSPENDED PARTICULATES: This category
is a catch-all for any particle in the air including soot,
mists,  sprays, dust, dirt  and  toxic substances. Re-
lated health  effects are  wide-ranging. Inhalation of
lead particles can cause  lead  poisoning; particulates
may weaken the body's  resistance to infection and
cause  injury to the linings  of the lungs and throat.
Dust and mists can prove irritating to the eyes.

CARBON MONOXIDE: A tasteless,  odorless, colorless
gas, carbon  monoxide is spewed forth into the en-
vironment  by a familiar culprit—the automobile. Ex-
posure to  small amounts can result in fatigue, diz-
ziness  and headaches. As  it inhibits the ability of
oxygen to enter the blood, exposure to large amounts
of carbon  monoxide can be fatal. Persons suffering
from  lung  disease, anemia, or cerebral-vascular
disease should avoid contact with carbon monoxide
whenever possible.

PHOTOCHEMICAL  OXIDANTS: These pollutants are
secondary in nature. They are the result of chemical
reactions  that  occur when  other  pollutants are
exposed to sunlight. Smog is produced in this fashion.
                                                                                        1

-------
                                                                     SULFUR DIOXIDE
      QAir Quality Maintenance Areas
      (by county)
Air Quality Maintenance Areas (AQMA's)
are areas that have been identified by        „» , „  _
the states, and designated by EPA, which,   \JLUNOIS
due to current air quality and/or projected
growth rate, may'have the potential for
exceeding any National Ambient Air
Quality Standard in the future.
      Non-attainment Areas (by county)
Non-attainment Areas are areas where air
quality monitoring data or modeling results
indicate that the air quality standards are
exceeded. Also, some additional areas
where violations of the air quality standards
are suspected have been identified as non-
attainment areas to indicate the need for
further analysis.
Other photochemical oxidants include formaldehyde,
nitrogen peroxide and peroxyacetyl nitrate.
  Ozone is a  constituent  of photochemical smog.
Ozone is  currently the subject  of  intensive studies
regarding  health effects.  It  is believed that exposure
to ozone results in severe respiratory irritation. Other
photochemical  oxidants are given credit for causing
headaches,  coughing,  chest  pains, and  triggering
asthma.
NITROGEN OXIDES: Nitrogen oxides are formed in
high-temperature  combustion  processes  such  as
electrical power plants. Exposure  is linked with  in-
hibiting vegetation  growth and serious respiratory
problems. High concentrations may prove fatal.

HYDROCARBONS: Hydrocarbons are found in auto
emissions and are also formed  from the evaporation
of industrial  solvents  found  in painting and dry-

-------
                                       TOTAL SUSPENDED  PARTICULATES
      Air Quality Maintenance Areas
      (by county)
 Air Quality Maintenance Areas (AQMA's) ^Jns
 are areas that have been identified by
 the states, and designated by EPA, which,
 due to current air quality and/or projected
 growth rate, may have the potential for
 exceeding any National Ambient Air
 Quality Standard in the future.
      Non-attainment Areas (by county)
Non-attainment Areas are areas where air
quality monitoring data or mode/ing results
indicate that the air quality standards are
exceeded. Also, some additional areas
where violations of the air quality standards
are suspected have been identified as non-
attainment areas to indicate the need for
further analysis.
cleaning  processes.  While  no adverse  affects  are
directly  related  to  hydrocarbons,  they  react  under
light to form photochemical oxidants.

           Region V and Clean Air

  As specified in the Clean Air Act Amendments of
1970,  all states were  required  to develop and imple-
ment specific  programs for achieving  clean air stan-
dards set  by  EPA. EPA approved all state program
plans but encountered a snag in Ohio where the pro-
posed plan was deficient in the area  of sulfur oxides.
EPA developed regulations  to compensate for the
deficiency  and  these were  adopted  in  August of
1976. Although the regulations resulted in  a program
plan that  demands  the  least  amount of pollution
reduction  consistent  with maintaining public health
standards,  immediate reaction  by  utilities and in-

-------
dustnes was far from  favorable. Over 35 utilities and
industries brought  charges  against EPA. Most  of
the furor is over the use of scrubbers and other control
techniques. Scrubbers are expensive pollution con-
trol devices which reduce  the amount of sulfur oxide
emitted through  the  burning of  high  sulfur  coal.
The charges  are under review by the  6th U.S. Cir-
cuit Court of Appeals.
  If technology has  its way, the next decade will
bring  an effective, yet inexpensive replacement for
scrubbers. Scientists at the University of Tennessee's
Space Institute announced the development of an ef-
ficient electrical generating process which  burns high
sulfur coal while producing  a minimum of pollution.
Magnetohydrodynamics is the name of the process
which catches 95% of the  sulfur oxides without  using
costly scrubbers. Advocates of the process say such
plants will be able to produce 50% more power than
conventional plants and the  process will be commer-
cially available by 1985 or 1990.
  Meanwhile Region V reports a decrease in sulfur
oxide and  particulate  levels  in several  metropolitan
areas. In Chicago particulate levels dropped from 153
micrograms per cubic meter  in  1975 to 148 micro-
grams per cubic meter in 1976.  Sulfur oxide levels
dropped from  .031 parts per million  to  .019  parts
per million  in  1976.  The national standard  is .03
parts  per million. Other cities recording decreasing
sulfur oxide and particulate  trends included Detroit
and Cincinnati.

      Ozone Alley, Fluorocarbons, and
                  All of  Us...

  One of the  most persistent and controversial air
problems  remains the threat of ozone. Ozone is the
focal  point for two environmental  issues. EPA, to-
gether with the Food and Drug Administration and the
Consumers Product Safety Commission, has Imposed
a ban on all fluorocarbon sprays  by April 15, 1979.
It is believed that the use of fluorocarbons depletes
the ozone layer—a protective layer of air in the upper
atmosphere surrounding  the earth which  screens
out ultraviolet rays. Destruction  or depletion of the
ozone layer would result  in  a significant increase in
skin cancers throughout the world. The new ban will
affect approximately  one billion pressurized spray
containers manufactured in the United States.
  Looking at ozone in Region V, the amount of ozone
found in both our  urban and rural areas  has risen
sharply. By  mid-June, 1977, Chicago  had received
its fourth ozone advisory of the year, and people with
cardiac  problems were being advised to avoid stren-
uous activity  and remain indoors. The first alert, be-
ginning  in  May  and  extending  into June, was the
longest  advisory  in Illinois history, lasting 23  days.
  The  harmful ozone in  the lower atmosphere  is
formed  from hydrocarbon emissions which  interact
with sunlight. Layers of ozone tend to build-up in the
cities although the problem also extends (to a lesser
degree) out  to rural communities. The Chicago lake-
front area extending  to  Waukegan was nicknamed
"Ozone Alley."
  EPA is working with the six states in Region V  to
tackle  the  ozone  problem  and develop  a feasible
solution. All  Region V states have ozone levels over
the health standard, and in some areas the ozone level
has risen to three times the health  standard. The key
to reducing  the problem  is  to reduce  hydrocarbon
emissions from motor vehicles and industry.  The six
states and EPA are developing a solution to the prob-
lem  which should  be proposed in 1978. Possible
strategies include emission testing of automobiles and
trucks, controls on numerous industries, and the in-
creased use of mass transit.
             Chicago and  Cincinnati  already have
auto emission testing programs. Chicago's voluntary
testing  screens  700 cars per day at  six  stationary
and 10  mobile testing units, but in order  to screen
all the city's cars, a mandatory program would need
to process 4000 cars per day. EPA feels that if such
a  program  became  mandatory, exhaust  pollutants
could be reduced by 30-50% over a five year period.
  At the national level, the crackdown on  auto emis-
sions has resulted in direct confrontation with the
auto industry. EPA is currently  seeking  the authority
to impose a penalty of $65 to $100 per car, beginning
in 1983 on  new  cars which will not meet nitrogen
oxide standards in effect at that time. The major auto-
motive  manufacturers have said  that the  recom-
mendation is too stringent and  will  result in inflation,
lost jobs, and the waste of billions of gallons of gaso-
line each year. The controversy rages on, with EPA
holding firm on a policy on  pollution control through
auto efficiency.
   EPA  is not only concerned  with  eliminating pol-
lutants,  but also with maintaining pollution free areas.
EPA's  policy, known as emission  offset, advocates
restricting industrial polluters from  building in  areas
where the air pollution level is already in violation  of
standards. Another EPA requirement focuses on the
prevention  of significant deterioration  of air  quality
in areas with cleaner  air. Sources are restricted from
expanding in those areas where it is known that the  air
quality will deteriorate as a result of the action. While
this new area of  responsibility causes  many  federal-
state  management questions, the  end result  will  be
cleaner air for us all.

-------
N
OISE
  A  passing  freight  train,  blaring  television  set,
revved-up car, or neighbor's lawnmower—almost dai-
ly each one of us is exposed to sounds that are loud-
er than what we consider comfortable. When sounds
pass the comfort  threshold and  interfere with com-
munication, we usually think of them as "noise."
  Noise is a subtle, yet serious pollutant.  Over 14
million Americans  are exposed to  high  noise levels
from trucks, planes, motorcycles, stereos, lawnmowers,
and  kitchen appliances.  On-the-job  conditions can
pose an additional  threat with an estimated 15 million
people exposed to dangerous noise levels  in con-
junction with their work.
  EPA began fighting noise pollution in 1972 with the
passage of the Noise Control Act.  All regions received
instructions  to begin  working  directly  with  com-
munities in an effort to aid towns in the development
of noise pollution  workshops which serve to instruct
municipal  officials  on noise pollution ordinance devel-
opment, monitoring devices, and  enforcement strate-
gies. EPA's goal is to promote cooperation and un-
derstanding  between towns and cities  so that  they
may  develop compatible noise ordinances.  An ex-
cellent  example   of  inter-community   cooperation
is demonstrated by St. Francis and West Allis, Wis-
consin. Town leaders in West  Allis are helping offi-
cials in St. Francis design their noise pollution con-
trol  ordinance so it will be compatible with the exist-
ing regulations in West Allis.
  Citizens, too, are  showing  an increased  interest
in the problems of noise pollution. In a unique rul-
                                                ing in Ferndale Heights, Illinois, citizens were given
                                                the right to report noise pollution violations and in
                                                lieu of proper monitoring equipment, the complainant's
                                                testimony is sufficient to prove a violation. If measure-
                                                ments are  taken, they  must show that the numerical
                                                limits are exceeded to prove a violation.
                                                  Currently,  nearly 20 million Americans have suf-
                                                fered some type of hearing loss. At one corporation
                                                in Illinois,  250 workers filed worker's  compensation
                                                complaints for partial  and  total hearing  losses re-
                                                ceived while working in the company foundry, assem-
                                                bly line, and testing rooms.
                                                  Transportation Modes — Environmental
                                                                 Headaches
                                                 Noise pollution is a general area, but it is possible
                                               to address a few of the specifics. The noise generated
                                               by traffic is generally considered  one  of the major
                                               offenders. EPA operates the U.S. Noise Enforcement
                                               Facility in Sandusky, Ohio to test newly manufactured
                                               trucks and  air compressors to make sure they con-
                                               form to strigent EPA  standards. New EPA standards
                                               which will be effective  January 1, 1978, will require
                                               new medium and heavy trucks  not to exceed a noise
                                               level of  83 decibels  at 50  feet. By  1982, the noise
                                               level must be  reduced to 80 decibels. EPA's aim is to
                                               reduce truck noise by 45%.
                                                 Individual communities tackle traffic noise in various
                                               manners, some of which are quite innovative as well

-------
                                                     as  practical.  Detroit,  Michigan  is  handling  traffic
                                                     noise  pollution through better construction practices.
                                                     City highways are being excavated below grade-level
                                                     and landscaped in an attempt to block noise naturally.
                                                       Officials in  Gahanna, Ohio used a more forceful
                                                     tactic, threatening to close down a portion of the Outer-
                                                     belt Highway unless a noise barrier was constructed.
                                                     The city claimed  the state  promised them the noise
                                                     barrier when permission for construction was granted
                                                     in  1966. The  Department  of  Transportation  recently
                                                     promised Gahanna that construction of the 3,700-
                                                     foot concrete  noise barrier will  be completed by the
                                                     end of November  1977. Outerbelt traffic noise will
                                                     be reduced 10 decibels as a result of the barrier—
                                                     the first of its kind in the state.
                                                       Airport noise  is another  area  of vital  concern.
                                                     Far too often, the roar of jets overhead makes for mis-
                                                     erable living conditions for residents of areas  near
                                                     airports. In Region V the worst offender  is O'Hare In-
                                                     ternational Airport. Sound  levels at O'Hare frequently
                                                     measure over 90  decibels. Homeowners  near the air-
                                                     port have flooded  the  management with letters  of
                                                     complaint and their problem is so serious that sever-
                                                     al residential areas are now ineligible for FHA mort-
                                                     gages. In response to public outcry, Illinois Congress-
                                                     man  Abner  Mikva has  introduced legislation that
                                                     would  provide for stricter  control  over airport noise.
                                                     Illinois Attorney General William Scott proposed an
                                  STATE  ROLL  CALL
          Cities in Region-V that  have existing, new, or are drafting
                           noise  pollution  control ordinances
    Arlington Heights
    Carbondale
    Cham pa ign-U rba na
    Chicago ;
    Cook County
    Des Plaines
    Downers Grove
                 Evansville
                 Garv
                 Hammond
                 Loaansoort
                Ann Arbor
                Birmingham
                Comstock
                 Ashland
                 Bamesvle
                 Ogden Dunes
                 South Send
                                     Grand Rapids
                                     Harbor Springs
                                     tivonia
                                     Meridian Twp
                                                  Lewisburg
                                                  Lynchburg
                                                  Macedonia
                                                  Manfield
    Joliet
    Marengo
    Moline
    Northbrook
Bloommgton
Brooklyn Park
Cannon Patte   '
Columbia Heights
Minneapolis
                                                                   Twinsburg
                                                                   UhrichBVille
Washington Twp
Westland
Wyoming
                                                                      Wicklrffe
                                                                      Woodvilla
                                                                      Wooster
Park Ridge
Peoria
Rockford
6

-------
airport noise abatement regulation  that is under-con-
sideration by the Illinois Pollution Control Board in 1977.
  In Minnesota, the state pollution control  agency  is
conducting  an indepth  study of  jet aircraft noise  in
an  attempt  to  find ways to  held alleviate  deafening
conditions near Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport.
  Region V EPA  views airport-related  noise as  a
serious environmental threat and an area demanding
immediate attention. EPA  has developed a  process
to  enable  airports  and  communities to assess the
magnitude  of  airport noise in  their  areas and will
be working  directly with numerous airports and towns
to plan and implement noise abatement strategies.
  According  to  United  Airlines  President  Richard
Ferris, the airlines and  government agree  that  most
older four-engine jets should be replaced. This would
include early DC-8's, 707's, Convair 880's, and 990's.
There  is some disagreement on whether  or not to
sound-deaden Boeing  727's, 737's,  and  McDonnell
DC-9's. The airlines feel it  is too  expensive; however,
such  retrofitting is required  by  1984  through a new
FAA ruling.
  The Department of Transportation  recently pro-
posed  an  airline  tax  plan  for  the   refitting  or
replacement of  aircraft that do  not  meet  federal
noise standards. If such legislation passes, the out-
come should be a major step towards improving en-
vironmental quality.
This decibel (dB) table compares some common sounds and
shows how they rank in potential harm to hearing. Note that
70 dB is the point at which noise begins to harm hearing. To
the ear, each 10 dB increase seems twice as loud.
 Carrier deck
 jet operation
 Air raid siren
     Sound Levels and H
 Common Sounds
• Jet takeoff (200 ft.)
 Thunderclap
 Discotheque
• Auto horn (3 ft.)
 Pile drivers
 Garbage truck (50 ft.)
 Heavy truck (50 ft.)
 City traffic
                    Noise
                    Level
                    (dB)
                            Effect
                    110
                    100
Alarm clock (2 ft.)
Hair drier
 Noisy restaurant
 Freeway traffic
 Man's voice (3 ft.)
 Air conditioning unit
 (20 ft.)
 Light auto traffic
 (100ft.)
 Living room
 Bedroom
 Quiet office
                                                            Library
                                                            Soft whisper (15 ft.)
                                                            Broadcasting studio
                     70
                     60
                     50
                     40
                      30
                      20
                                                                                  10
                                        (8 hours)
                            Annoying
Telephone use difficult
                           Intrusive
                           Quiet
                           Very quiet
                                                                                        Just audible
                            Hearing begins

-------
PESTI
CIDES
   It all began with SILENT SPRING. Rachel Carson's
 best-seller on environmental threats sounded the alert
 to an unsuspecting public. Pesticides may be dan-
 gerous.
   The term "pesticide" is actually  a  catch-all term
 for any substance that repels or destroys pests; and
 for any mixture of chemical used as a plant regulator
 or killer.
   While  it is certainly true that some  pesticides can
 be lethal, it  is also a fact that they are tremendously
 useful substances. A  skillful combination  of  some
 1400  chemicals results in 46,000 pesticides that have
 dramatic  effects  on man's lifestyle and  well-being.
 Pesticides  can   claim  credit   for  increasing  crop
 production,  eliminating the vectors of several deadly
 diseases, and improving livestock production.
   EPA's work with pesticides is primarily in the area
 of regulation. By  provision of the Federal  Insecticide,
 Fungicide,  and   Rodenticide  Act  (FIFRA)  of  1972,
 EPA  has the authority to regulate all  pesticides in
 both  interstate and  intrastate commerce.  EPA  has
 the power  to suspend registration, thereby halting
 production,  if a pesticide is considered an  imminent
 health hazard to  public welfare. Since the program
 began,  EPA banned the controversial  DDT, and  has
 taken similar action on mercury, aldrin, and dieldrm.
 Several  other pesticides are currently under  study
 including the  phenoxy  herbicides,  chemical sprays
 that have been banned for forest  spraying in seven
 counties in the State of Minnesota.
                                        President  Carter, in  his May 1977 Environmental
                                      Message, directed  EPA to expand its power in pesti-
                                      cide regulation. In the past EPA had the task of regu-
                                      lating the 46,000 individual pesticides on the market.
                                      The  new  presidential  order  will simplify the  task
                                      by  giving  EPA the  authority  to regulate the  1400
                                      chemical ingredients rather than the final products.
                                      What does this mean to  Region V? With over 6000
                                      pesticides registered in the Midwest, the new order
                                      should make registration  and checking  for violations
                                      a more efficient process. In 1976,  over 600 inspec-
                                      tions were made and 900 samples were collected in
                                      Region V for laboratory analysis.
                                        Whenever  people  are exposed to poisonous sub-
                                      stances there is always the possibility  of accidents.
                                      In Lombard,  Illinois, the  local police force has  de-
 8

-------
                                                            Number of Pesticide Applicators
                                                                   Trained in Region V
                                                        ILLINOIS
                                                                                               38,125
                                                        MINNESOTA
                                                                  110,000
                                                               16,870
                                                        WISCONSIN
                                                             15,000
                                                            [4,000
                                                        Total   99,587
                                                                47,192
                      Private
                      Commercial
veloped an ingenious poison prevention program which
focuses on children. Primary grade school children
get a classroom visit from "Officer Nicely" and receive
free poison warning stickers for placement on dan-
gerous substances.  Children also receive a coloring
book  on  pesticides  and an  informative brochure  to
take home to parents.
  While it is  possible to eliminate pesticide poison-
ings by eliminating the use of pesticides all  together,
such an action would result in more harm  than good.
A viable alternative is a new approach to pest control
called  Integrated Pest  Management. Integrated  Pest
Management  uses a combination  of biological and
chemical options for pest control  based on the type
of pest, crop, and environment.
  According  to EPA  Administrator Douglas Costle,
"Some pest species have developed a genetic  resis-
tance to  pesticides,  and in  many cases, natural bal-
ances  have   been  disrupted,  or  entirely  new  pest
problems have emerged as a result of pesticide treat-
ments. We want to do what we can to assist the De-
partment of Agriculture and the agriculture commun-
ity in  developing alternative crop production techni-
ques  which reduce  reliance on the ever increasing
cost and  rapidly diminishing supply of petrochemical-
based  fertilizers and  pesticides.  This  explains our
interest in Integrated Pest Management".
  An  example  of Integrated  Pest Management  in
action  can be seen  through  the Dial-A-Bug program
in Michigan. Information about weather, insect popu-
lations and  other  data is  collected daily  from 27
regions in the State and analyzed by computer, which
relays the information to agricultural extension agents.
Farmers  can obtain  (regional) up-to-the-minute data,
and studies  have shown that use of Dial-A-Bug has
reduced the use of insecticides by 30%.

          What's Happening Now...

  Many pesticides are used each year by individuals
who may have little knowledge of proper  application
techniques or background on  the possible effects
of the pesticide. EPA is  working  with the  states  in
the development of applicator training and  certifica-
tion programs. Plans have been submitted by all the
Region V states, and the Pesticide  Branch is hopeful
that all state plans  will be  approved by  October  of
1977.
  The certification  program  divides pesticides into
two groups—general and  restricted. General  pesti-
cides  are those which can  be used safely without
special knowledge—a good example is the household
ant trap or mosquito spray. Restricted pesticides are
far  more dangerous and  require  application by  or
under  the  supervision of a  trained applicator. So
far close to  100,000 Region V citizens have received
training and  passed state  applicator examinations.
As the state programs move ahead during 1977-8,
the number of  trained applicators  is expected  to
increase.
                                                                                                     9

-------
R
ADIATION
  Radiation is an invisible  pollutant. We  can't see
it, hear it, or smell it, but it  is present all around us
Man is exposed to radiation from  both  natural and
manmade  sources.  Natural radiation comes  from
cosmic and terrestrial sources. Sunbathing gives the
body direct  exposure to cosmic  radiation,  that is,
the radioactive rays from the sun. The water we drink
and  ground we walk  upon are sources of  terrestrial
radiation.
   Manmade  radiation is divided into two categories:
ionizing  and  nonionizing radiation. Included is ra-
diation produced  by x-rays,  nuclear  power plants,
radio and television transmitters, microwave devices,
ultraviolet light, lasers and high voltage transmission
lines.
   EPA is interested in radiation since it can  affect
our environment and health. The use of radiation has
resulted in  significant medical advances.  Our com-
munication   systems  are  associated  with  minute
amounts  of  radiation  as are nuclear  power station
releases.
   Scientists  have found that exposure to large  doses
of radiation  can  have harmful  health  effects.  Some
 of the health problems associated  with radiation can
   RAD1A
                           Exposure of
                       film badge measured
                             in rems
         Radioactive
      material measured
          in curies
                        Intesity of
                       gamma rays
                       measured in
                        roentgens
   Radiation — it's all in the name. Rems, roentgens, and
   curies are all units associated with radtetion. EPA measures
   the biological effects of radiation in millirems. Each year
   man is exposed to approximately 200 millirems from a
   combination of natural and manmade radioactive sources.
include genetic defects, cancer, cataracts, skin burns,
and some neurological and behavioral changes.
  In Region V, the Radiation  program is coordinat-
ing  its  activities  with  the  state  radiation  offices.
In 1977, the Agency will propose standards for radio-
active  materials in drinking water  under the  Safe
Drinking  Water Act.  Under other authorities, EPA is
also proposing new federal guidance for medical and
dental x-ray practices in federal health care facilities.
Currently, EPA is  involved in  a coordinated federal
program for developing a long-range plan for safely
managing and disposing of radioactive wastes. Dur-
ing  1978, Region V will define and evaluate the pro-
blem  of decommissioning  radiological  facilities  in
urban  areas.  Regional  findings  will be  used in a
national assessment plan.
  The  Canada/United States  Water Quality Board
recommended in its 1976 annual report that federal,
state, and  local  or Provincial agencies  engage  in
environmental monitoring  programs to  assess  the
impact  of  nuclear power stations  upon  the  Great
Lakes. There are  presently 20  nuclear  power  re-
actors in operation on the Great Lakes using the water
of the  Lakes for condenser cooling. At this time  the
impact of thermal and  radioactive discharges  upon
lake biota is not being assessed.
  EPA is proposing  new radiation  standards  which
will reduce  public exposure to planned  releases or
radioactive materials from the nuclear power industry
to one-twentieth of previous guidelines.
  As an added measure of safety  assurance, EPA
formally  reviews all nuclear facility plans through the
required Environmental Impact Statements.
  Looking  at radiation  associated with communica-
tion systems, a special radiation monitoring van from
EPA visited  Region  V during 1976  to check the  in-
tensity  of  broadcast radiation from UHF and VHP
television and FM  radio transmitters. The project was
the first phase  of a two year analysis  on  environ-
mental  levels of  radio and microwave  radiation in
urban  areas of  the  United  States. The study,  being
done with  the  President's  Office  of  Telecommuni-
cations Policy, will determine the amounts of electro-
magnetic radiation in various parts of the  country,
define the  need for non-ionizing radiation guidelines,
and study possible health effects on humans.
 10

-------
SOLID
WASTE
   Remember the city dump? Remember the sicken-
 ing  smells  of  rotting  trash  and  all  those  mini-
 mountains of decaying auto remains and appliance
 pieces?
   Garbage may  well be an unrealized tribute to our
 modern throwaway  society, but it also accounts for
 a tremendous waste of precious natural  resources.
 Each year Americans  dispose of  48 billion  cans,
 26 billion  bottles and  jars,  4 million tons of plastic,
 7.6 million television sets,  7 million cars/trucks, and
 30 million tons of paper. Annually, we generate over
 150 tons of municipal  refuse which  could be  con-
 verted into  the  energy equivalent  of 200  million
 barrels of crude  oil  using available technology. Right
 now, the concept of resource recovery  (recovering
 energy and other materials from municipal solid waste)
 is understood  and  practiced by only a few. EPA is
 banking on  resource recovery systems becoming a
 way of life.
   In Region V, the problem of garbage disposal and
 resource recovery is of massive proportions.  Thirty
 percent  of  the   nation's  garbage  accumulates  in
 Region V. Finding a final resting place for the Mid-
west's throwaways  is an incomprehensible environ-
mental headache.  The  Regional  office  is active  in
giving technical assistance to states and communities
considering resource recovery. Under the provisions
of the new Resource Conservation and Recovery Act,
EPA also has the power to provide limited financial
assistance to states and  municipalities  interested
in developing their own resource recovery systems.
               Where It's At...

  Region V has two major resource  recovery plants
currently in operation with plans outlined for 10 more
to be under construction by 1980.
  The  1000-ton-per-day resource recovery  facility
in Chicago, Illinois, converts trash into supplemental
fuel for  a Commonwealth Edison generating station.
Another benefit from the plant is the recovery of steel
cans for recycling. According  to a Chicago city  re-
port, the supplementary fuel plant is the most efficient,
clean, and  economical solution  to the  city's waste
disposal problem.  Officials  estimate the  plant will
                                                                                                  11

-------
save the city  $600,000 a year in operating costs as
compared to an incinerator disposal system of equiva-
lent capacity.  Commonwealth Edison estimates the
energy  produced by the processed waste  fuel will
supply enough energy at presently planned consump-
tion rates to supply the electrical needs for about 45,-
000 Chicago homes.
  At Milwaukee,  Wisconsin an $18 million plant takes
all of that city's  municipal  waste and  separates it
into metals, paper, glass,  and fuel. A total of 90% of
the Milwaukee garbage can  be recycled. The project
is  presently the  largest waste  recycling plant of its
kind in  the country. The Wisconsin  Electric Power
Company has signed a contract to purchase the shred-
ded fuel which will later  be fired as a supplement
to  coal  to generate  electricity.  The  plant was  ded-
icated in May,  1977 and by the end of the first month
nearly 300 tons  per day (%  of the facility's  planned
daily load) were being processed.
  In 1971, an EPA sponsored  resource recovery dem-
onstration facility opened  in Franklin, Ohio. The pilot
plant used a "wet pulp" method for separating alum-
inum,  ferrous  metals, glass, and  paper fibers  from
municipal garbage. Although plant operation has  been
intermittent, Franklin served an important role in point-
ing out  the benefits and "kinks" in a significant  re-
source recovery concept. Major facilities based upon
the  Franklin   process  are  under  construction  in
Florida and New York.

           EPA And The States...

  Each of the states has been working closely with
EPA in the development of solid waste management
programs  (comprehensive plans for controlling the
collection, recovery, recycling, and disposal of muni-
cipal  refuse and  hazardous waste).  EPA and  state
solid waste agencies have  been working to complete
individual  state hazardous waste surveys. Such sur-
veys  will  identify  potentially  dangerous  conditions
regarding  closed  disposal sites,  and develop more
uniformly  strong hazardous waste management pro-
grams which will encourage private industry to design
and  construct  all  types of  hazardous waste disposal
facilities.
  Early in 1977,  residents  of  Wilsonville, Illinois
claimed that a hazardous waste disposal site in their
town posed a serious health threat. At the request of
Illinois EPA,  U.S.  EPA Region V conducted an  in-
dependent study on the safety and potential hazards
at Wilsonville.  Report findings were due for release
by Fall, 1977.
                                                        Resource Recovery Facilities
                                                         From Municipal  Solid Waste
  CITY COUNTY REGION
12

-------
  How far along are the state solid waste management
programs?
ILLINOIS       The State Division  of Land Pollution
               Control is  currently evaluating  the
               results of a $3 million grant program
               for solid waste management and re-
               source recovery demonstrations.
INDIANA       A  "Guide  to  Recycle  the Source
               Separation  Way" was recently pub-
               lished  by the State Board of Health
               for use  by communities  consider-
               ing the collection and sale of muni-
               cipal refuse separated at the site of
               generation.
MICHIGAN     Michigan is developing a  resource
               recovery  plan by 1978 which will al-
               low for issuing revenue  bonds, con-
               tracting  for  services,   construction
               and operation.
MINNESOTA   A  $3.5 million solid waste disposal
               and resource recovery grant program
               is  currently in  operation. Grants to-
               taling  approximately $800,000 were
               made in 1976.
OHIO          15 projects totaling $1   million were
               approved and  plans were  reviewed
               for a $46 million recycling  center for
               Akron.  Six one-day  workshops on the
               new  state  solid waste regulations
               were held for interested  citizens and
               officials.
WISCONSIN    The Wisconsin Solid Waste Recycl-
               ing Authority issued a  request  for
               proposals for  a resource  recovery
               facility  to  be  located   in   a three-
               country area including  the cities of
               Oshkosh and Neenah. Proposals from
               the private sector  are   expected  in
               August,  1977.  EPA  assisted   the
               Authority  with a solid waste planning
               grant earlier in their project.
  EPA is encouraged by the states'  progress and in-
terest in solid waste program development. Individual
citizens, too, can  help  in solid  waste management.
Contributing  newspapers  to  community   paper-
drives  and taking  aluminum  cans  or glass  bottles
to the local recycling center is a conscientious move
toward resource recovery. Citizens  in over 400 Mid-
western cities and  towns  have access to community
recycling  plants. Recycling has proven economical
for big industry and has become popular with many
major manufacturers. Union Carbide, Raytheon, and
Grumman are investigating recycling and/or resource
recovery methods.  Even our telephones  can  and  are
being recycled. With the awakening  of an energy con-
scious  nation, the trend  toward resource  recovery
is expected to become a significant part of the national
energy-saving program. Resource recovery is here to
stay.
ILLINOIS
     '-
INDIANA
              34
OHIO

                                       if 106
MICHIGAN

                n" , '.^"i-V^&JJ*
            >'../'•.• .t«8"M*

MINNESOTA

             33

WISCONSIN
                                01
                                O I
                                                                                                   13

-------
w
ATER
  In 1972 the condition of our waters was grim. News-
papers printed the obituary for Lake Erie, industrial
rivers  resembled floating carpets of slime and  grease,
and Lake Superior was the daily dumping  ground for
67 tons of taconite waste.  Only the foolhardy would
drink from the Detroit River or swim in the Cuyahoga.
With  municipal  and industrial growth on the  up-
sw ing, the end seemed nowhere in sight.
  The picture changed dramatically with the passage
of years. Enactment of the Federal Clean Water Act
Amendments signaled the  beginning of an environ-
mental war. For the first time there was a national
policy on cleaning-up water pollution, with goals and
deadlines for the achievement. The new law decreed
the nation's waters must be fishable and swimmable
by 1983. The  Act  required  all industry and  munici-
palities to obtain permits for dumping wastes, and the
amount that could be dumped was placed  under tight
restrictions. Secondary  wastewater  treatment  was
required by law no later than July  1, 1977. The clean-
up effort was  aided by 18  billion  dollars which  EPA
was authorized to administer through a grant program
for the funding of wastewater treatment facilities.
  All this occurred five years ago. The 1977 progress
report is realistic, yet favorable, noting definite water
quality improvement in  many areas  of the country.
The Regional picture is also encouraging. Over 11,000
industries  and municipalities have received permits.
Permit violations are most frequently attributable to
municipal  construction delays or  failure of industrial
plants to comply with effluent limitations.
  The Region V states predict that 1983 water qual-
ity goals  will  be met  by Minnesota, Wisconsin, In-
diana, and Michigan. Some waters in Illinois and  Ohio
  Om April 9th,
you can prevent
                                                  Next April 9th, we're inviting you
                                                  and your neighbors to join in the
                                                 planning process for a water quality
                                                     program for Dane County.
                                                      Your ideas are welcome.
                                                       The options are many.
                                                    The choices can be difficult.
                                                   Conflicting interests have to be
                                                resolved to make economic sense while
                                                 serving environmental needs and the
                                                     overall community welfare.
                                                    This is your chance to be part
                                                of the power structure in  Dane County.
                                               Our water resources depend on how you
                                                     help make these decisions.
                                                See you April 9th, at the Holiday Inn,
                                                        9:00 A.M. Look for
                                                    "Water Planning Workshop:'

                                              The clean wafer people of Dane County
                                          Prototype of a "Call to Meeting" ad developed by
                                          Region V for its 208 agencies.
14

-------
are not predicted to meet standards;  however, these
areas have unique problems such as acid mine dram-
age—one  of the complex issues EPA will address in
1977-78.
  Remaining  water  quality  problem areas as noted
by states include:
ILLINOIS
INDIANA
MICHIGAN
MINNESOTA
OHIO
The  Chicago  area  waters and  the
tributaries to  the Big  Muddy River
where acid mine drainage makes at-
tainment of the "fishable, swimmable"
goal questionable
The Indiana Harbor Canal, the West
Fork of the White River, and the upper
Pakota  River,  also an area suffering
from acid mine drainage.
The waters around Detroit, the Clinton
River,  Flint  River, and Kalamazoo.
EPA brought  legal  action  against
Detroit  in  May of 1977, for  serious
pollution discharges from the Detroit
Water and Sewage Department.
Fecal  coliform bacteria  present a
problem in the Red River of the North,
Minnesota  River, Cedar  River,  Des
Moines  River  and  the Twin Cities
Metropolitan Area.
Problem areas in Ohio include  the
waters   around  Cleveland,   Akron,
Toledo,  and Lorain  and in the  Ma-
honing River Valley. Acid mine drain-
age also presents pollution problems
for streams in the southeast portion
of the state.
                                        WISCONSIN    Water quality problem areas include
                                                      the urban  areas  of  Milwaukee,  the
                                                      Fox River to Green Bay, and portions
                                                      of the Wisconsin River.
        Waters Clouded By Issues...
  The fight for clean water is clouded by  numerous
issues—PCB's,  Reserve Mining, phosphates, thermal
pollutants, industrial  discharges and  mercury pollu-
tion.
  3^An  alarm  on toxic substances  sounded in 1975
  when tests  revealed high concentrations of PCB's
  in Great Lakes  fish. EPA  established  the Office
  of Toxic Substances to  deal with this and similar
  problems. Research on  toxic substances will con-
  tinue as authorized by the Toxic  Substances Con-
  trol Act.  The new law  requires  all producers of
  selected toxic substances to  provide EPA with pro-
  duction and test  data before such chemicals reach
  the market. The Great Lakes Water Quality Review
  from the International Joint  Commission (US  and
  Canada) cited the need for toxic substances control
  and monitoring programs as "imperative."
  3(cThe continuing  controversy over phosphates in
  the Great  Lakes gains  momentum as  projected
  studies  indicate that  phosphorus  loadings  will
  increase at an alarming rate during the next decade.
  The addition of  phosphorus to  the lakes results
  in eutrophication—slow choking of the lakes by ex-
  cessive  nutrient  growth. It would appear that the
  most  practical  way  to  combat  the problem of
  phosphorus is to enact a ban on detergents using
                                                                                                   15

-------
               ILLINOIS
                          ROCK RIVER BASIN
                           WATER QUALITY
                                 — Good
                                 A Medium
                                  HPoor
                                  O Unknown
  phosphates. Although some cities have bans on
  phosphates,  no nation-wide  ban  has yet  been
  passed.
  ^The Reserve Mining plant in Silver Bay, Minnesota
  has been the scene of heated controversy  since
  1967, when the Federal Water  Pollution  Control
  Administration declared that taconite wastes from
  the facility were harming Lake Superior. During 1977
  the State Supreme  Court approved  an  on-land
  disposal  site and work began on the new disposal
  facility during June.
  j|cA series  of poisonous  chemical  spills in the
  Ohio River prompted  EPA to take another look  at
  methods designed  to prevent and/or deal  with
  emergency  spills.  EPA  is currently  considering
  stepped  up  monitoring procedures and working
  for increased emphasis  on  spill prevention by
  industry.
  >
-------
     The Techniques of Cleaning-Up...

   Although  the  Federal  law  states the  nation's
 waterways must be cleaned and protected from further
 pollutants, specifics of the gigantic project are  not
 clearly spelled out.  Section 208 of the water law calls
 for  regional  water quality management  plans—
 regional  programs  for dealing  with common  water
 quality problems. Such  plans address the preserva-
 tion of clean water as well as the restoration of polluted
 waters and  advocate  public participation  through-
 out the planning process.
   In  Region  V, 37  regional planning agencies  are
 working  closely  with cities and towns  to identify
 problems and develop methods of reducing and elimi-
 nating pollutants.  Planning  solutions  include  com-
 binations of  building wastewater treatment facilities,
 enacting  regulations, stream monitoring,  and  limit-
 ing sources of pollution. Although in some states the
 planning  effort is slowed to a snail's pace as a re-
 sult of political red-tape, the public's interest in  208
 is increasing.
                      OHIO
HOCKING RIVER BASIN
   WATER  QUALITY
        — Good
         A Medium
         • Poor
                                "WtCWlSM
                                       Geograph
                                       «* mat® ©f   ," *^5*,jt*f*<'"*'*H*"!i "

                                                                                               17

-------
         — Good
           A. Medium
           II Poor
	 Good
 A Medium
 m Poor
   WISCONSIN MAINSTEM STREAM SEGMENTS      !
                 WATER QUALITY                     1
  While the Coastal  Zone Management program  is
not administered  by  EPA, its environmental impact
deserves mention. The Illinois  House  passed HB
2118, the  Illinois  Coastal Zone  Management  Act,
in  May,  1977. If passed by the Senate, it would make
Illinois  eligible  for $1.2 million  annually  in  Federal
funds for the protection of Lake Michigan shoreline
through scientific  studies,  correcting  shoreline dam-
age, acquisition of beaches,  improvements in fisher-
ies, and grants to municipalities for  improving their
shorelines.  Other  Region V states are currently im-
plementing similar programs.
   The best known facet of PL 92-500  is the construc-
tion grants  program, which is the largest public works
project  in  the nation.  Under  construction grants,
municipalities  may apply  to  EPA for  partial (75%)
funding for  municipal wastewater treatment projects.
   Overall budget for  Region  V is $4.5 billion and the
region  leads the nation in the total number of  pro-
jects, with  over 1800 facilities under  construction  at
the present time. The largest project is an $520 +
million  tunnel  system for  the Chicago Metropolitan
Sanitary District. When completed, the tunnel network
can store sewage and storm water runoff until it can
be pumped into wastewater  treatment plants. Bene-
fits from the project will include reduced drainage,
and a reduction in the release of polluted flood waters
into Lake Michigan.
   By far the greatest challenge facing the construc-
tion grants program is racing  against the clock  in
order to obligate all federal monies before the national
September 30, 1977  deadline. The complexity of the
grants  program adds to the problem. An  unbeliev-
able workload is expected in August  and September
1977 as the states and EPA  attempt to obligate the
1.4 billion remaining in the regional construction grants
coffer.

      More At Stake Than Recreation ...
   With  so  much attention being given to the goal of
fishable, swimmable waters, one might  think the recrea-
tional and  aesthetic quality  of  water  was the  only
objective.  This is hardly the case. EPA has a major
program to ensure the safety of drinking water. The
Safe Drinking  Water Act  requires EPA to establish
and enforce national  drinking water  standards. EPA
is  active  in supporting state and local community
drinking water programs  by  providing financial and
technical assistance.
   Naturally, the quality of the  water you drink de-
pends on where you live. Individuals with well  water
are far  more likely to contract bacterial diseases than
those people receiving city water. The importance of
safe drinking  water  cannot  be  overlooked.  Between
1960 and 1970, over 46,000 people suffered illness as a
result of polluted  drinking water. Twenty deaths were
reported throughout  the country. EPA's goal is to eli-
minate drinking water hazards and thereby ensure safe
drinking water for all.
   It is  difficult to comprehend  the amount of drink-
ing water used each day. Cook County and the City
        18

-------
of Chicago use 1  billion gallons a day. Conservative
estimates  project  a national use of 443 billion  gal-
lons per day by 1980.
  Region V uses the Model States Information System
to gather  additional  information on  drinking  water
supplies. In response to a drinking water crisis caused
by the disposal of taconite wastes in  Lake Superior,
the city of Duluth,  Minnesota received a federal grant
for the construction of a treatment plant.  When com-
pleted the new facility will  be capable of removing
potentialy  hazardous   asbestiform fibers  from  the
water.
  In other parts of the nation, EPA  scientists  have
launched studies on the possibility of carcinogens  in
drinking water  supplies. In Region V, such a study
is currently being conducted on the  Fox River near
Aurora, Illinois.
  While EPA has  stringent primary water standards,
secondary standards dealing with the aesthetic para-
meters of water are a new development. During March
1977,  EPA proposed  standards dealing with odor,
color,  chlorides, copper, foaming agents, hydrogen
sulfide, sulfates,  ph,   and  several  trace  elements.
While not  mandatory, the new standards are designed
to aid the  states in the development of their individual
programs.
                 CENTRAL fVHCHSGAISf
                Lake Huron Norh
                Planning Subarea
WATER QUALITY
       •$» Good
       A Medium
       » Poor
                                                                                                   19

-------
                                       REGIONAL ADMINISTRATOR
                                            George R. Alexander, Jr.

                                   DEPUTY REGIONAL ADMINISTRATOR
                                              Valdas V. Adamkus
                                                   -REGIONAL COUNSEL

                                                     AUDIT AND INSPECTION
    OFFICE OF PUBLIC AND
INTERGOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS
OFFICE OF CIVIL RIGHTS
 AND URBAN AFFAIRS
OFFICE OF RESEARCH
AND DEVELOPMENT
  OFFICE OF GREAT
LAKES COORDINATOR
MANAGEMENT
DIVISION
'• Data Processing Branch
1 Financial Management Branch
;— Manpower Development Branch
- Program Development Branch
, General Services Branch
- Personnel Branch



AIR AND HAZARDOUS
MATERIALS DIVISION
- Pesticides Branch
-- Air Programs Branch
• Waste Management Branch






WATER . SURVEILLANCE AND
DIVISION ; ANALYSIS DIVISION
Planning Branch r Quality Assurance Office
• Construction Grants Branch
Water Supply Branch





-- Technical Support Branch
•Field Support Branch
Eastern D. 0
Central 0. 0.
Western D. 0.
— Air Surveillance Branch
• Great Lakes Surveillance Branch
— Central Regional Laboratory
                                                                                            ENFORCEMENT
                                                                                               DIVISION

                                                                                         — Water and Pesticides
                                                                                         i  Enforcement Branch

                                                                                         j- Permit Branch

                                                                                         *- Air Enforcement Branch

-------
Region V Deputy Administrator Va/das  V. Adamkus
looks over shoulder of Regional Administrator
George R. Alexander, Jr.

          THE REGIONAL
        ADMINISTRATOR
  The official spokesmen for Region  V are the  Re-
gional Administrator and  Deputy Regional  Adminis-
trator. The Regional Administrator keeps in close con-
tact with the Washington office, serving as an advisor
on national policy  matters. EPA policy is officially set
by the Administrator  in Washington and  it is the re-
sponsibility of the  Regional Administrator to see that
program  goals and policies are carried  out as they
pertain to the  Midwest. In order to accomplish re-
gional and  national goals, the Regional  Administra-
tor allocates agency personnel and financial resourc-
es through the five program divisions. The Deputy
Regional  Administrator is  well-versed  in all program
areas  so  that he may  assume responsibilities belong-
ing to the Regional  Administrator when necessary.
  As  representative of the  EPA Administrator,  the
Regional  Administrator represents the Agency on the
Federal  Executive Board  and the Federal  Regional
Council. He's also the Agency-appointed representa-
tive on the Great Lakes Basin Commission, the Upper
Mississippi River Basin Commission, and holds  mem-
bership  on the Winter Navigation  Board,  an  Army
Corps of Engineers feasibility program extending the
navigation season in  the  Great  Lakes-St. Lawrence
Seaway.  During 1976 and  1977 he  has served  as
Chairman of the United States Section of the  Great
Lakes Water Quality Board of the International Joint
Commission.
   THE  REGIONAL  COUNSEL
  Not all pollution fighters are scientists. The Region-
al Counsel and staff cannot be found within any pro-
gram division, yet their role is vital to the success of
the nationwide pollution clean-up effort.
  The Regional Counsel serves as the principal legal
advisor to the Regional Administrator and is the chief
law officer of the Region. He and his staff are a com-
ponent of the headquarters Office of General Counsel,
and are therefore technically not  a part of the regional
office.
  The  Office  of  Regional  Counsel  provides  legal
advice  and  opinions to all of the programs, divisions
and offices  of Region V.
  The past year has been the busiest in the Office's
history.  Its  six attorneys  and three secretaries res-
ponded to  361 formal requests for legal  opinions.
These  requests  came from  both  within and out-
side EPA, and dealt  with a wide range  of topics in-
cluding  the meaning  of environmental  statutes, le-
gality  of state  regulations,  eligibility of applicants
for  program or construction grants, employee com-
plaints  of discrimination based on race or sex, and
civil service questions.
  In addition,  the  Office of Regional Counsel tries
all appeals  that are taken from  grant  eligibility deci-
sions of  the Regional Administrator.  At the end of
1976 there  were 76  grant  appeals pending nation-
wide, of  which 26 involved  Region V! Most of these
concerned municipalities and school districts seeking
reimbursement for  waste treatment construction pro-
jects.
  Another busy area for the Regional  Counsel's staff
involves  protests  filed by unsuccessful bidders on
construction projects funded by  EPA. In  1976 the Of-
fice produced twenty-one formal decisions  resolving
bid protests which were adopted and issued by the
Regional Administrator.
  A  major  role for the Regional Counsel  is  to re-
present the Region  in court suits. Since EPA's reg-
ulatory programs affect so many people in so many
ways, it  is  only  natural that  the cry "sue  EPA" is
being  heard  ever  more  frequently.  Suits against
Region V are now being filed at the  rate of two or
three  per month.
  These  kinds  of  cases involve  a  wide range  of
EPA activities, including air and water  pollution is-
sues and questions on environmental impact  state-
ments.  Office attorneys also  worked with  Enforce-
ment Division personnel in a successful joint effort
to preserve  EPA's procedures to place plants that are
violating  pollution  regulations on  a  list of facilities
that are not eligible to receive federal  grants or con-
tracts.
  Finally, the  Regional  Counsel's office devotes a
good deal of  its time in assisting the Office of Civil
Rights  and  Urban  Affairs in guaranteeing that con-
tractors working on  EPA funded projects comply
fully with all equal  employment  opportunity  require-
ments.
                                                                                                  21

-------
  OFFICE OF PUBLIC AND  INTERGOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS
  Questioning citizens, media and outside agencies
find answers and direction through the Office of Public
and  Intergovernmental Affairs.  The comprehensive
public affairs program communicates Agency policy
to a variety of publics  while providing  sounding-
board for community ideas.
  In  the exercise of  its  Intergovernmental  Affairs
function, the Office gives information  on EPA policies
and programs to agencies and officials at other levels
of government.  The  monitoring of  state  legislative
activity  and the representation of the regional office
on  some  intergovernmental  bodies  are  additional
responsibilities of this position.
  Community  ideas  and  feedback have become a
key ingredient in the public affairs program.  During
1976 and into 1977, Town Meetings were held in Cleve-
land, Ohio;  Marquette, Michigan; Springfield, Illinois;
Indianapolis, Indiana; Bowling  Green, Ohio, Cincin-
nati,  Ohio;  and  Grand Rapids,  Michigan. The day-
long  exchanges  included  meetings  with  business
leaders, local  government  officials, environmental
groups,  and concerned citizens. Town meetings  will
continue throughout  1977  under  the new title  of
"American  Environmental Forums."
  A successful business-government conference on
process change methods of pollution clean-up was
held  in Chicago during January 1977. Over 400 at-
tendees represented  numerous environmental  in-
terests and the conference received wide  national
coverage.
  In  cooperation with the technical  programs,  the
Office produced the first  film on toxic substances.
The Fall of 1976 saw an aggressive information cam-
paign with race car drive Bobby Unser calling atten-
tion to high smog levels and importance of auto tune-
ups for better gas mileage and clean air.
  The Office provided the Water Division with a public
participation  specialist to work directly with local 208
agencies. Public Affairs also  assisted in  putting on
numerous hearings and public meetings for various
regional and Washington programs.
  Responding to requests from educators, the Office
of Public and  Intergovernmental  Affairs  developed
Environmental  Education  Packets—resource pack-
ages for classroom use which promote a hands-on
approach to learning  about the environment. These
were prepared for distribution to 20,000 schools dur-
ing Fall,1977.
  The speakers bureau expanded  durmg 1976 with
numerous  invitations  from  schools  and  citizens
groups.  The  Office continued  its high  level of service
to the news media and strengthened the link between
publics  and  EPA  through  the use of weekly radio
shows  on the  environment and two monthly pub-
lications—the internal  newsletter and popular outside
magazine ENVIRONMENT MIDWEST.
         OFFICE OF  CIVIL  RIGHTS AND URBAN AFFAIRS
  The Office of Civil Rights and Urban Affairs is com-
posed of two sections:  in-house Equal Employment
Opportunity and external Contract Compliance.
  The former  insures that  Equal  Employment Op-
portunity is practiced  within  EPA through such activ-
ities as  the Federal Women's  Program, Title VI en-
forcement, the Spanish-Speaking Program and the
EEO Complaint System.
  Contract Compliance is responsible for monitor-
ing  Equal Employment Opportunity in EPA-funded
wastewater treatment  facility construction. At present,
the Region V Office of Civil Rights and Urban Affairs
is monitoring 480 contracts totalling $4.8 billion.
  All contractors  and sub-contractors take part in
preconstruction  conferences where  EPA  and  De-
partment of  Labor EEO requirements are explained.
Reporting procedures are also discussed. The  need
for  minority hiring and "good faith" efforts are covered
in depth with grantees, contractors, and  consulting
engineers.
  Involvement by the  Office of Civil  Rights and Urban
Affairs includes the following project areas:
  1. The equitable utilization of minority engineering
     and architectural firms.
  2. The equitable utilization  of  minority  construc-
     tion contractors.
  3. EEP on demonstraction grants.
  4. EPA  Form  4700-4,  Compliance  Report,  the
     equal treatment  of all persons to be served by
     a project.
  5. OCRUA also investigates compliants filed under
     the Labor-Standards Wage  & Hour provisions
     of the Davis-Bacon Act.
  To  assist  in the administration and accomplish-
ment  of its various  programs, the office published a
series of booklets  for issuance  to  grantees,  con-
sulting engineers, and contractors. The success of
the compliance program was evidenced by the  rise
in the use of minority  workers on construction jobs to
a high of 13.3%.
  During 1977, the Office of Civil Rights and Urban
Affairs continued the  in-house  implementation of the
Equal  Employment  Affirmative  Action  Plan.  Af-
firmative action plans  for state and local governments
were evaluated and  technical assistance was provided
when requested.
22

-------
              OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
  Finding  the "right" answers  to  tough environ-
mental questions—this is the job  of  the  Office of
Research and Development. The questions and prob-
lems on the environment are numerous and  varied.
Defining cancer-causing agents in the  environment,
studying the  effects of phosphates on lake  eutro-
phication, and developing new ways to can and freeze
food which will require less water: these are just three
representative problems being dealt with through this
office.
  Research and Development is a massive operation.
More than 1/5 of the total EPA  budget is allocated
for  scientific  study.  In addition  to the  Washington
headquarters  and 10 regional offices, further work is
directed at numerous field stations,  15  major  labor-
atories,  and  at  academic,  industrial,  and research
facilities throughout the country.
  The Office  of Research and Development acts as
the official research liaison with the states, universities,
and the public. The Region V staff is responsible for
relaying the results of regional and national research
and  development to the  general public and  special
interest  groups.  One means  of achieving this goal is
through the Technology Transfer program. Technology
Transfer is a public information system which utilizes
seminars, design manuals, capsule reports, and bro-
chures to get the message across.
  The Region V Research and Development Director
provides liaison  with all regional activities and keeps
the Regional Administrator advised on research pro-
grams and accomplishments.  The Director and his
staff are  responsible  for reviewing all research pro-
posals, managing the research position for Region V,
and for assessing the environmental  research needs
of the Midwest.
  During 1977 the  Region  V Office of Research and
Development  provided project officers for 15 major
programs ranging  from  research  on food proces-
sing to metal manufacturing.
  Current  studies  include the  Muskegon  Waste-
water Management Program—a research  grant used
to demonstrate the large scale use of land applica-
tion for the treatment and reuse of combined mun-
icipal-industrial  wastewater.  In   another research
project, the Office is monitoring the Lawrence Avenue
Underflow Sewer System Project—a Chicago demon-
stration project to assess the feasibility of using under-
ground tunnels for the temporary storage of storm-
water runoff.
  Some  research programs are jointly administered.
The most notable  example is  the  Development of
Environmental  Monitoring  Systems  for  the  Great
Lakes. Several  years in the planning, Region  V and
Washington EPA have worked closely on the com-
bined NASA/EPA program. The actual development of
specialized monitoring equipment  is  just beginning
and the program is expected to continue  throughout
the1970's.
           OFFICE  OF THE GREAT  LAKES  COORDINATOR
  The Great Lakes comprise the largest  freshwater
reservoir in the world,  covering 95,000 square miles
and containing some 65 trillion gallons  of water. In-
ternational concern over the quality  and  future for
the  Great Lakes resulted in the 1972 US/Canada
Water Quality Agreement. In response  to the com-
mitment to meet water quality objectives, EPA es-
tablished and implemented the Great  Lakes National
Program. Based in Region V, the Regional Administra-
tor serves as the program manager for the effort. The
Great Lakes Coordinator supports the Regional Ad-
ministrator in carrying out the Great Lakes Program.
The Office coordinates, implements and monitors ef-
forts being made by EPA and the states in response
to the 1972 Water Pollution Control Act.
  In conjunction  with his  membership  in the Inter-
national  Joint Commission, the Great Lakes Coordina-
tor  held two chairmanships from  1976-1977.  During
1976 he  served as Chairman of the Remedial Program
Committee; in 1977 he held the post of  Chairman of
the  Implementation Committee. Other memberships
includes  Chairmanship of the IJC/Rainy  River Pol-
lution Control Board, and  alternate US  Chairman to
the IJC/Red River Pollution Control Board.
  The work of the Great Lakes Coordinator covers a
broad spectrum.  Significant  staff effort  is  placed on
Section  108(a) and on project monitoring and evalua-
tion. Demonstration grants totalling $1.5 million were
obligated during FY-76 under Section 108(a)  of the
1972 Water Pollution Control  Act. This program pro-
vides for  federal funding to states,  political sub-
divisions, interstate agencies or other public agencies
to carry out projects that will demonstrate  new meth-
ods  and develop preliminary plans for the elimina-
tion  or  control  of pollution within  the watershed of
the Great Lakes.  Projects continuing under Section
108(a) include:
   1. Wisconsin  State  Board  of  Soil  & Water Con-
     servation Districts,  for the "Development and
     Implementation of a Sediment Control Ordinance
     for Water Quality Improvement."
   2. Douglas County Soil & Water Conservation Dis-
     trict,  Western  Lake Superior  Erosion-Sedi-
     mentation   Control  Program, Wisconsin-Min-
     nesota.

  3. Allen County Soil & Water Conservation Dis-
     trict,  "Reduction of Sediment and  Related Pol-
     lutants in the Maumee River and Lake Erie."

  In addition to the  108(a)  projects,  the Office  of
the Great Lakes  Coordinator  is also responsible for
the coordination of grants to finance four pilot  water-
shed studies.
                                                                                               23

-------
                             MANAGEMENT DIVISION
               MANAGEMENT
                    DIVISION
          Data Processing  Branch
          Financial Management  Branch
         •Manpower  Development Branch
          Program  Development Branch
          General  Services Branch
         •Personnel Branch
  The Management Division provides Region V with
the administrative and support services necessary for
smooth Regional operations. The Division advises the
Regional  Administrator  and his  program managers
in  the areas of planning, management systems, and
administrative support.
  The responsibilities of the Division include program
planning, resource distribution,  and evaluation, spe-
cialized  grantee  assistance,  financial  management,
general  administrative  services,  personnel manage-
ment, data processing support,  manpower develop-

EPA Administrator Doug  Costle presents award to
Region V's Charles Lewis at Management Division's
annual awards program
ment, graphic  arts support,  facilities management,
safety and security.
  The Planning and Evaluation Branch assists fn the
development of the Region's program from year to
year. The Branch helps program managers formulate
budgets, specify objectives, and monitor accomplish-
ment. Internal evaluations are conducted periodically.
The Branch also assists grantees in the areas of pro-
perty, procurement, audit coordination,  accounting,
and fiscal matters.
  The  Financial  Management Branch  assures  that
Federal  financial  regulations are  adhered to,  that
employees receive their paychecks on time, that bills
and contracts and grant obligations are paid, that of-
ficial travelers  are  reimbursed, and that appropriate
financial systems are in  place and accurate records
are kept. The Grants Administration Section moni-
tors  procedures and assures that Regional staff and
grantees are trained in grants processing.
  The  Personnel  Branch has the responsibility  for
recruitment, staffing, classification, employee develop-
ment, and  employee  relations for the  over seven
hundred employees in the various offices of Region
V. The Branch administers the  Executive Develop-
ment and the Upward Mobility Programs and provides
staff services for the annual awards ceremony. Person-
nel staffers  advise Regional managers  in all areas
of  personnel  management  including  performance
appraisals, employee-management relations, and em-
polyee recognition and incentives.
  The  General Services Branch  takes care of I.D.
Cards, procurement and  purchasing, property, safety,
reproduction,  supplies,  mail  distribution, facilities
management, general complaints, and all  manner of
odds and ends that must be done if an  office is to
open each morning. The Graphic Arts Section produc-
es  all  sorts  of  visual  aids, signs,  layouts,  maps,
charts, slides,  and the like for use in  exhibits or pub-
lications in support of Region V's programs.
  The  manpower  development  activity  assists the
states in  Region V to develop an adequate supply
of skilled personnel for the successful implementation
of Federal  statutes at state and local levels.  EPA-
related educational and training  grants are adminis-
tered and coordination with  manpower agencies and
programs is accomplished.
  The Data Processing Branch provides ADP support
to programs and activities in  Region V.  Branch re-
sponsibilities  include planning  computer use,  data
entry and retrieval, review of requests for  ADP equip-
ment and services, technical advice to  managers,
liaison with ADP in Washington, and Regional com-
puter training. In  addition  to providing  support to
programs like water supply,  enforcement, air  sur-
veillance, and construction grants, the Branch handles
local and national  financial, personnel, timekeeping,
and  other management  systems  supported by  ADP
in Region V.
24

-------
                   AIR AND HAZARDOUS  MATERIALS

                                          DIVISION
         AIR  AND  HAZARDOUS
         MATERIALS DIVISION

          Pesticides Branch
          Air Programs Branch
          Waste Management Branch
  Toxic chemical  spills,  SC>2 regulations,  pesticide
applicator   training  programs,  hazardous  waste
regulation—the work handled by the  Division of Air
and Hazardous  Materials spans a diverse  range of
timely environmental issues. Regional programs for
Air, Noise,  Radiation, Pesticides, Toxic Substances
and Waste  Management  are managed through this
office. Primary responsibility of the Air  and Hazardous
Materials Division is  to  assure  that  national  EPA
program recommendations and goals are implement-
ed in the Midwest. To achieve this aim, personnel are
provided to work closely with state and local agencies
on grants,  planning and monitoring  systems,  data
collection and analysis, and on the development of
regulations.
  The six areas covered  by the Division are divided
among  three Branches:  Pesticides,  Air  Programs,
Solid  Waste Management, and the  new  Office of
Toxic Substances.

                  Pesticides

  Pesticides  promotes safe pesticide use through
state applicator  training  and certification  programs.
Five of the Region V states have certification programs
which resulted as a joint effort by EPA  with the states.
The State of Wisconsin  has completed plans for a
certification  program  and is awaiting approval by
the legislature. In addition to working  on state train-
ing  programs, the Branch  regulates all  pesticides
registered  in Region  V,  investigates pesticide ac-
cidents and spills  and is currently investigating the
use of Integrated Pest Management as an alternative
pest control measure.

            Air Programs Branch

  Air  Programs  coordinates and  implements  the
Regional air program objectives with local and State
agencies, the Office of Air and  Waste Materials, and
federal  agencies.  Branch  personnel  work closely
with state  officials on programs  to control existing
Famed race car driver Bobby Unser spoke out for
clean air through regular car tune-ups in a Region V
sponsored tour

sources  and to insure that industrial growth will  not
threaten  existing clean  air. 1976 saw  the  adoption
of EPA-developed sulfur dioxide regulations for the
State of Ohio. Ozone and particulate  matter pollution
remain a critical issue throughout the Region.

         Waste Management Branch
  Noise,  Radiation and Solid Waste Management fall
within the realm of the Waste Management Branch.
Each  office  works  with State and  local personnel,
providing technical  assistance in the development of
program  plans  and other  program functions. The
administration  of grants,  radiation  monitoring and
fostering  development of community  noise control
ordinances  are but  a few of the areas of involvement
for the Waste Management Branch.
                                                                                               25

-------
                                    WATER  DIVISION
                   WATER
                  DIVISION
          Planning Branch
          Construction Grants Branch
          Water Supply Branch
  When we talk about the Water Division, the  first
thing  that comes to  mind is  the building  of waste-
water treatment plants. While  it is true that the Con-
struction Grants Branch  works  with the states on
wastewater treatment grants, the focus of the Division
is actually divided between  dealing with water  issues
of today and planning  for tomorrow.
  Over  180 employees are divided among the con-
struction grants, planning, and water supply branches.

Scuba divers prepare  to collect sediment samples at
Shagawa Lake, Minnesota
             Construction Grants
  Construction Grants is responsible for the manage-
ment  of a  $4.5  billion grant program for the  con-
struction of wastewater treatment facilities in  Region
V. The Region is administering  over 1800 active pro-
jects representing a Federal  grant investment in ex-
cess of $3.3  billion.  Construction  grants authority
extends over application review and assistance, grant
awards, project monitoring, on-site inspections,  User
Charge/Cost  Recovery  Systems,  Infiltration/Inflow
Analysis, and completed Plant  Operation  and Main-
tenance.

               Planning Branch
  The  Planning  Branch  provides  direction  to  the
Regional water planning and water quality program.
Under  Section 208  of the  Federal  Water Pollution
Control Act,  EPA  is  authorized to make financial
assistance available to state governments for area-
wide waste treatment management  planning. Plan-
ning to prevent future  pollution  is  a  "hometown"
project. Local officials in an area advise their Gover-
nor which  areas  require planning due to high levels
of  pollution.  Governors  designate  planning areas
within their own states and see that public meetings
are held  at which local citizens may express  their
views on the  issues involved. EPA has money avail-
able for regional planning  agencies to  help offset
costs, thereby encouraging public  participation and
more comprehensive planning efforts.
  In addition to involvement  on 208, the Planning
Branch represents the Region  on interagency plan-
ning committees,  prepares  Environmental  Impact
Statements on  proposed  projects,  administers the
Clean  Lakes  Program, and  provides  assistance to
State and  local  officials on  EPA planning  require-
ments.

            Water Supply Branch
  The Water Supply Branch is responsible for imple-
menting the Safe Drinking Water Act in  Region  V.
Program implementation is an  awesome task—over
95,000 public water supply systems exist in  Region
V, and  to perform annual or biennial  sanitary surveys
on each system would run close to $15 million.
  EPA's involvement  entails working with the states
on the development of state drinking water programs.
To  make  state programs work, tough regulations or
enforceable legislation is a "must."  Five  out of the
six  Region V states have declared their intent to  seek
primary enforcement  responsibility  for their public
water supply system programs.
  In addition  to state drinking  water  programs,
EPA is also  responsible for  protecting  sources of
underground water. Regulations for  the Underground
Injection Control  Program are under final revision.
26

-------
               SURVEILLANCE AND  ANALYSIS  DIVISION
         _SURVEILLANCE  AND
            ANALYSIS DIVISION

          Quality  Assurance Office
          Technical Support  Branch
          Field Support  Branch
              Eastern  D. 0.
              Central  D. 0.
              Western D. 0.
          Air Surveillance  Branch
          Great Lakes  Surveillance  Branch
          Central  Regional Laboratory
   The Surveillance and Analysis Division functions as
 the "eyes and ears of EPA".  Providing  up-to-the-
 minute feedback  on the state of the environment is
 the major objective of this technical division.
   Surveillance  and Analysis collects,  monitors, an-
 alyzes, and evaluates environmental quality data for
 support of regional and national  monitoring  programs
 and enforcement efforts. The Division  is responsible
 for  maintaining the Environmental  Emergency Re-
 sponse Center for  handling oil and chemical  spills
 throughout  Region  V. Other responsibilities include
 coordinating Environmental Impact  Statement re-
 views,  Section  10 and section  404 permit reviews,
 and  insuring  compliance  with  environmental  laws
 by federal facilities.  In working with  the other EPA
 divisions, Surveillance and Analysis evaluates  state
 program  plans and provides technical assistance to
 the states  when needed.  Most  importantly,  the
 Division is responsible for the implementation  of re-
 gional monitoring programs to meet regional and na-
 tional  objectives  not met  by Washington  EPA pro-
 grams.
   The year-to-year accomplishments of the Regional
 Surveillance and  Analysis  Division  would fill several
 volumes. Over  140  technical and support  personnel
 staff the Regional facilities  which include the Chicago
 EPA office,  the Central Regional Laboratory, and Dis-
 trict Offices in Ohio, Minnesota, and  Illinois.  Major
 achievements during 1976-1977 include:

^Development  of  a position paper advocating a de-
 tergent phosphate ban for the  Great  Lakes. Phos-
 phates  are  considered  a  major source  of  eutro-
 phication  in the Great Lakes. A ban on phosphates
 in  detergents is  considered  by Region V  EPA  to
 be the easiest  and cheapest  way to correct the
 problem.

^Publication  of  a  summary  report on toxic sub-
 stances  in  the  Wabash  River  Basin. The report
 identifies known toxic sources, compounds,  and ad-
 ditional monitoring needs.
^Review comments and  testimony in  court proce-
 edings and on the subsequent permit application for
 the  Reserve  Mining Milepost 7  land  disposal  site.
 The Division  also operates an ambient air monitor-
 ing network near Silver Bay,  Minnesota to evaluate
 and study  the correlation between pollution trends
 and public health.

^Completion  of a 21/z year water quality evaluation of
 the Mahoning River. Conducted in support of permits
 for steel mills in the area, the  river study  includes
 mathematical modeling of all  parameters,  evaluation
 of treatment methods and cost projections.
 Sampling Lake Michigan water from Region V's
 research vessel, the Roger R. Simons

^Continuation  of the Great Lakes Surveillance  Pro-
 gram. In addition to the 9-year water quality sampling
 program, the Division is engaging in  a  special  two-
 year study of atmospheric pollution in the Great Lakes
 through  a grant with  Governors State  University.
 Testing  is  done aboard  the EPA  oceanographic
 vessel—Roger  R.  Simons.  The  Surveillance  and
 Analysis Division is also working with NASA to develop
 methodology which  will enable satellites to  monitor
 Great Lakes and ocean water quality.

^Sponsorship of specialized technical workshops with
 state and local agencies for the purpose of improving
 the quality of collected  environmental  data. The pro-
 gram included an evaluation of all state laboratories,
 a series of ozone calibration  workshops, state air
 monitoring field audits, and assistance to the states
 in the development of written water quality goals.
                                                                                                 27

-------
                            ENFORCEMENT DIVISION
           ENFORCEMENT
                DIVISION
                     PasticWts
          Eif«|tm  nt SraMb
i—a-
                           Snitch
                Enforcement
  Enforcement acts as the "strong  arm" for EPA.
According to the Clean Air Act, and Federal Water
Pollution Control Act, it is illegal to discharge any pol-
lutants  into the nation's air or waterways which do not
meet stringent  standards. The  Enforcement Division
is responsible for assuring compliance with the  law
by all Region V waste sources.

EPA Enforcement Division Director James McDonald
  An air or water  permit is not a license to pollute.
Permits set strict limits  on  "what" and "how much"
may  be  discharged. Any source in  violation of, or
discharging without a permit faces court action, pos-
sible imprisonment, and severe fines.
  While some industries consider the environmental
restrictions a nuisance, the  real payoffs are seen in
environmental improvement—air and water that is
cleaner and  healthier.  In Region V,  Enforcement's
persistent efforts against the paper mill dischargers
have resulted in a cleaner  Fox River in Wisconsin.
Other actions are reflected in  significant  improve-
ments along Lake Michigan beaches and on the Cuya-
hoga River. The air  we breathe is cleaner, too.Through
enforcement actions, the number of  Region V cities
failing to meet  national air quality standards  has
been cut in half and steps have been taken to insure
that the  clean air  in the rural  parts  of the Midwest
stays that way.
  The Enforcement Division consists  of three bran-
ches:  Water and  Pesticides  Enforcement Branch,
Permit Branch, and the Air Enforcement Branch.

 Water and Pesticides Enforcement Branch

  The  Water and Pesticides  Enforcement Branch
implements the EPA enforcement program to ensure
that waste dischargers and pesticide users and hand-
lers  comply with  the applicable laws and statutes.
During 1977, Region  V  EPA  won a major enforce-
ment victory against water  permit violations by  U.S.
Steel. Also notable was the significant  rise in the
number  of toxic substances violations and necessary
enforcement actions.

                Permit Branch

  The  Permit Branch directs  the Regional NPDES
permit program  (National  Pollutant  Discharge Eli-
mination System), and monitors the operation of these
States with  NPDES authority. Over 12,000 permits
have been  issued  in Region V, 1100 of which were
for major dischargers.
  Other areas of involvement for the Permit Branch in-
clude thermal demonstrations,  ocean disposal  per-
mits, and  the Corps  of Engineers Dredge and Fill
Permit Program.

           Air Enforcement Branch

  The Air Enforcement  Branch develops and imple-
ments a regional  air pollution  enforcement program
for  over 4000 major air pollution sources in Region
V, and provides technical back-up for state air pollu-
tion  control  programs. During  1976 the branch  took
enforcement action on 130 cases of air standards vio-
lations from power plants,  steel mills, and other in-
dustrial sources.
28

-------