1970
                        30 YEARS OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRESS
                                                •*-2000
                     REMEMBER THE PAST
                     PROTECT THE FUTURE

                                                 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
                                                 Region 10, The Pacific Northwest & Alaska
                                                 EPA-910-R-00-007
ALASKA •
• IDAHO
OREGON-
-WASHINGTON

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                          Carol M. Browner
                           EPA Administrator

EPA was born 30 years ago at a time when rivers caught fire and cities were
hidden under dense clouds of smoke. We've made remarkable progress since
then. But we can't rest on our success.

Our mission to protect the environment, and to protect public health, is a mission
without end. New challenges loom over the horizon as surely as the new day.

We must continue our work to ensure that with each new dawn, the sun shines
through clear skies, and upon clean waters - and all our families enjoy the
blessings of good health.
                                                       Carol M. Browner

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              Mill
• U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY • PACIFIC NORTHWEST AND ALASKA •
The United States Environmental Protection Agency was established thirty years ago as the country was becoming more aware of
our dependence on the natural world. By placing most environmental laws under one agency, the government became more
accountable and responsive to the needs of present and future Americans. In the past three decades rivers have become cleaner,
skies clearer and our approach to addressing problems more holistic.
From the Regional Office in Seattle, the EPA employees are working to build partnerships with the state and local governments of
Alaska, Idaho, Oregon and Washington and hundreds of Tribes to continue this progress.
                 Clean Air - Tough action
                 on polluters has brought
                 major improvements; the
                 next step is up to you.
              1
Clean Water -
Improvements to sewer
systems, industrial facilities
and agriculture are making a
difference in your streams
and lakes.
                 Clean Land - Everyday we
                 create waste.  Cleaning up
                 the mistakes of past disposal
                 and preventing future
                 contamination is leading to
                 safer industrial and
                 residential neighborhoods.
                 Healthy Communities -
                 The stresses of population
                 growth can erode your
                 quality of life, health and
                 the natural beauty of the
                 world around you. Several
                 communities are making
                 smart decisions for the
                 future.
                                     Healthy Ecosystems -
                                     Myopic approaches to water
                                     and air pollution are now
                                     replaced by an
                                     understanding of the
                                     interconnectedness of our
                                     world.
Healthy Planet - Borders
on maps don't stop the
effects of poor
environmental policies.
EPA's work with other
countries is leading to
benefits at home.
                                     Challenges for the Next
                                     Century - Sustainable
                                     practices at work and at
                                     home will provide a healthy
                                     future for our children and
                                     the generations to follow.

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                                       EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
- Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act      - Federal Water Pollution Control Act      - Clean Air Act

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                      The Breath  of Life - For A  Healthy America
                                               mA,
    Clean air.  It's easy to think that our air is pure and clean
    in the Northwest. Unless we see or smell the clues of air
    pollution, we don't often think of any problems with air
    quality.

    It's true that we no longer see black smoke billowing
    from nearby smokestacks, yet there are times in the
    summer when haze makes it difficult to see the
    mountains in the distance. The familiar smell of wood
    smoke brings fond memories of cozy winter nights, but
    car and truck exhaust can be
    an unpleasant aroma on many
    urban streets.
    Over the last thirty years, the
    main sources of air pollution
    have changed, but the
    challenge to keep the air free
    of pollution is  as great as ever.

    EPA's goal is to ensure that
    every person in the Northwest
    can breathe air free of
    pollutants that cause
Pollution at Sea
                            significant risks of cancer, respiratory distress and other
                            health problems. We want to clear the air of pollutants
                            that damage our forests and crops, acidify our wilderness
                            lakes, and obscure our view of the natural wonders we
                            have in such abundance here.

                            Of the thousands of substances that are released to or
                            subsequently form in the air every day, EPA has chosen
                            to set national outdoor standards for just seven of them:
                            carbon monoxide, lead, nitrogen dioxide, ozone, sulfur
                                                     dioxide and particulate matter.
Along the Alaska coast line, citizen complaints alerted EPA
investigators to a different source fouling the air: Cruise
ships. While investigating the complaints, EPA staff observed
smoke coming from the ships which exceeded state and
federal limits for visible emissions. Consequently, six cruise
lines were issued Notices of Violation (NOVs) in early 2000
for emissions in Juneau, Seward and Glacier Bay.

Citizen tips are a valuable tool for finding polluters. By
working closely with local residents, the EPA and state
environmental agencies can better protect the air for those
communities and their tourists.
EPA works with state and
local governments to improve
air quality, and the results to
date are impressive. Since the
federal Clean Air Act was
passed in 1970, the nation has
significantly cleaned up the
air: 98 percent of lead, 79
percent of the particles, 41
percent of gaseous sulfur
dioxide, 28 percent of the
carbon monoxide, and 25
- Rachel Carson's book Silent Spring published; documents environmental harm resulting from toxic pesticides and herbicides.

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                                          EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
percent of the smog soup now called
ozone have been eliminated from
the air we breathe. Such
improvements are very meaningful,
due to the growth that occurred
 during the same period. The
 nation's economy grew by 90
 percent, the total U.S. population
 grew by 27 percent, and the number
 of motor vehicle miles driven
 increased by 111 percent!
                                                                                 Asthma and Children's Health

                                                                                 Asthma remains a persistent problem
                                                                                 in the U.S.  the number of children
                                                                                 afflicted has doubled in the past 10
                                                                                 years, currently affecting almost five
                                                                                 million nationwide. Nationally, the
                                                                                 asthma rate among children ages 5-14
                                                                                 rose 74% between 1980-94. Asthma
                                                                                 can be triggered by irritants and
                                                                                 allergens such as smoke,  dust, molds,
                                                                                 mites and pet dander.

                                                                                 The trends related to asthma are not
                                                                                 encouraging. For instance, the
                                                                                 hospitalization rate for asthma in
                                                                                 Washington state is rising much faster
                                                                                 than the rest of the U.S. That rate is
                                                                                 seven times higher among minority
                                                                                 children from the inner city than
                                                                                 children from other communities.
                                                                                 Low-income and minority children are
                                                                                 afflicted at much higher rates.  To
                                                                                 minimize asthma triggers, EPA
                                                                                 promotes the use of common-sense,
                                                                                 low-cost solutions for clearing the air
                                                                                 in homes and schools.

                                                                                 In response to this problem, the EPA
                                                                                 has funded several special projects
                                                                                 including:
                                                                                 •  Community-based, inner-city
                                                                                   asthma medical intervention clinic
                                                                                   and home visit programs.
                                                                                 • An inner-city asthma outreach and
                                                                                   education program.
                                                                                 •  Development and distribution of
                                                                                   brochures targeting residential air
                                                                                  pollution improvements in minority
                                                                                   and low-income communities.
          Economic growth and
          environmental protection can go
          hand in hand.  Industry was the first
          target of the Clean Air Act rules,
          and by installing sophisticated
          pollution control equipment on
          facilities both large and small, much
          of the industrial air pollution of the
          past has been eliminated.  Today,
          less than one-fifth of the total air
          pollution in the Northwest is caused
          by industry.
 - Shoreline Erosion Protection Act
- Solid Waste Disposal Act
- National Environmental Policy Act
-The

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     The quality of the air in the
     Northwest today is dependent upon
     the day-to-day choices we make.
     How do we get from place to place?
     How do we heat our homes? What
     do we do with garbage and yard
     debris?

     Cars, trucks and other means of
     transportation account for more than
     fifty percent of the total air pollution
     in the United States, and even more
     in the Northwest. Vehicle exhaust is
     a main ingredient of smog during
     the warm summer months, and it
     produces carbon monoxide in the
     wintertime.

     Yet despite the improvements in
     automobile exhaust systems over the
     last  30 years, pollution caused by
     cars is still a problem because there
     are simply more people driving
     more cars over greater distances
than ever before.  A well-tuned
vehicle creates less pollution, so
vehicle emission check programs in
major urban areas of the Northwest
help citizens keep their cars and
trucks tuned-up and operating
efficiently year-round.  Oxygenated
gasoline in winter helps engines
burn fuel efficiently even in the cold
winter temperatures.

Wood-burning stoves and outdoor
burning together account for
approximately one quarter of the
particulate pollution in the air we
breathe. Road dust, windblown
dust, as well as forest-burning and
field burns  also contribute to
problems in some areas.  During
winter weather inversions, stagnant
air traps pollution close to the
ground, increasing the levels of
pollutants where people breathe.
These problems have been solved in
many areas of the Northwest: new
woodstoves are now certified to
meet emission standards, and public
education programs teach people
how to burn wood efficiently,
without excessive smoke. Special
                                                                                   Controlling Air Quality in Indian
                                                                                   Country

                                                                                   The 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments
                                                                                   authorizes Native American tribes to
                                                                                   enact their own Clean Air programs,
                                                                                   and clarifies EPA's responsibility to
                                                                                   directly implement Clean Air programs
                                                                                   throughout Indian Country until a
                                                                                   tribal nation chooses to conduct its
                                                                                   own air pollution control plan. EPA
                                                                                   Region 10's work with Northwest
                                                                                   Native American tribes is focused in
                                                                                   two ways: 1) fostering tribal capacity
                                                                                   to manage air quality by providing
                                                                                   grant money and technical training;
                                                                                   and 2) fulfilling the array of required
                                                                                   regulatory responsibilities in Indian
                                                                                   Country (for example, issuing clean
                                                                                   air operating permits to industrial
                                                                                   sources located in Indian Country).
precautions, such as local burning
bans when pollution from
particulate matter is measured at
unsafe levels, helps keep pollution
to a minimum.

Population growth is by far the
biggest challenge to keeping the air
clean. A growing population means
more cars on the road, more
construction of new homes and
businesses, and greater demand on
the surrounding environment.

EPA is determined to do more than
simply maintain the progress that's
been made; by working together -
federal, state and local governments,
business, industry and citizens — we
can do what is necessary to improve
the quality of the air we breathe.
first Earth Day Celebration       - Environmental Protection Agency is created by President Nixon.       - United Nations

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                                             EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT


Recognizes Earth Day      - Lead Based Paint Poisoning Prevention Act      - Clean Water Act, protects wetlands and gives EPA

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                                                        WIT
                                                     Water for Every on
    The Pacific Northwest and Alaska are known for clear,
    clean, fresh tasting water.  Our major rivers and lakes are
    found in the high desert, coastal rainforest, arctic glaciers
    and valleys separating mountains. Such varied
    landscapes offer a challenge when balancing economic
    and population growth with protecting the quality of
    these water resources.  Since 1970, the EPA has worked
    with many partners to improve sewage treatment, reduce
    industrial waste discharges, and preserve habitat in our
    Northwest ecosystems.

    Improved Sewage Treatment
    In the past, raw or inadequately treated sewage was
    routinely released into our region's waters. As sewage
    decomposed, these wastes consumed large amounts of
    oxygen from the water.  Over
    time, the continuous supply of
    sewage consumed so much
    oxygen that many lakes, rivers
    and streams could no longer
    sustain aquatic life.
    To reverse this trend, the EPA
    developed a major sewage
    treatment program to
    eliminate the harmful effects
    of human wastes on aquatic
    ecosystems. Millions of
    dollars were provided to local
    governments to support the
    construction of new
    waste water treatment plants.
    Additionally, the EPA
    required wastewater plants to
    treat and remove oxygen
    consuming wastes.  In
    Oregon, these clean-up efforts
    doubled the oxygen levels in
    the Willamette River,
    revitalizing an important
    waterway.
Sewer Clean up
Between 1972-1990, the Clean Water Act provided $1.9
billion to build wastewater treatment facilities and
improvements in the states of Alaska ($234 million), Idaho
($246 million), Oregon ($578 million), and Washington
($843 million).
Water quality improvements in the Pacific Northwest have
lead to great public health benefits. For example, EPA funds
enabled the City of Yelm, Washington, to upgrade its
collection and wastewater treatment facility and deal with
failing or inadequate septic tank systems. Now the nitrate
levels in the groundwater supply, which once were rising
above the allowable drinking water standards, are under
control.

For the City of Boise, Idaho, improvements to its Lander
Street wastewater treatment facilities reduced the amount of
nutrients and bacteria taking oxygen from the Boise River.
Wastewater flows increased by seventy percent from 1995 to
1999.  Consequently, the oxygen depleting nutrients and
bacteria entering the plant increased by sixty percent. The
changes to the facility reduced the detrimental nutrients and
bacteria leaving the plant by eighteen percent over the same
four years. The result was more oxygen available for the
river's fish and plants.
Seventy-three million more people, in thousands of
communities across the nation, have upgraded sewage
treatment, compared to 25 years ago. The water quality
improvements associated with these efforts are
impressive. Releases  of oxygen consuming wastes have
declined by 36 percent (from 6,700 metric tons a day in
1970 to 4,300 metric tons a day in 1992) even though the
amount of sewage being treated has increased by 28
percent. Even more significant, levels of life-giving
dissolved oxygen have increased in regularly monitored
waters across the country.

Safe Drinking Water
Most people in the United States simply turn on the
kitchen tap to fill a glass with clean, safe  drinking water.
                        It's probably even fair to say
                        that most Americans assume
                        that the 34 billion gallons of
                        tap water we use each day will
                        always be pure and close at
                        hand. To ensure that this
                        would always  be true,
                        Congress enacted the Safe
                        Drinking Water Act in 1974.
                        Since that time, preserving the
                        safety of our nation's public
                        drinking water supply has
                        been, and continues to be, one
                        of the EPA's top priorities.
                        Over the last 25 years the EPA
                        has issued numerous  drinking
                        water standards protecting the
                        public from the effects of
                        harmful chemicals and
                        microbial pollutants.  In
                        addition, the EPA and each
                        state monitor the quality of
                        drinking water supplies and
                       I develop strategies to prevent
                       J contamination.  Together these
authority to set water quality standards
        - Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act Amendment
                                           - Coastal

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                                              EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
     efforts constitute a comprehensive
     program providing the American
     public with safe and reliable water.

     Special protection programs are
     being implemented in about 4,000
     communities across the Northwest
     region. The success of these efforts
     is shown by the fact that in 1999
     more than 90 percent of the
     population in community water
     systems received water meeting all
     health-based standards.

     Reduced Industrial Pollution
     Prior to 1970, wastewater
     discharges from industry went
     largely unchecked. The Clean
     Water Act, however, made it illegal
     for any industry to discharge
     pollutants directly to national waters
     without a permit specifying
     appropriate pollution limits. Those
     limits are based on balancing our
     economy's need for production and
     the ecosystem's natural ability to
     compensate for some amount of
     pollution.

     The EPA developed standards for
     more than 50 different industries
     and currently oversees more than
     57,000 industrial water pollution
     permits. Currently, these permits
     prevent more than one billion
     pounds of toxic pollution from
     entering our nation's waters each
     year.

     A related water pollution control
     program focuses on companies
     dumping liquid wastes down their
     drains into the public sewer system.
     The Clean Water Act contains
     special provisions that require these
     dischargers to "pretreat" their waste
     before it enters the sewer. More
     than 30,000 major industrial
     dischargers are now covered by
     pretreatment standards.  As one of
     the EPA's most successful programs,
     pretreatment standards have reduced
     toxic discharges to public sewers by
     an estimated 75 percent.
                 Yaquina Bay Bridge, Newport Oregon
                 Public Water System Violations
                 Since the Safe Drinking Water Act Ammendments of 1996, States have submitted annual reports. The
                 percentage of water systems in violation of federal rules has declined steadily since that time.
                    I
                    =
                       100
                        80
                        40
                        20
                                              Alaska
                                              Idaho
                                              Oregon
                                              Washington
                            1996
                  1997
                 1998
                   For a complete report on the nation's public water systems, view it on the web:
                   www.epa.gov/safewater/annual/acr98.pdf

                   Oregon's 1996 report double counted some systems
Zone Management Act
- Ocean Dumping Ban Act
- DDT is Banned
- Endangered Species Act

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     The Pulp Industry

     Many industries affect Pacific
     Northwest water quality either by
     using or discharging water.  Under the
     authority of the Clean  Water Act, some
     of the most dramatic environmental
     progress has occurred in cleaning up
     Region 10's pulp & paper industry.

     The manufacturing process uses far
     less water today than 30 years ago.
     Consequently,  water pollution from
     these facilities has declined. For
     example, the water discharged
     consumes much less oxygen in the
     water.  The suspended solids that
     cloud the water and hurt aquatic water
     life have also been reduced.  The net
     improvement in water discharged by
     mills has been remarkable.

     To achieve this pollution reduction, the
     industry made increased efficiency and
     waste reduction a top priority. There
     is an amazing  downward trend in
     discharge and water use since 1967.
     And yet this streamlined industry has
     seen a steady net increase in
     production.  That translates into a
     stronger economic base while
     releasing much less pollution - a real
     success story.
Pulp & Paper Wastewater Discharge Improvements in the Pacific Northwest
& Alaska
       200
                                             Palp Production

                                       Biochemical Oxygen Demand
Biochemical
     Oxygen
      Demand
                    1972
            1977
1989
1999
   How much has the water quality
   improved? Monitoring data tell of a
   98 percent reduction in oxygen
   consumption, 89 percent reduction in
   Total Suspended Solids and 63 percent
   reduction in water use.
                      The graph above shows this
                      compelling story of an efficient
                      industry working to meet EPA water
                      quality limits.
    The Non Point Source Pollution
    Story
    In the 1990's the EPA began looking
    at water quality problems on a
    watershed basis (the area from
    which water drains into a river
    system). Nearly every human
    activity within a watershed has
    some impact on its water quality.

    As pollution from stationary sources
    such as factories and sewage
    treatment plants declined, the water
    quality was still impaired from the
    effects of many non point sources of
    pollution. Agricultural and logging
    activities, urban runoff and
    homeowner actions were still
    affecting water quality. Reductions
    in these non point source impacts
    are succeeding because of
    cooperation between other agencies,
    organizations and individuals.
    Perhaps the most significant impact
    has been when all of these interested
  parties joined together to form
  Watershed Councils. The councils
  take an active role in protecting their
  own community's watershed.

  Enforcement of environmental
  regulations alone will get us only
                     part way toward our goal of cleaner
                     water. The citizens in each
                     community must band together to
                     preserve these precious water
                     resources.


Drinking Water Act      - Basic theory of how CFC's destroy ozone is published       - Energy Policy and Conservation Act

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                                             EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
- Hazardous Materials Transportation Act      - EPA requires new cars to have catalytic converters and use unleaded gas. Lead

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                                                                    (
                                  rom Superfund to  Super Parks
    Thirty years ago, thousands of contaminated junkyards,
    dump sites, and industrial facilities littered the land.
    Industry and the government addressed chemical usage
    and disposal totally separately. To bring this toxic
    dilemma under control, Congress began establishing laws
    to prevent polluting yet more
    areas, and then to clean up the
    many toxic sites around the
    country.

    Congress enacted the
    Resource Conservation and
    Recovery Act (RCRA) in
    1976 to address chemical
    usage and disposal from a
    more comprehensive
    approach.  The act regulates
    hazardous waste through the
    entire 'life cycle' - from
    cradle to grave.

    To address the existing, highly
    contaminated sites, Congress
    passed the Comprehensive
    Environmental Response,
    Compensation and Liability
    Act (CERCLA) in 1980, which established the Superfund
    program. More than 36,000 sites were identified and
    entered into EPA's inventory of hazardous waste sites.

    These two laws changed the way the country looked at
    industrial pollution. Generators of hazardous waste
    became responsible for the use and disposal of their
    waste.  Polluters became responsible for cleaning up the
    mess they created.  The EPA then faced the challenge of
    monitoring chemical use, disposal and clean-up.

    "From Cradle to Grave"
    Hazardous wastes under RCRA are now managed within
    a system having a beginning and an end.  Many industrial
Business Incentives
                             and commercial facilities are required to have permits
                             controlling both waste treatment and disposal.  Although
                             household hazardous wastes are primarily controlled at
                             the local level, EPA set national standards for municipal
                             waste disposal to ensure that problems don't arise in the
                                                     future.
The EPA's Region 10 is finding new ways to better manage
our chemicals and waste, from using fewer toxic chemicals in
industrial processes to voluntary cleanups of past releases.
One such voluntary initiative provides incentives to
companies for going beyond simple compliance with
environmental requirements. Targeting 17 high-priority toxic
chemicals, participating companies here have reduced
releases and disposals by an astonishing 58%.  Corporate
consciousness and initiative account for much of the
program's success with over a quarter of the eligible
companies participating, the highest rate in the U.S.

Economic opportunity and environmental protection are not
mutually exclusive propositions.  In stimulating the
development of businesses that use recyclable or reusable
materials, new jobs and tax revenues have been created while
performing an important environmental service to society.
Our support led to a national electronic marketplace for
recyclables on the Chicago Board of Trade Recyclables
Exchange.
   Congress intended for the
   States to have direct
   responsibility for running the
   RCRA program.  The EPA
   assumed an assistance and
   oversight role, providing
   compliance and enforcement
   functions, where  appropriate.
   Oregon, Washington, and
   Idaho have pursued and been
   authorized to to regulate their
   share of the 6,818 hazardous
   waste handlers located
   throughout the region. Alaska
   has not.   In 1997, Washington
   ranked 24th, Oregon 36th, Idaho
   9th, and Alaska 47th in
   hazardous waste generation
   among the 50 states.
                             Garbage and Recycling
                             Most of us have heard reports about the unfortunate
                             problems created by municipal landfills.  We are
                             addressing these problems by promoting better waste
                             management practices. Lining landfills with high-tech
                             seepage preventing barriers or returning sites to valuable
                             park and recreational space make these sites better
                             neighbors.

                             It takes an entire forest - over 500,000 trees- to supply
                             Americans with their Sunday newspapers every week?
                             Recycling is a vital part of any sensible waste
                             management program. It not only reduces the volume of
levels in urban air drop 99% over next 20 years.
                - Toxic Substances Control Act
- Resource Conservation and Recovery

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                                             EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
    garbage otherwise sent to landfills,
    but also reduces demands on our
    natural resources.  Although the
    trend in recycling here has been
    steadily moving upward, so has the
    per capita amount of waste
    generated.  Your continuing support
    is the key.

    Toxic Substances
    Some materials are so toxic, and the
    threat of their release to the
    environment so widespread, that
    special toxic substances laws were
    enacted to regulate them. EPA has
    broad authority to ensure that these
    substances are managed safely.  Our
    focus in this region is on PCB's
    (poly chlorinated byphenyls),
    chemicals in commerce (import/
    export), and lead.

    Between 1930 and 1979, PCBs were
    used as an insulator in a variety of
    electrical equipment. PCB's are a
    very effective insulator - and a very
    potent environmental hazard.  Some
    137 million pounds of PCBs were
    safely disposed of in permitted
    facilities in 1994.

    It is truly disturbing that one in
    every 25 children in the U.S. has
    dangerously high blood lead levels.
    This comes about in a variety of
    ways, including contact with leaded
    paints, contaminated soil, and dust.
    We're working to assist tribes and
    states to reduce lead exposure.

    Cleaning up the Contamination
    Superfund is designed to protect
    human health and the environment
    through fast, effective cleanup of
    priority hazardous waste sites and
    releases. Those who created the
    problems are required to clean them
    up.  If they either can't be identified
    or can't afford the cleanup costs, the
    government moves forward with
    cleanup using federal money.

    We work with others - state, tribal
    and local agencies, and the general
    public - in actively searching for
    sites that may require cleanup under
                          Superfund.  Once identified, these
                          sites fall into two basic categories.
                          There are those sites which are
                          considered such a significant hazard
                          to human health or the environment
                          that they require an immediate
                          cleanup, known as a removal. And
                          there are other seriously
                          contaminated sites that require more
                          long-term cleanup.  These sites can
                          be added to the National Priorities
                          List (NPL) and thus become eligible
                          for federal funded cleanup money if
                          necessary. Some sites are also
                          cleaned up under the supervision of
                          a qualified state cleanup program.

                          The Removal Program
                          Removals typically take less than a
                          year and involve waste treatment
                          onsite or transferring drums,
                          excavated contaminated soils, and
                          other wastes to regulated disposal
                          facilities. Some removals are
                          outright emergencies stemming
                          from fires or spills.  In non-
                          emergencies, we locate the party
                          responsible for the contamination
                          and direct them to perform the
                          cleanup. If post-removal testing of
                          soils and groundwater reveals that
                contamination levels are still of
                concern, the site may either be listed
                on the NPL or referred to another
                agency for further cleanup.

                Northwest Superfund Sites
                Of the over 1,400 Superfund sites
                located across the country, 91 can be
                found in the Pacific Northwest.
                Over a million people here live
                within two miles of one or more
                Superfund sites. These sites run the
                gamut from active industrial
                facilities to small businesses.  From
                less than an acre to more than 21
                square miles in size.

                Of the region's 91 Superfund  sites,
                43 have been cleaned up and 22 of
                them have been formally deleted
                from the NPL.  Final cleanups at
                another 41 sites are currently
                underway nationally. More than
                675 of the most serious uncontrolled
                or abandoned hazardous waste sites
                have been cleaned up and 85 more
                will be done by the end of 2000.
                Responsible parties have paid 70
                percent of the cleanup costs, saving
                taxpayers billions of dollars.
                          Quantity ofRCRA Hazardous Waste Generated in the Pacific Northwest &
                          Alaska
                             15,000,000


                             12,000,000



                              9,000,000


                              6,000,000



                              3,000,000
                                    Washington
                                            1991
           1993
1995
1997
Act (RCRA)
- Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act
- Love Canal Crisis in N. Y. Heightens
              - CFC's

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     High-Tech Cleanup Winding
     Down

     The Western Processing Company, a
     chemical waste processing and
     recycling facility, operated from 1961
     to 1983 on a 13-acre site in Kent, 20
     miles south of Seattle. Some of the
     Pacific Northwest's largest industries
     contracted with Western Processing to
     handle a wide variety of chemicals and
     waste materials.

     In 1983, the EPA ordered the company
     to stop operations and placed Western
     Processing on the NPL. The
     Superfund program required the
     cleanup of contaminants from soil and
     water found during the site
     investigation.

     Cleanup activities began in 1984 with
     the removal of 4,700 tons of wastes
     from ponds, drums, and tanks on the
     site's surface. The EPA worked with
     the Washington Department of
     Ecology in 1987 on the second
     cleanup phase, removing more than
     35,000 cubic yards of contaminated
     soils and sludges.

     In the ensuing years we built a 40-foot
     deep vertical barrier wall,
     groundwater treatment system, and a
     multi-layered cap over the entire 13-
     acre southern portion of the site.

     Today, the site is 95% complete, and
     no taxpayer money was used to clean
     up the site. The work was managed
     and paid for entirely by the Western
     Processing Trust. The Trust was
     formed by the responsible parties
     (companies such as Boeing, Franz, )
     who had used Western Processing to
     dispose of their waste. The work
     accomplished demonstrates the
     successful partnership of government
     and private industry in helping to
     protect the environment and improve
     the quality of life for the people of the
     Pacific Northwest.

Oil Spills & Public Awareness
EPA and the Coast Guard are jointly
responsible for cleaning up oil
spills, and for enforcing laws meant
to prevent spills. If a facility that
stores oil reports two or more small
spills, or one large one, it must
submit a spill prevention and
cleanup plan to EPA for review.
EPA also performs inspections of
such facilities to help keep spills
from happening.
Superfund's Emergency Planning
and Community Right to Know Act
requires businesses using hazardous
chemicals to report the chemicals
and their quantities to state and local
emergency response and planning
groups. We support these groups
with grants, technical assistance and
training. Our hazardous materials
response program has conducted
health and safety training at eleven
villages in Alaska in an effort to
prepare residents for cleanup jobs at
local sites.
                                            Prince William Sound, Alaska. Eleven million gallons of crude oil from the Exxon Valdez
                                            contaminated shorelines 1989. Congress passed the Oil Pollution Act in 1990.
(chloroflourocarbons) banned in most aerosol cans      - Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant Accident      - EPA bans sale

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                                            EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT


of Agent Orange herbicide.      - Mount St. Helen's Erupts      - Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and

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                  Safe and Healthy P,
nd Healthy Places to Live, Wor
            Work and Play
    There is nothing unique about Americans wanting a safe
    and healthy place to live, recreate, raise children, have
    careers, build a future. In 1949, Congress mandated "a
    decent home and suitable living environment for every
    American family"and reaffirmed it again in 1968.
    President John F. Kennedy warned in 1963 that if we
    neglect our cities, we will neglect the nation.

    And yet our cities have been neglected.  Trends have
    found families moving to the suburbs as they seek the
    dream of home ownership, open space, parks and ball
    fields.  New roads and freeways provided easy
    automobile access to abundant and affordable land,
    encouraging yet new development and urban sprawl.

    The Northwest, and particularly the coastal and sound
    communities, has grown because of the opportunities
    created by its residents.  Our commitments to economic
    restructuring, transportation and the environment, give us
    the opportunity to improve our region's livability and
    prosperity for years to come.

    How do we sustain our region's livability and prosperity?
    By making economic and environmental decisions that
    meet our needs and without compromising the ability of
    future generations to meet theirs; in other words, by
    avoiding dead ends.

    Sprawl
    In communities across the nation, there is a growing
    concern that current development patterns, dominated by
    what some call "sprawl", are no longer in the long-term
                               interests of our cities, existing suburbs, small towns, rural
                               communities, open space or wilderness areas. Though
                               supportive of growth, communities are questioning the
                               economic costs of abandoning infrastructure in the city,
                               only to build it further out.  They are questioning the
                               social costs of the mismatch between new employment in
                               locations in the suburbs and the available workforce in
                               the city. They are questioning the wisdom of abandoning
                               "brownfields" in older communities, eating up the open
                               space and prime agricultural lands at the suburban fringe,
                               and polluting the air of an entire region by driving further
                               to get places.  Spurring the  smart growth movement are
                               demographic  shifts, a strong environmental ethic,
                               increased fiscal concerns and more open views of
                               growth. The result is both a new demand and a new
                               opportunity for smart growth.

                               This opportunity should not be confused with "no
                               growth" or even "slow growth." People want the jobs,
                               tax revenues,  and amenities that come with development.
                               But they want these benefits without degrading the
                               environment,  raising local taxes, increasing traffic
                               congestion, or busting budgets.  More and more local
                               governments are finding that current development
                               patterns frequently fail to provide this balance.

                               Portland, Oregon and Seattle, Washington, are two
                               examples of communities searching for this balance.
                               They have both struggled with the classic pattern of
                               disinvestment in urban/suburban areas while investing in
                               as-yet-unbuilt communities on the fringe. In the last two
                               decades, flight from the core to the suburbs created a
Liability Act (Superfund Law)
    - Nuclear Waste Policy Act
- Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments to RCRA

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                                        EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
golden ring of the priciest homes
encircling the cities and moves
further outward in both cases.
Million dollar homes now sit on
ridges along the eastside of Seattle,
that were only twenty years ago
homes to rabbits and deer. The rural
character of these areas has been hit
with traffic congestion, high taxes,
decline in public services,  and loss
of farmland.

Portland, Oregon, however, has
managed, with its long-standing
urban growth boundary, downtown
building boom, and well-developed
transit system, to be known as one
of the best known and frequently
cited examples of smart growth.

Smart Growth
Smart Growth recognizes
connections between development
and quality of life. It leverages new
growth to improve the community.
The features that distinguish smart
growth in a community vary from
place to place.  In general,  smart
growth invests time, attention and
resources in restoring community
and vitality to city centers and older
suburbs.  New smart growth is more
town-centered, is transit and
pedestrian oriented, and has a
greater mix of housing, commercial
and retail uses.  It also preserves
open space and many other
environmental amenities. But there
is no "one-size-fits-all solution.
Successful communities do tend to
have one thing in common - a vision
of where they want to go and of
what things they value in their
community - and their plans for
development reflect these values.

Current development patterns are all
too familiar. There has continued to
be a disinvestment in older
communities and the flight of much
of the middle class to newer, diffuse,
single-use developments. Older
suburbs now experience the
downward economic cycle once
thought to be uniquely urban.
Indeed, many suburbs now have
more in common with urban
counterparts than with new suburbs.
This has created an opportunity to
forge regional problem solving
between the city and the
surrounding suburbs. This has thus
led to investing in existing
communities rather than subsidizing
flight to as-yet-unbuilt
developments. There has been a
shift that new growth, especially
growth subsidized by state's and the
federal government, should add
value to existing communities.

The call to reexamine our growth
patterns and practices has support.
The President's Council on
Sustainable Development, a group
of business CEO's
environmentalists, and government
agencies, recommended new
patterns of growth to maintain
community vitality.  While land-use
and growth-management activities
are the responsibility of state, tribal
and local authorities, EPA is
uniquely positioned to encourage
growth-management measures that
take environmental impacts into
consideration.

EPA Region 10 uses existing
authorities under statues such as the
Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act
and the National Environmental
Policy Act to help minimize the
impacts of development activities.
Region 10 also focuses on
supporting state, tribal and local
efforts.  Specific activities include
improving communications and
providing technical expertise and
resources to manage  growth issues
such as wastewater disposal,
drinking water, water quantity,
waste disposal, transportation and
air quality, storm water runoff, and
wetlands and habitat loss. EPA also
provides funding and support for
specific projects through programs
such as Sustainable Development
Challenge Grants and Better
American Bonds
 "We will help you build what we hear you are asking for and what is no less than
 you and your families deserve; livable communities, comfortable suburbs, vibrant
 cities, and for you grandchildren's well-being and for their grandchildren's too,
 green spaces."
                                                    Vice President Al Gore
                                                         January 11, 1999
 - Over 2000 people killed in Bhopal, India following toxic gas release      - Union Carbide plant at Institute, West Virginia

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    Brownfields
    Brownfields are abandoned or
    underused properties where real or
    perceived environmental
    contamination has slowed
    redevelopment. There are hundreds
    of these sites in the Region, from
    abandoned factories and shuttered
    gas stations, to aging rail yards.
    Cleaning up and reusing these areas
    often helps to preserve greenspace
    which would otherwise be used for
    development.

    Since 1995, Region 10 has provided
    up to $200,000 in seed funding to
    more than 20 state, local and tribal
    governments to expedite local site
    cleanup or assessment. Examples of
    recent brownfields initiatives
    include:  funding of the Portland
    Brownfields Cleanup Revolving
    Loan Fund, which provides local
    cleanup loans; the Seattle/King
    County Job Training Pilot, which is
    successfully training individuals in
    need to work on hazardous waste
    site assessment and cleanup; and
    supplemental awards to the Oregon
    Economic and Community
    Development Department and King
    County, Washington to perform
    assessments which promote
    economic redevelopment and
    greenspace preservation.

    Lead in Children
    Cities have faced  a myriad of
    environmental problems: polluted
    air; lead based paint hazards;
    asbestos, radon, vehicle gridlock,
    hazardous waste sites, polluted
    beaches. All of these threaten the
    health of the children growing up in
    our cities. As urban sprawl
    expanded, many of these same
    problems moved to the suburbs.

    Before 1978, lead-based paint was
    commonly used in homes and
    apartment buildings. Exposure can
    also be traced to contaminated soil
    and water from mine wastes.
    Although cases of childhood lead
    poisoning are on the decline
    nationally,  lead contamination
    remains a localized concern in parts
    of Region 10.  Lead is a naturally
 Community Tools for Transportation

 When city and county governments ask for public participation in local planning,
 you can bring new ideas and concepts to the table:

 Explore alternatives and involve the community. Look for creative solutions
 integrating land use, transportation, environment and livability.

 Diversify the transportation system by providing more transportation choices.
 More choices enhances personal freedom, economic equity, and environmental
 protection.

 Emphasize Transportation Demand Management (TDM). Explore this method of
 trip reduction through an array of travel alternatives, roadway incentives, financial
 incentives, work hours and location management.

 Maximize the use of existing infrastructure. Habitat degradation, fragmentation,
 and loss can be prevented by making better use of the existing infrastructure.

 Consider redevelopment. Redevelopment prevents sprawl and protects farms,
 forests, and natural lands.  It also improves the existing built environment for people.

 Maintain historic, cultural, natural features, and community character.
 Emphasizing local history, culture, and natural history and avoiding impacts to these
 elements helps to establish or maintain community identity and cohesion.
occurring substance that is toxic
when ingested or inhaled.  Lead is
most hazardous to children under
six years of age. Health effects
include reduced intelligence and
attention span, reading/learning
disabilities and behavioral problems.
Home sellers and landlords must
now disclose known lead-based
paint and its hazards to both buyers
and renters.  Since June 1, 1999, in
support of the Clinton-Gore
Administration's right to know
efforts, any contractor involved in
remodeling or renovation is now
required to give home owners a
copy of a new booklet, Protect Your
Family From Lead in Your Home.

EPA provides grant  money to states
and tribes for public education and
testing activities. The agency also
certifies training providers and
programs to perform inspections,
risk assessment and abatement
work. EPA is also beginning to
focus on outdoor sources of lead
exposure — such as paints used on
playgrounds and fences.  For
example, EPA awarded the
Washington State Department of
Health more than $2.5 million in
grant funds for determining the
extent of threats to children caused
by lead paint and lead dust across
the state.
releases methyl isocanate. Congress debates possibility of Bhopal-like accident in U.S.      - Emergency Planning and Community

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                                             EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
Right to Know Act, requires chemical facilities to report annual toxic releases.      - Chernobyl Nuclear Reactor Accident

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                     HEM  THY
                       Looking at the World Differently
Traditionally, we have looked at environmental problems
based on where they occur, such as in the water, air or
soil. Or we focused on the nature of the problem, such as
hazardous waste, pesticides or asbestos. As a result we
often missed the deeper perspective of how all these
element interrelated in the real world.  We were not
looking at the whole picture at one time. EPA now looks
at the challenges facing our fragile environment from an
ecosystem approach. We are now finding big picture
solutions to ecosystem level problems.

Our goal is to protect and restore the remarkable
ecosystems in the Pacific Northwest and Alaska by
addressing problems in specific geographic areas using
an integrated approach. It is a complex way of doing
business, requiring coordination with many different
people. It is also time consuming. However, since we
began focusing on environmental interrelationships over
four years ago, significant progress has been made in
addressing environmental problems from a holistic
ecosystem perspective.

Working Together in Agriculture:
Agricultural practices have been linked to a number of
environmental problems: nitrate and pesticide
contamination of ground and surface water, air quality
impairment caused by "agricultural dust", loss of natural
shrub-steppe habitat and loss of salmon habitat. The
agriculture industry is concerned about these
environmental challenges and others such as loss of
pesticides needed to protect crops, declining market
prices for traditional crops and increasing costs of doing
business.

The Columbia Plateau Agricultural Initiative is a
comprehensive effort promoting environmental
protection with wise agricultural practices, resulting in a
sustainable environment and a sustainable industry.
In early 1997 EPA, various state, federal and local
agencies, local Conservation Districts, Washington State
University Cooperative Extension, industry organizations
and individual farmers began working together.  The
intent was to support community-based and individual
efforts in five eastern Washington counties that promote
farming and ranching practices which protect both the
environment and the pocketbook.

EPA provided $400,000 in funding for projects that
promote nitrate monitoring in groundwater, develop new
farming practices and provide education and training. In
addition, the Columbia Plateau Agriculture Initiative
tapped into funds from other programs such as
environmental education grants, safe drinking water
grants and air quality protection and food safety funding
sources.

The "Wilke Farm Project" is a national model of how to
develop and demonstrate to farmers, that environmentally
friendly crops and cropping methods can result in a
sustainable agriculture industry. The Wilke project and
the other efforts of the Columbia Plateau project look at
agriculture and the natural ecosystems holistically, not in
 - Superfund Amendments and Re authorization Act (SARA)
 - Montreal Protocol Signed by 24 nations, Banning CFC's

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                                        EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
the context of independent
environmental elements. They
develop economically sustainable
crops and cropping methods, while
minimizing pesticide and fertilizer
use.  They also aim to prevent
sediment run-off to surface water
and wind erosion that causes
agriculture dust.

Innovation and Industry
When several species of Pacific
salmon were listed as endangered in
1999, private land owners faced a
new challenge to maintain
productive crops while protecting
aquatic habitat. The EPA,  National
Marine Fisheries Service and the
State of Washington worked with
Simpson Timber Company to
develop an integrated plan for
managing their timber lands. The
plan addresses the conservation
needs of fish and wildlife, maintains
water quality, basin hydrology and
channel integrity.  Simpson was able
to integrate healthy environmental
management into a profitable
commercial forest operation. By
making  strong commitments to
protect the ecological integrity of
their lands and waters Simpson
sought flexibility in how the
Endangered Species Act and Clean
Water Act would be enforced in the
watershed.

Simpson Timber Company's
voluntary effort to manage these
lands from an ecosystem approach
is an example of how industry and
government are working together to
view the environment differently.
This area of the Chehalis River
Basin, about 220,000 contiguous
acres, is being managed beyond the
measures that Simpson would
otherwise be subject to. Simpson
Timber Company, the EPA and
National Marine Fisheries Service
developed a mutually acceptable
plan, ensuring the protection of the
aquatic dependent resources of the
area and the ability to maintain a
commercial forestry operation.

Forest and Fish
Salmon are often referred to as an
"icon" in the Pacific Northwest and
Alaska.  They represent thriving
streams, healthy forests and a
connection to our historical roots of
living off the land. Unfortunately,
many Pacific  salmon runs are listed
as threatened or endangered under
the Endangered Species Act. The
reasons for the critical state of many
salmon runs generally fall under the
category of habitat destruction or
modification, whether it be from
hydropower dams, agricultural
practices, urbanization, or forest
practices.

One large scale attempt at habitat
improvement is the Forest and Fish
agreement that covers nearly eight
million acres of private forest land
in the State of Washington.  While
forest practices are regulated, the
continuing decline of salmon
triggered a second look at the
adequacy of those regulations.  They
ultimately proved to be inadequate.

The EPA joined other federal and
state agencies, counties, tribes, and
forest landowners to re-evaluate the
regulations.  The goal was to meet
both the Endangered Species Act
and the Clean Water Act, while
recovering harvestable levels of
salmon and timber. The parties met
the  goals through a long and
difficult, but ultimately successful
negotiation.  The new agreement
provides:
• 180 feet of stream side vegetative
 buffers
• protection for small streams
• additional restrictions on logging
 steep slopes
 - Long Island Garbage Barge Wanders East Coast, rejected from landfills in 5 states.
                                            - Lead Contamination Control Act

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• inventories, prioritization and
 repair of forest roads
• increased enforcement
• reclassification of some streams
• funding tribal involvement
• and, continuing evaluations on the
 success of the new rules.

Forest practices in the State of
Washington  are now among the
most stringent in the nation, and are
the result of stakeholders
negotiating in good faith to protect
the ecosystem.

There will always be challenges
when we attempt to balance
environmental protection with
economic activities and the needs of
communities.  Effective solutions to
environmental problems require the
cooperation  and involvement of
many groups who have a wide range
of interests.  We must work together
to  examine these challenges from an
ecosystem approach. Looking not
only at legal and scientific efforts to
protect the environment, but the
social and economic needs of people
as  well.
    River and Stream Quality Assessment - Support of Aquatic Life
    From the 1998 305b Report to Congress
          100 r
                                                                                   Good


                                                                                   Good (Threatened)


                                                                                   Fair


                                                                                   Poor


                                                                                   Impaired (Multiple uses)

                                                                                    Impairment for multiple uses
                                                                                    may include Supporting
                                                                                    Aquatic Life and Swimming
                     State (Percentage of Rivers and Streams Assessed)
   For more details visit - http://www.epa.gov/305b/98report/
 - Exxon Valdez Oil Spill on Alaskan Coast
- Toxic Release Inventory Available to Public
- Love Canal Declared

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                                            EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
Habitable, Home Sales Begin      - Pollution Prevention Act      - Oil Pollution Act      - Clean Air Act Amendments address

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                               Hi If BY
                         Many Countries — One  World
                          PLAIT
   World events have changed our view of the potential for
   disaster awaiting an unprepared nation. Bhopal, India -
   1984: 43 tons of toxic gases escape from a factory killing
   two thousand people. Chernobyl - 1986: Uncontrolled
   nuclear reaction spreads radiation across Northern
   Europe. Kuwait - 1991: Oil fields set aflame by
   retreating Iraqi troops, blacken middle eastern skies. For
   weeks, even months, they brought us to an awareness of
   what a small, vulnerable place the world really is. But
   for all their special notoriety, they might also have
   diverted our attention from more common, everyday
   releases of pollutants into the global environment.

   Two important lessons we have learned from these global
   tragedies: Lack of safeguards on human activities can

   Regional EPA specialists advised Saudi Arabian leaders on an
   environmentally sound relocation of this treated water outfall pipe.
           Sewage in the Red Sea

           The City ofJeddah in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia sought
           the expertise of EPA scientists and engineers in the design of
           a wastewater treatment plant on the shores of the Red Sea.
           The Saudi government's Meteorological and Environmental
           Protection Administration faced the task of determining the
           effects of releasing the treated waste water into the adjacent
           coral seas.

           Recognizing the expertise of the United States Environmental
           Protection Agency in evaluating sewage treatment plants, the
           Saudi government requested a team of specialists to review
           the proposed outfall design. Three EPA employees were
           dispatched to Jeddah at the expense of the Kingdom of Saudi
           Arabia.

           After studying maps, oceanographic reports, discharge
           estimates, and design plans, the three EPA team members
           used a computer simulation to estimate how the treated
           wastewater would dilute in the coastal sea, and where it
           would travel.   The simulation results proved very useful to
           the Saudis in their decision making processes, supporting the
           extension of the outfall pipe and additional lengthy diffuser.
           In addition to providing a simulation of the anticipated
           effects, the EPA team also proposed effluent monitoring, an
           impact study of the coastal coral reef, and a training
           program which would further develop the technical expertise
           in Saudi Arabia.
                                              result in environmental and human disaster; and large
                                              scale environmental contamination and its associated
                                              impacts do not stop at international borders.
acid rain, air toxics and stratospheric ozone.
Environmental Education Act
- Federal Recycling and Procurement

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                                               EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
     The world is interconnected.
     Whether it's put in environmental,
     economic, or  social terms, how we
     manufacture,  consume and dispose
     of goods eventually affects other
     people in other lands. It could be
     the transport of airborne pollutants,
     trade in endangered species, loss of
     habitat to deforestation, or ocean-
     dumping of toxic wastes. Actions
     affecting the environment in a
     remote corner of the world can have
     an adverse impact in the United
     States.
                                A Win Win Situation
                                The EPA's dedication to solving
                                complex environmental challenges
                                extends beyond U.S. borders. EPA
                                is actively involved with partners in
                                foreign countries that will yeild a
                                "win-win" for all countries.

                                For example, we know that the
                                Pacific Northwest contributes so-
                                called greenhouse gases (e.g. CO2)
                                that have led to global climate
                                change.  We also know that others
                                outside this region contribute to this
                                global environmental problem,
                                affecting our weather and other
natural systems. Similarly, domestic
and foreign activities contribute to
stratospheric ozone depletion, which
may lead to increased incidences of
skin cancers, cataracts, and other
health and welfare concerns. By
engaging our international
colleagues in discussions, we hope
to find solutions to reducing
greenhouse gas emissions and ozone
depleting chemicals that will be of
mutual benefit for all.

Closer to home, our record of
cooperation with our Canadian
neighbors in addressing trans-border
environmental issues continues to
grow. We regularly work
     U.S. and Canada
     Marine Ecosystem Partners

     EPA Administrator, Carol Browner and Environment
     Canada's Minister, David Anderson, signed a Joint Statement
     of Cooperation on the Georgia Basin and Puget Sound
     Ecosystem, in January, 2000. This Statement of
     Cooperation between the U.S. and Canada is the first
     bilateral agreement to address the two marine basins as one
     ecosystem.

     The Puget Sound, Strait of Juan de Fuca and the Straight of
     Georgia, are three basins that together form a larger
     ecosystem. As the largest marine estuary in North America,
     the Georgia Basin-Puget Sound region is one of the most
     ecologically diverse,  containing a wide range of
     internationally significant species and habitats.

     As the current regional population of six million moves
     toward an estimated nine to eleven million by 2020, planning
     for sustainable growth will be essential to maintaining a
     balance between development and environmental health.
     The Statement of Cooperation has been developed to provide
     for improved trans-border cooperation, priority-setting and
     information exchange throughout the ecosystem.

     In 1996, The Province of British Columbia and  the State of
     Washington committed to cooperative efforts on
     environmental matters on the Puget Sound/Georgia Basin
     ecosystem, resulting in the identification of priority issues
     through assigned international task forces. The EPA and
     Environment Canada will join in these protection strategies
     for managing a shared marine ecosystem.

     Areas of major concern include:
     • Minimizing estuarine habitat loss;
     • Establishing marine protected areas;
     ' Protecting marine plants and animals;
     • Minimizing exotic species introduction:
     • Joint monitoring and research;
     • More effective controls on toxic wastes releases
                                                 The Georgia Basin to the North and the Puget Sound to the
                                                 South Are Now Cooperatively Managed by the United States and
                                                 Canada
                                                      Pacific
                                                      Ocean
                                                 The cooperative agreement also allows both Federal
                                                 governments to engage in projects to address air quality issues,
                                                 growth and transportation issues, and climate change.
Policy
- Saddam Hussein Orders 7 million barrels of oil dumped into Persian Gulf       - Earth Summit held in Rio de

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    cooperatively on issues related to
    salmon, water quality, air quality
    and chemical management.

    We also devote a small fraction of
    our resources to helping others
    around the world.  Over the past
    three years, we have sent our
    experts to more than twenty
    countries providing assistance to
    deal with the often profound
    environmental problems they face.
    The expense  to the U.S. is minimal.
    The host country pays for all travel
    and operation expenses, while the
    EPA contributes technical experts.
    As an alternative, we have met with
    officials from more than 35
    countries during their visits to the
    United States, with whom we share
    our environmental management
    experiences.
Benefits for Region 10

For the many benefits that this
modest investment yields, it is
clearly worthwhile. Our efforts
often lead to direct improvements in
the health and welfare of people in
host countries. Building capacity in
foreign environmental programs
leads to more efficient use of these
countries' precious natural
resources. Our involvement in
technical pollution control issues
often opens doors to the purchase of
American environmental products
and services, stimulating our
economy. And as host countries
begin to shoulder the real costs of
responsible environmental
stewardship, the increased price of
their products results in a more level
international marketplace.
Among all the benefits to the United
States, perhaps the most subtle are
the experiences our employees bring
back. In working with people
elsewhere under difficult,
sometimes desperate circumstances,
we get ideas for new, often low-tech
solutions that can be applied to
some of the problems we encounter
here.
'aneiro, Brazil drawing 178 nations       - EPA reports that secondhand smoke is a serious risk to non-smokers.      - American

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                                              EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
Bald Eagle population increase leads to listing upgrade, from Endangered to Threatened      - President Clinton, orders

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                                             Sustainable  Business Prac
    "A sustainable United States will have a growing economy that provides equitable opportunities for satisfying
    livelihoods and a safe, healthy, high quality of life for current and future generations. Our nation will protect its
    environment, its natural resource base, and the functions and viability of natural systems on which all life depends."
                                                                  The President's Council on Sustainable Development
    The Unmistakable Problem
     Our industrial system
    transforms natural resources
    into nearly all of the products
    and services that we use—our
    food, our cars, our computers.
    These products ultimately
    return to the environment.
    This flow of materials, usually
    in an altered form, from nature
    to the economy and back is
    fundamental to our society.
    According to the World
    Resources Institute, the
    weekly per person consumption of natural resources is
    equal to 300 shopping bags filled with materials
Energy Efficiency = Savings

A business can change its processes to save money and
protect the environment. It is also less vulnerable to
government regulations. These types of investments are
generally low-risk and high-yield.  The U.S. EPA's Energy
Star and ClimateWise programs have shown that switching
to energy efficient technologies can save millions of dollars.
Businesses in Region 10, saved over $21 million dollars
through these programs by using technologies such as
compact flourescent lamps, solar energy, and non-toxic
materials.  These companies made themselves more
competitive, and more attractive to environmentally
conscious consumers.
weighing as much as a large
luxury car.  In fact, a recent
study says that for developing
countries to duplicate the
"American" standard of living
will take in excess of three
planet Earth's worth of
resources.  Short of mounting
a massive space exploration
program, living within the
carrying capacity of this planet
is certainly a more cost
effective and  sustainable
option.
government agencies to make environmental justice part of their mission.       - Food Quality Protection Act addresses impact of

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                                             EPA REGION 10 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
     The Road to Sustainable Business
     Practices
     EPA and businesses have a history
     of interactions which span a range
     from antagonistic through
     synergistic. Before the 1970's,
     corporations were generally
     unprepared for the "command and
     control" approach to environmental
     protection. There were no industry
     goals for environmental
     performance.  During the 1970's,
     with the increasing attention to
     environmental issues and the
     creation of the EPA, the corporate
     response was generally viewed as
     "reactive," in part to regulatory
     standards being created and
     enforced. During the 1980's, the
     industry goal was motivated mainly
     by avoiding additional costs.
     Companies stressed Total Quality
     Environmental Management and
     Stakeholder Participation.
     Beginning in the 1990's, the
     industry goal was to adopt the "eco-
     efficient" profit-center approach.
     Industries began using strategic
     environmental management
     systems, product stewardship,
design for the environment, and
environmental cost accounting. The
"Sustainable Development" era
ahead, will be characterized by
integrating sustainability principles.

The price of goods and services
usually do not include
environmental impact costs.  There
are few, if any, "sustainable"
choices for the consumer, and often
they are more expensive.  For this
reason, the Region 10 Evergreen
program honors companies which
integrate pollution prevention into
business planning. Fifteen
 Corporations, because they are the
 dominant institution on the planet,
 must squarely address the social and
 environmental problems that affect
 humankind.
                     Paul Hawken,
   co-founder of Smith & Hawken, and
    author, The Ecology of Commerce
companies have been honored in the
past 4 years with Evergreen awards
after demonstrating a commitment
to the environment, achieving
environmental results through
pollution prevention and providing
greener purchasing options for the
public. If businesses can offer
consumers choices which support a
healthy environment, they ultimately
protect the source from which all
revenue flows— the planet's natural
resources.

In Region 10, our philosophy is that
the best way to prevent pollution is
to move up the waste management
hierarchy towards source reduction.
Source reduction means reducing or
eliminating the creation of wastes at
the source.  Changes in materials,
practices, processes or design are
the key to source reduction.
However, a recent poll of 137
businesses in the Pacific Northwest
show that less than 1%  of
businesses employ eco-efficiency.
Clearly, there is much to be done to
educate and encourage business to
adopt cost-saving measures which
also protect the environment.
pesticides on children's health      - EPA establishes the Office of Children's Health Protection      - EPA announces Clean

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    Eco-Efficiency May Not Be
    Enough
    Pollution prevention, waste
    minimization and source reduction
    are extremely important practices
    for the business sector and cost
    savings, for the small number of
    businesses which employ them,
    have been substantial.   A growing
    number of observers, however,
    suggest that these eco-efficiency
    practices, while significant, may not
    be enough.  Robert M. Day of the
    World Resources Institute states that
    "Eco-efficiency excellence will be
    necessary, but not sufficient, for
    doing business in the next
    millennium." He points out that
    eco-efficiency is a valuable concept
    both for society and business
    because it is in everyone's interest to
    drive waste out of our economic
    systems. Global trends, however,
    indicate that we are not even coming
    close to achieving what is needed
    for sustainable development.  The
                   goal of sustainability is slipping
                   further from our grasp.

                   Individual Choices are the Key
                   Meaningful steps towards
                   sustainability for the business sector
                   can mean many different things.
                   From steps taken to improve
                   efficiency and eliminate waste all
                   the way to complete redesign of the
                   way a company does business. One
                   thing is clear, no business activity
                   can be truly sustainable without
                   being profitable. All major federal
                   environmental laws are based upon
                   the constitutional power of the
                   Commerce Clause.  EPA's
                   environmental regulatory authority
                   only extends within the parameters
                   allowed by the rules and statutes as
                   passed by Congress.

                   Most of the environmental problems
                   are not caused by a polluting factory
                   which can be simply permited to
                                          pollute less.  It will take a holstic
                                          approach to environmental
                                          protection, working in concert with
                                          sustainability business leaders,
                                          transforming the current system by
                                          designing products in a whole new
                                          way.

                                          You, as a consumer, can drive this
                                          change.  Personal choices of
                                          consumers (what we buy,  how we
                                          travel, where we live)  actually
                                          create more of an impact than all
                                          industrial sources combined. In the
                                          Pacific Northwest, most air
                                          pollution is caused by wood smoke
                                          and automobiles. The portion of air
                                          pollution from large facilities is
                                          small in comparison.  For more
                                          information about the power of
                                          personal choices, please visit
                                          Region 10's Sustainability Website
                                          at www.epa.gov/rlOearth/
                                          sustainability. The choices you
                                          make will shape our environmental
                                          future.
     Energy Efficiency Is A Superior Investment

           40%
                                                              Small Company
                                                              Stocks

                                                              Common Stocks

                                                              Long Term
                                                              Corporate Bonds

                                                              U.S. T-Bills
                0%
   10%
20%
30%
40%
                                                           Consumers, businesses, and
                                                           organizations have a tremendous
                                                           opportunity to make smarter
                                                           equipment purchansing and
                                                           investment decisions. Thousands of
                                                           equipment purchases are made every
                                                           day. People tend to buy the
                                                           equipment that is the least efficient,
                                                           thereby committing themselves to
                                                           higher energy bills for the next 10 to
                                                           20 years, depending on the life of the
                                                           equipment. At the same time, buyers
                                                           overlook the investment opportunities
                                                           represented by the more efficient
                                                           equipment - investment opportunities
                                                           with more than double the return on
                                                           investment of other common options,
                                                           such as money markets or U.S.
                                                           Treasury bonds (see figure at left).
     Richard, S., Hardy, B., Von Neida, B., and P. Mihlmester.  1998. The Investment Risk in Whole Building Energy-Efficiency Upgrade Projects. In the
     Proceedings of the 1998 ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in Buildings.
     We are all responsible for this planet, but business must take the lead because only business has the global reach, the innovative
     capability, the capital, and most important, the market motivation to develop the technologies that will allow the world to truly
     achieve sustainable development.
                                                                       Harry Pearce, Vice-Chairman of General Motors
Water Action Pla
Underground fuel tanks nation-wide must meet strict standards, protecting groundwater.

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Region 10
United States
Environmental Protection Agency
1200 Sixth Avenue
(EXA-124)
Seattle, WA 98101
http://www.epa.gov/rlOearth
Public Environmental Resource Center
(800) 424-4EPA, (206) 553-1200
E-mail: epa-seattle@epa.gov
REMEMBER THE PAST •  PROTECT THE  FUTURE
30 YEARS OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRESS IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST
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