&EPA
             United Slates
             Environmental Protection
             Agency
             Division of
             Water Planning (WH-554)
             Washington, D.C.2M60
  JULY 1979
Annotated
Bibliography
for
Water Quality
Management
6™
Edition

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                  UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY


  DATE: June 12, 1979

SUBJECT: Annotated Bibliography for Water Quality Management


  FROM: Merna Hurd, Di rector-^Y^        ~"1).   ,J
       Water Planning DivisioJ '  UAA^   f*—^

    TO: All Regional Water Division Directors     Information Memorandum:  INFO 79-85

 ATTN: All Regional 208 Coordinators
      *

       The enclosed Bibliography is prepared by EPA to assist those agencies
       engaged in water quality management planning.  As before,  references
       cited have been selected for their applicability to 208 planning and  for
       their availability.

       The entries are divided into five categories:  Basic Information Materials
       on Water Quality Management; Exhibits-Films-Training Programs;  Water
       Planning Division Publications; NTIS Publications; and Other Publications.
       Each reference is followed by a short abstract, and whenever necessary
       by ordering number or information.  Instructions for using the  Government
       Printing Office and the National Technical Information Services, as well
       as ordering forms for EPA's North Carolina Warehouse are included  on  the
       last two pages.

       Questions, comments or suggestions regarding this edition  should be
       addressed to Operations Branch, Water Planning Division, WH-554, Washington,
       D.C.  20460, telephone 202-755-2117-

       cc:  All State and Areawide Agencies
            All Intra-agency Staff Contacts
            All 208 Public Participation Coordinators
            Thomas Jorling
            Swep Davis
CPA FORM 1120-6 (REV. 3-761

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                           TABLE OF CONTENTS


Alphabetical  Listing of Entries                                       ii

Basic Information Materials on Water Quality Management                 1

Films                                                                  3

WPD Publications                                                       8

NTIS Publications                                                     14

Other Publications                                                    27

Appendices                                                            42
     208 Data Clearinghouse, Volumes 1,  2,  3
     List of EPA Regional Offices
     Instructions for Ordering Publications
     North Carolina Ordering Forms

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                    ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF ENTRIES


All You Need to Know About U.S.  Environmental  Protection Agency
  Sewage Treatment Construction  Grants                                6
Alternative is Conservation, The
Alternative Waste Management Techniques for Best  Practicable Waste
  Treatment                                                          ^
Areawide Assessment Procedures Manual', Vols.  1,11, III
Assessment of Mathematical Models for Storm and  Combined Sewer
  Management
Assistance Available from USDA Agencies in Section  208  (PL 92-500)
  Planning                                                           ^
Big Cleanup, The                                                      £
Building for Clean Water                                             3~
Can We Fish Again?                                                   J:
Characterization and Treatment of Urban Land  Runoff                  25
Citizen Involvement in OCPC 208  Planning - A  Progress Report          10
Cleaning Up Europe's Waters:  Economics, Management and Policies      37
Clearwater                                                            6
Common Environmental Terms                                            1
Communication for Urban Water Resources Management—A Review and
  Annotated Bibliography                                             15
Community Guide                                                      12
Compilation for Federal, State and Local Laws  Controlling Nonpoint
  Pollutants:  An Analysis of the Law Affecting Agriculture,
  Construction, Mining and Silviculture Activity                       8
Compilation-of Papers Presented  at the 208 Areawide Water Quality
  Management Workshop, A                                             26
Conservation Districts and Nonpoint Pollution  Control                 41
Conservation Districts and 208 Water Quality  Management               24
Contributions of Urban Roadway Usage to Water Pollution               18
Control of Water Pollution from  Cropland — A  Manual for Guidelines
  Development                                                        32
Control of Water Pollution from  Cropland,  Vol.  II—An Overview        20
Cost-Effective Comparison of Land Application  and Advanced Waste-
  water Treatment                                                    36
Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Municipal Wastewater Reuse             16
Costs of Wastewater Treatment by Land Application                     25
Criteria for Developing Pollution Abatement Programs for  Inactive
  and Abandoned Mine Sites                                           10
Design Criteria for Mechanical,  Electric,  Fluid  Systems and
  Component Reliability                                              14
Development and Application of a Simplified Stormwater  Management
  Model                                                               19
Development of Residuals Management Strategies — A Report            26
Development of Residuals Management Strategies—Executive Summary      16

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Direct Environmental Factors at Municipal  Wastewater Treatment Works   32
Ecological  Modeling in a Resource Management Framework                37
Economic Incentives for Land Use Control                               36
Ecosystem Impacts of Urbanization                                     21
Effects of Log Handling and Storage on Water Quality                  30
Effluent Guidelines and Development Documents                         40
Erosion and Sediment Control Handbook                                 41
Erosion and Sediment Yield Methods                                    29
Environmental Assessment of Water Quality Management Plans            11
Environmental Comment                                                  1
Environmental Improvement Through Economic Incentives                 37
Environmental Quality Management/An Application to the Lower
  Delaware Valley                                                     38
EPA Publications on Urban Stormwater Runoff: Ordering Infor ;'         10
Evaluation of Cost-Effectiveness of Nonstructural  Pollution           15
  Controls:  A Manual for Water Quality Management Planning           15
Evaluation of Land Application Systems                                40
Evaluation of Land Application Systems                                35
Evaluation of Water Quality Models: A Management Guide for Planners   13
Federal Guidelines, Operation and Maintenance of Wastewater
  Treatment Facilities                                                 8
Federal Guidelines: State and Local Pretreatment Programs              49
Federal Programs Impacting Regional Water Quality Management           8
First Joint USA/USSR Symposium on Physical/Chemical  Treatment  from
   Municipal and Industrial Sources                                   34
First Pollution, The                                                   5
First Things First: A Strategy Against Water Pollution                 1
Fiscal Impacts of Land Development: A Critique of Methods  and
  Review of Issues                                                    33
Fresh Water from Waste Water                                           6
Gifts, The                                                             4
Governance of Common Property Resources                               38
Great Cleanup, The                                                     6
Ground Water Contamination in the Northeast States                    23
Ground Water Contamination in the Northwest States                    23
Ground Water Pollution in the South Central States                    20
Guidance for Facilities Planning                                      10
Guidance for Preparing a Facility Plan                                35
Guidance for Sewer System Evaluation                                   9
Guide 1 -- Effective Public Meetings                                  12
Guide 3 -- Effective Use of Media                                     12
Guide 2 — Working Effectively with Advisory Committees               12
Guide to State Programs for the Reclamation of Surface Mined
  Areas, A                                                            31
Guide to the Selection of Cost-Effective  Wastewater Treatment, A      21
Handbook of Procedures — Construction Program for Municipal
  Wastewater Treatment Works                                          35
Handbook for Sewer System Evaluation and  Rehabilitation               26
                                 iii

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How to Obtain Federal Grants to Build Municipal  Wastewater
  Treatment Works                                                    24
Impact of Construction Activities in Wetlands of the United States    e.
Implementing a BMP for Residuals, The Waste Exchange                   .
In Order to Change
Inactive and Abandoned Underground Mines:   Water Pollution
  Prevention and Control                                             io
Incentives for Managing the Environment
Institutional Assessment of the Implementation of the Planning
  Requirements of the Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of
Integrated Residuals Management:   A Regional  Environmental Quality
  Management Model                                                   *
Is Your Drinking Water Safe?                                           ,
It's Time, Speak Up                                                  i;
Land Application of Sewage Effluents and Sludges:  Selected Abstracts  dd
Land Availability, Crop Production, and Fertilizer Requirements
  in the U.S.                                                        32
Land Development and Natural Environment:  Estimating Impacts          32
Land Use Information for Water Quality Management Planning            10
A Linear Programming Model of Residuals Management for Integrated
  Iron and Steel Production                                          38
Listening to Metropolis:  An Evaluation of the New York Region's
  CHOICES FOR '76 Mass Media Town Meetings and a Handbook on Public
Participation in Regional Planning                                   27
Loading Functions for Assessment of Water Pollution from Nonpoint
  Sources                                                            41
Logging Roads and Protection of Water Quality                        20
Man and A River, A                                                     5
Manual for Preparation of Environmental  Impact Statements for
Wastewater Treatment Works, Facilities Plans, and 208 Areawide Waste
  Treatment Management Plans                                         33
Manure Harvesting Practices: Effecting on  Waste Characteristics
  and Runoff                                                         28
Measuring Impacts of Land Development:  An Initial Approach           33
Meecology                                                              5
Methodology for the Study of Urban Storm Generated Pollution Control  19
Methods for Separation of Sediment from Stormwater at Construction
  Sites                                                              29
Methods of Quickly Vegetating Soils of Low Productivity,
  Construction Activities                                             13
Methods to Control Fine-Grained Sediments  Resulting from
  Construction Activity                                                9
Model  Facility Plan for a Small Community—Supplement to:
  Guidance for Preparing a Facility Plan                              34
Model  Plan of Study, Supplement to:  Guidance for Preparing  a
  Facility Plan                                                       34
Model  State Water Monitoring Program                                  36
Modeling Nonpoint Pollution from the Land Surface                     16
                                   IV

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Municipal Sewage Treatment:  A Comparison of Alternatives             13
National Water Quality Inventory                                      11
Nonpoint Source Control Guidance, Construction Activities              9
Nonpoint Source Control Guidance Hydrologic Modifications             11
Nonpoint Sources Slide Series                                          4
Our Natural Resources:  What Is Our Water Worth. 1975-1978            22
Performance Controls for Sensitive Lands: A Practical  Guide for
  Local Administrators                                                21
Planning for Floods                                                    7
The Potential Contribution of Fertilizers to Water Pollution          24
Practical Guide for 208 Areawide Water Quality Management, A          27
Practice in Detention of Stormwater Runoff                            18
Preventive Approaches to Stormwater Management                        19
Private Property and the Public Interest: The Brandywine Experience   29
Problems and Approaches to Areawide Water Quality Management          16
Proceedings of the Third Federal Inter-Agency Sedimentation
  Conference,  1976                                                   24
Proceedings: Urban Stormwater Management Seminars                     19
Process Design Manual for Sludge Treatment and Disposal                28
The Public Benefits of Cleaned Water, Emerging Greenway
  Opportunities                                                       12
Public Involvement in the Corps of Engineers Planning  Process         14
Public Participation in Water Resources Planning: An Evaluation of
  the Programs of 15 Corps of Engineers Districts                     14
Question of Values, A                                                  5
Recreational Benefits of Water Quality Improvement, The                1
Relationship of Level B Planning and Water Quality Management
  Planning         -                                                    8
Regional Residuals-Environmental Quality Management Modeling          39
Regional Residuals-Environmental Quality Management Models:
  Applications to EPA's Regional Management Programs                  39
Research Status on Effects of Land Application of Animal  Wastes       20
Residential Stormwater Management:  Objectives, Principles and Design
  Considerations                                                      37
Residual Waste Best Management Practices:  A Water Planner's Guide
  to Land Disposal                                                     17
Residual Waste:  Model State Legislation                              25
Residuals-Environmental Quality Management:  The Role  of Regional
  Modeling                                                            39
Resource Recovery Information for Municipal Officials                  17
Restoring the Willamette River:  Costs and Impact of Water Quality
  Control                                                             22
The Role of Citizen Advisory Groups in Water Resources Planning       15
Secondary Impact of Transportation and Wastewater Investments:
  Research Results                                                    23
Secondary Impacts of Transportation and Wastewater Investments:
  Review and Bibliography                                             22
Selected Irrigation Return Flow Quality Abstracts                     23
Selected Techniques for Soliciting Community Participation in
  Transportation Planning                                             31

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Setting the Course for Clean Water                                    \
Silvicultural Chemicals and Protection of Water Quality
Sludge Processing, Transportation and Disposal/Resource Recovery:
  A Planning Perspective                                              (
Small Victory, A                                                     3jj
Soil Erosion and Sedimentation Guidelines for Forestry                £:
Solid Waste Management-Available Information Materials
Spend the next two minutes reading this leaflet and  perhaps you 11
  want to spend the next few hours getting involved.                   ^
Steel Production: Processes, Products and Residuals                   ™
Stormwater Management Model: Level 1-Preliminary Screening Procedure  28
Stormwater Pollution Control                                 .
Structuring Communications Programs for Public Participation  in
  Water Resources Planning                                           *!?
Studies of Residuals Management in Industry                          ™
Suggested State Legislation, 1971-1977                               Z7
Summary Appraisals for the Nation's Ground Water Resources
Tools and Rules...Federal Environmental Protection Program             2
Towards Clean Water:  A Citizen's Guide to Action                     2
Urban Land                                                           U
Urban Runoff Pollution Control Technology Overview                    36
Urban Stormwater Management and Technology:  An Assessment             18
Urban Stormwater Management Research and Planning Projects for
  FY 1975 and FY 1976                                                28
Urban Stormwater Runoff                                               4
Urban Stormwater Runoff: Determination of Volumes and Flow Rates      26
Use of Climatic Data in Estimating Storage Days for  Soils Treatment
  Systems                                                            20
Uses of Values:  Public Participation in the Planning Process, The    30
Waste Load Allocations in River Basin Plans                          27
Wastewater Flow Measurement in Sewers Using Ultrasound                20
Water Cleanup and the Land:  Securing Full Value on  the Public's
  Investment in Water Pollution Control                              41
Water Pollution Caused by Inactive Ore and Mineral Mines—A
  National Assessment                                                29
Water Pollution Economics, Volume II. 1975-July 1976 (A Bibliography
  with abstracts)                                                    23
Water Quality Assessment-A Screening Method for Nondesignated Areas   40
Water Quality Impacts of Land Disturbing Activities-Evaluation and
  Development of Institutional Systems for Environmental Management    11
Water Quality Management Directory                                     2
Water Quality Management Planning for Urban Runoff                     18
Water Resources Decision Making on the Basis of the  Public  Interest    14
Water Resources Protection Measures in Land Development: A  Handbook    18
Where Do We Go From Here?  The Challenge of WQM for  Elected
  Officials                                                           12
                                   VI

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        BASIC INFORMATION MATERIALS ON WATER QUALITY MANAGEMENT


Big Cleanup. The - What the Restoration of Our Nation's Waterways Could
Mean for Parks and Recreation.  National Recreation and Parks Association.
February 1977.  Available from EPA Regional Offices.

       The NRPA devoted this issue to a discussion of PL 92-500.   The
       discussion emphasizes the important benefits which can accrue to the
       public through combined efforts to attain clean water and  more open
       space or recreation opportunities.  Recommended for citizen education.

Common Environmental Terms:  A Glossary.  Gloria J. Studdard.  U.S. EPA,
November 1977.Available from EPA Public Information Center, Washington,
D.C.  20460.  23 pages, 240 entries.

       Glossary of common words and terms essential to the study, under-
       standing and solution of environmental  problems.

Environmental Comment.  January 1976.  Available from the Urban Land
Institute, 1200 18th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.  20036.

       Contains eight articles offering varying perspectives on the State
       and areawide WQM program, ranging from that of a Congress  staff member
       to that of a local planner.  Provides an excellent introduction to
       the program, its goals and its methodologies.  Suitable for public
       information.

First Things First:  A Strategy Against Water Pollution.  U.S. EPA.
September 1974.  Copies available from the EPA Public Information Center,
Washington, D.C.  20460, and GPO (551-507).

       Booklet explaining the major elements of the strategy used by EPA
       and the States in their attack on water pollution, the problems
       faced and what is being done about them.  Suitable for public
       information.

 Recreational Benefits of Water Quality Improvement. The:  Analysis of
Day Trips in an Urban Setting.  Clark S. Binkley and W. Michael Haneman,
February 1977.  EPA 600/5-77-003.   NTIS PB 257-719.

       Report explores demand models, new to recreational analysis, which
       are based on site characteristics and individual preferences to
       estimate benefit measures by consumer's surplus.  The empirical
       findings of this study are based on a structured survey of 467
       representative households in the Boston SMSA.  Focus  was specifically
       day trips to a system of Boston area beaches, but considerable
       additional  data on willingness-to-pay,  substitution between general
       recreation behavior was developed as well.   The reader will  find an
       extensive review of the post-war literature on recreation  economics
       and water quality benefits.


                                   1

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"Spend the next two minutes reading this leaflet and perhaps you'll  want
to spend a few hours getting involved."  U.S.  EPA, November 1976.   Avail-
abe from EPA Public Information Office, Washington, D.C.   20460.

     A brief non-technical  flyer aimed at motivating citizens to  take
     part in making decisions about how to clean up the water.  Emphasizes
     the effect which water clean up might have on citizen lifestyle, and
     the need for the public to get involved in the decision-making
     process to insure that all viewpoints are heard.   2  pages.

Setting the Course for Clean Water.  The National  Wildlife Federation,
November 1377-Available from the National  Wildlife Federation's  Educa-
tion Division, 1412 16th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.  20036.   (To be
revised by Fall 1979).

     A handbook designed to enable citizens  to participate effectively
     in 208 programs.  All  aspects of 208 are  covered  including  require-
     ments, sources of pollution, citizen's  role,  and  alternative  programs
     to control water pollution problems.

Tools and Rules...Federal Environmental Protection Program.   The
Association of New Jersey Environmental Commissions, October 1978.   Avail-
able from EPA Forms & Publications Center, Mail Drop 41,  Research
Triangle Park, NC  27711.

     A manual which outlines major Federal environmental  statutes  including
     the Clean Water Act, the Safe Drinking  Water Act, the Clean Air Act,
     the Resource Conservation and Recovery  act, the Insecticide,  Fungicide,
     and Rodenticide Act, the Noise Control  Act, and the  Toxic Substances
     Control Act.  The implication of Federal  legislation on States and
     localities is addressed in a chart at the end.

Towards Clean Water:  A Citizen's Guide to Action.  The Conservation
Foundation, Fall 1976.Available from the Conservation Foundation,  1717
Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C.  20036.

     Examines the FWPCA through regulations, guidance, and court decisions.
     Focuses on the key points at which decisions are  made and provides
     guidance to citizen leaders on means of assuring  the most environ-
     mentally sound implementation of this law.  Examines legislative
     proposals that will affect implementation of the  law.

Water Quality Management Directory.  Third Edition.  U.S. EPA, March 1979.
Available from EPA Regional Offices.

     Includes the State and local water quality managment agencies,  EPA
     Regional project officers, and key State, Regional Office and  Head-
     quarters contacts.  Maps of each State  are provided  showing the
     boundaries of the local agencies' jurisdictions.   Grant information
     is provided in appendices.

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                  EXHIBITS - FILMS - TRAINING PROGRAMS


HOW TO BORROW FILMS

EPA films are reserved in the order requests are received.   To  avoid
disappointment, requests should be made at least three weeks in advance
of the intended showing date.

Where acceptable, alternative ..titles should be given and,  if the showing
date is flexible, it is helpful to include alternative showing  dates  at
least one week apart.  Request letters should indicate the  number of
showings, the size and type of audience, and how long the  film  will be
needed.

A confirmation of film reservation will be sent to you indicating the
title and the date reserved.

Please include your name address and zip code on your film  request.
Send request to the designated distributor:

     Film Comm                     RHR Filmedia, Inc.
     208 S. LaSalle Street         48 w. 48th Street
     Chicago, Illinois  60604      New York, New York  10036
     312-263-0497                  212-541-9692
                                   (All RHR films may be ordered through
     Modern Talking Pictures        Film Comm)
     1687 Elmhurst Road
     Elk Grove Village, Illinois  60007
     312-593-3250

All films are free.,.borrowers pay only return shipping (fourth class
book rate).

All films are 16mm, sound, and color—unless otherwise noted.

A Small Victory

     A 28-minute film documentary.  Traces the citizen action inspired by
     the water quality condition of Lake Winnisquam in New Hampshire
     which ultimately lead to the initiation of the Winnipesaukee River
     Basin Project.  Available for viewing from:  1) Lakes  Region Planning
     Commission, ATTN:  Rick Saunders, Main Street, Meredith,  NH  03253;
     2) EPA Region I or 3) New Hampshire Water Supply and  Pollution Control
     Commission, 105 Loudon Road, Concord, NH  03301.

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 Nonpoint Sources Slide Series

        This six-part slide show series  provides  an  introduction to the
        serious problem of nonpoint  source  pollution.   The  series  includes
        an overview of the Federal Water Pollution Control  Act Amendments
        and then in separate presentations,  the problems  are discussed
        and the possible solutions are covered for each of  these nonpoint
        source areas:  agriculture,  mining,  silviculture, and construction.
        The sixth slide presentation discussed the legal  and management
        aspects of 208.  Each  slide  presentation  has audio  tape cassettes
        and is approximately 45  minutes  long.  Available  on loan with supple-
        mental  fact sheets from  EPA  Regional Offices.

 Urban Stormwater Runoff

      A slide show which discusses urban  stormwater pollution on a national
      scale and management techniques for abating pollution.  Designed for
      general,  non-technical audiences.   Twelve and a half  minutes, 76
      slides, 1 audio tape cassette. Available for 2-week loan from all EPA
      Regional  Offices or the  Implementation Branch at  Headquarters.
      Contact:   Dennis Athayde,  245-3154.

 Is Your Drinking  Water Safe?

      A 30-minute  film,which provides vital  information about the Safe
      Drinking  Water  Law,  facts  about the Nation's drinking water and
      problems  many suppliers will have in meeting the  new  standards.
      Available on free  loan from:  Modern Talking Pictures.

 Can  We Fish  Again?

      a 14-minute film  on toxic  substances.   Available for  viewing from
      EPA Region V in Chicago.   Prints  are $105.00.

 The  Gifts

      Documentary film about the American landscape depicting the
      environmental degradation that  has  occured over the last two
      centuries.  The scene moves through 18 States showing dismal  pictures
      of poisoned fish, garbage filled  waterways,  dead,  oil-coated birds
      and air turning into smog.   Narrated by Lome Greene from a script
     by Robert McBride with original music  by Skitch Henderson,  this
      is an inspiring introduction to environmental  problems,  ideal for
     classroom and citizen action groups use.   EPA-produced 26-minute
     film.   Available from Modern Talking Pictures.

In Order to Change

     Produced in Chicago, this film  tells of a  community  group that won
     environmental  safeguards.   90-minute film  produced by  the University
     of Illinois.   Available from Film Comm.

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A Man and A River
     The man is Thomas Hart Benton, a great citizen of America,  painter,
     author, conservationist and raconteur.  The River is the Buffalo,  a
     clear-running waterway that winds through the Ozark Hills in north-
     western Arkansas.  A Man and A River is a fervent call  to preserve
     beauty by a man who perceives beauty.  14-minute film produced by
     EPA.  Available from Modern Talking Pictures.

Meecology

     A unique learning experience for elementary school  children.
     Meecology(just add ecology to me), shows how any child  can  relate
     to his environment in an ecologically sensitive way.  Young children
     from rural, urban, suburban and iner city surroundings  are  seen
     actively involved in preserving nature, conserving energy,  and
     avoiding waste.  The children on film "speak out" to children,
     inviting them to find the right thing to do in a meecology  situation.
     A catchy, original tune and creative film technique make this an
     entertaining, educations viewing experience for elementary  school
     children.  26-minute film produced by McDonalds Corp.   Available
     from Modern Talking Pictures.

A Question of Values

     This film illuminates an intense public debate in a small Maine town
     torn by conflict between environmental preservation and economic
     development.  A New York oil company wants to build a modern refinery
     in Maine, and crude oil would be provided by giant 200,000  ton tankers
     which would move through approaches to Penobscot Bay.   Huge oil spills
     could wipe out lobstering, fishing and the tourist-based economy of
     the area.  But, there is high unemployment in the area, and the
     refinery would bring jobs and attract satellite industries.  The
     Maine people involved have taken sides because they know their
     future could be at stake.  Available from RHR.

The First Pollution

     A new film about water pollution problems, what they are, who produces
     them, what's being done about it, and what will happen  in the future.
     The film visits the Potomac, the Kanawha, the Tittabawassee, the
     Houston Ship Channel  and other streams.  It takes the viewer into  the
     combined sewers of St.  Paul, to the advance waste treatment plant  at
     Lake Tahoe,  to Dow's chemical recycling plant, and Armco Steel's
     industrial  recovery system.  New concepts such as the "living filter",
     oxygen aeration and sewage reclamation are shown.  26-minute film
     produced by Stuart Findley.  Available from RHR.

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Fresh Water from Waste Hater

     Discussion of water reclamation and the possibilities of waste
     water reuse even for drinking water.   Technical  explanation of
     tertiary treatment at the South Tahoe Public  Utility District on
     Lake Tahoe.  16-minute film produced  by EPA.   Available from Film
     Comm.

The Great Cleanup

     A new film about a commonly cherished possession,  the Great Lakes,
     the largest collective body of fresh  water in the  world and one of
     the hardest hit by severe pollution.   The film carefully examines
     the major damage to the Great Lakes and the combined efforts which
     have resulted in an unprecedented,  multi-million dollar cleanup
     effort.  54-minute film produced by EPA.   Available from Modern Talking
     Pictures.

Stormwater Pollution Control
     Stormwater runoff is a major pollution  problem.   EPA  is  spending $85
     million on more than 120 research  and dvelopment  projects  aimed at
     solving it.  When it rains,  filth  by the  ton  is suddenly washed into
     sewage systems which can't handle  the load—the heavily  polluted
     water bypasses treatment and pours into the waterways in a concen-
     trated slug which can poison fish  and constitute  a  health  hazard.
     This film show some of the ways  in which  various  cities  are coping
     Stormwater runoff.  26-minute film produced by EPA.   Available from
     Film Comm.

Clearwater

     Available in film or videotape,  this 15 minute piece  describes runoff
     problems associated with agriculture and  best management practices.
     The film is designed as a motivational  tool,  and  as an introduction
     to the opportunities of the  Rural  Clean Water Program.   Available
     by July 1979 from the EPA Regional  Offices.

The Alternative is Conservation

     Through case studies on water conservation from all parts  of the
     country, this film or videotape  is  designed to encourage discussion
     of water supply and wastewater disposal problems.  Different types
     of available water saving devices  and alternative waste  treatment
     technologies are shown.   The film  is effective for a  wide  variety
     of workshops, public television, and classroom situations.  A  fact
     sheet will  accompany the film explaining  more fully its  technical
     aspects.  Available from EPA,  Barbara Yeaman, Facility Requirements
     Division (WH-595), (202)755-8054;  or from Lyle Brecht, Urban Scien-
     tific and Educational  Research,  Inc., 126 Oxford Road, Cambridge,
     Massachusetts  02140,  (617)864-8437.

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Planning for Floods

     A 28-minute film produced by the Environmental  Denfense Fund
     concentrating on floods on the Mississippi  River and  the historic
     flood at Rapid City, South Dakota, the film drastically demonstrates
     the tragedies that can result from total  reliance on  dams,  channel-
     ization, levees, and other structural  measures  for protection.   Needed
     reforms in Federal flood control policy are presented including  flood
     plain zoning and insurance.  Available for  the  cost of insurance and
     mailing from the Environmental Defense Fund or  Film Inc.,  at  any
     of the film centers nearest you.

          600 Grant Avenue, Ridgefield, NJ   07657
          324 Delaware Avenue, Oakmont, PA   15139
          5797 New Peachtree Road, Atlanta, GA  30340
          512 Burlington Avenue, La Grange, Illinois  60525
          8615 Directors Row, Dallas, TX  75247
          410 Great Road, Littleton, MA  01460
          915 NW 19th Avenue, Portland, OR   97209
          25358 Cypress Avenue, Hayward, California   94544
          2221 S. Olive Street, Los Angeles, CA   90007
          6420 W. Lake Street, Minneapolis, MN  55426

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                           WPP PUBLICATIONS*


RelationshiD of Level  B Planning and Water Quality Management  Planning*
U.S. EPA, November 19/6.  PDS No.  0004939.  Also  available from EPA
Regional Offices.

     Section 208 of the Federal  Water Pollution Control  Act Amendments  of
     1972 requires the preparation of a  "Level B  Plan  under the Water
     Resources Planning Act for all  basins  in the U.S."   The study
     describes how the Level  B study process has  actually worked,  and
     how the outputs of an actual  Level  B  plan may relate to the water
     quality planning  activities under the  Act and vice  versa.   The
     study includes analysis of two  actual  Level  B planning processes,
     in terms of their relationship  with water quality management
     planning.

Federal Programs Impacting Regional  Water Quality Management.   Prepared
for the Miami Regional  Planning Commission.  January 1976.   Available
from EPA Regional  Offices.

     The following information is  listed for 20 Federal  programs which
     impact water quality management:  program title,  authority,
     objectives, extent of participation,  eligibility  requirements,  funding
     status, and relation to areawide planning and management.

Compilation of Federal, State and  Local  Laws Controlling Nonpoint
Pollutants:  An Analysis of the Law  Affecting Agriculture,  Construction,
Mining and Silviculture Activity.   U.S.  EPA Report No. 440/9-75-011.
PDS No. 0002347. Also  available from EPA Regional  Offices.

     Investigates legal means of controlling water pollution from
     nonpoint sources  in agriculture,  silviculture, construction and
     mining.  Analyzes selected legislation at the Federal, State  and
     local levels, through existing  statutory practices  and procedures.

Federal Guidelines, Operation and  Maintenance of  Wastewater Treatment
Facilities!U.S.  EPA, August 1974.Available from EPA  Regional Offices.

     The guidelines are intended to  assist  in assuring that all  aspects
     related to wastewater treatment plant  operation and maintenance are
     appropriately considered by those responsible for complying with
     grant requirements, specific  effluent  permit criteria, and related
     water quality standards.  They  provide information  on the key elements
     that should be included in any  plan of operation  for a wastewater
     treatment facility.  Source documents  offering more detailed  infor-
     mation are referenced throughout.

*A11 publications available from EPA Forms  & Publication Center, Mail
 Drop 41, Research Triangle Park,  NC  27711, unless otherwise  specified.
Forms are provided for ordering in the back of this book.

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Guidance for Sewer System Evaluation.  U.S. EPA, 1974.   Available from
EPA Regional Offices.

     Intended to provide engineers, municipalities, and regulatory agencies
     with guidance on sewer system evaluation to determine presence of
     excessive infiltration/inflow.  Includes discussion of physical
     surveys, rainfall simulation, preparatory.cleaning, internal
     inspection and survey reports.

Silvicultural Chemicals and Protection of Water Quality.  U.S.  EPA,
Region X.Available from EPA Regional Offices.

     Describes present practices and guides in the development  of manage-
     ment practices on the minimization or prevention of nonpoint source
     pollution.  Describes the scope of chemical usage, the effects of
     these practices and their alternatives, offers a summary of guide-
     lines for use of chemicals in forests.  Reviews the toxicological
     properties of major forestry chemicals.  Glossary  of technical terms
     included.  209 pages.

Nonpoint Source Control Guidance, Construction Activities.  U.S. EPA,
December 1976.  PDS No. 0003400.  Also available from EPA Regional  Offices.

     Designed to provide State and areawide 208 agencies, the Federal
     agencies, and other concerned groups and individuals with  information
     which will assist them in carrying out their water quality planning
     and implementation responsibilities.  The basic guidance information
     included is principally technical in nature and presented  in three main
     chapters:  identification and assessment of procedures needed for selec-
     tion of controls; descriptions of individual and systems of BMP's, with
     a method for determining their effectiveness; and  several  methods for
     predicting potential pollution problems from future construction  activities.

Methods to Control  Fihe-Grained Sediments Resulting from Construction
Activity.  EPA 440/9-76-026.  PDS No. 0003400.  Available from  EPA
Regional Offices.

     This report was prepared to provide information and economical
     measures which can be used to contain or prevent the runoff of
     fine-grained sediments from construction sites.  Methods for the
     control of fine-grained sediments can be grouped into four general
     categories.   The first consists of standard erosion control techniques
     which are used in construction sites and which tend to reduce the
     production of  fine-grained sediments in the site.   The second category
     or line of defense involves the use of adequate sediment control
     measures.  Use of post-depositioned (post-sediment pond) devices  and
     techniques comprises the third fine-grained control line of defense.
     The final aspect of the control technology is the  removal  and disposal
     of the fine-grained sediment from detention ponds  and post-deposi-
     tioned devices.

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Inactive and Abandoned Underground Mines;   Water Pollution  Prevention
and Control.  June 1975.   EPA 440/9-75-007.   PDS No.  0001375.

     Provides information on the chemistry and  geographic extent  of mine
     drainage pollution in the U.S.  from inactive and abandoned under-
     ground mines; underground mining  methods and the characterization
     of mine drainage control techniques.

Criteria for Developing Pollution Abatement  Programs  for Inactive and
Abandoned Mine Sites.  EPA No. 440/9-75-008.  PDS No.  0001450.

     Gives guidance to States conducting or  anticipating the establish-
     ment of abandoned mine land pollution abatement  ordinances,  and
     reclamation programs.  Gives organizational, financial  and legal
     considerations for the program, and technical  and background
     approaches and reclamation programs.

Guidance for Facilities Planning.  U.S.  EPA,  Washington, D.C., May 1975.
Available from EPA Regional  Offices.

     Assist 208 agencies in the preparation  of  grant  applications and
     refinement of work plans, and aids  States  in their review of areawide
     grant applications.   Divided into three  parts:   grant  application
     requirements, outline of work plan, and  refinement of  work plan.

EPA Publications on Urban Stormwater Runoff:  Ordering Information.
Available from EPA Region IV.  June 1976.

     Listing of publications, without  abstracts.   Approximately 22 entries.
     Includes NTIS and GPO numbers and prices.

Land Use Information for Water Quality Management Planning.   U.S.  EPA,
August 1976.  PDS No. 0003528.  Available from  EPA Regional  Offices.

     This report tells water quality management planners what kinds of
     land use information is likely to be available and useful to them
     in their work at identifying impact of  land use  activities on water
     quality and at seeking planning and management strategies to solve
     water quality problems.  It is organized around  the sources  and types
     of information available and points up the first steps  in data col-
     lection:  people to see, maps and reports  to get, things to  look for.
     It is not a manual or methods and techniques for analyzing the
     relationship between water quality  and land use.   A great deal of
     work already has been done in that  area  and is continuing to be
     produced.  This is designed to complement  that work.
                                  10

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Environmental Assessment of Water Quality Management Plans.  U.S. EPA,
January 1977.  PDS No. 0003471.

     The preparation of an environmental assessment for a water quality
     management plan is a requirement under Section 208 of the Federal
     Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972.  This handbook is
     designed to assist managers and staff of planning agencies in
     assessing the natural and man-made environmental impacts of alter-
     native water quality management plan elements.  The intent of this
     guidance is to emphasize the interrelated nature of assessment in
     judging alternatives as they are developed.  While this handbook is
     still in draft form, it contains a great deal of information which
     will be useful to State and areawide agencies.

Nonpoint Source Control Guidance Hydrologic Modifications.  U.S. EPA.
PDS No. 0003580.

     The basic guidance information included in this nonpoint source
     control document is principally technical in nature and presented in
     four main chapters.  They include information on the identification
     and assessment of existing hydrologic modification nonpoint source
     problems; analysis and procedures needed for selection of controls,
     descriptions of individual and systems of BMP's; important consider-
     ations for predicting potential pollution problems from future
     hydrologic modifications activities; and final plan format.

Water Quality Impacts of Land Disturbing Activities - Evaluation and
Development of Institutional Systems for Environmental Management.
U.S. EPA, July 1976.  Available from EPA Regional Offices.

     This publication presents a systematic approach to the identification
     of optimal control authorities and programs for land disturbing
     activities.  It is intended for use by both State and areawide 208
     agencies as a possible approach to evaluating implementation alter-
     natives.  While recommendations are specific to the State of Nevada,
     the process may have applicability in various programs and media.

National Water Quality Inventory.   1976 Report to Congress.  June 1977.
EPA 440/9-76-024.   PDS No. 0003788.

     Submitted to Congress as required by Section 305(b) of the Federal
     Water Pollution Control  Act Amendments of 1972 (PL 92-500).

Urban Land.   July/August 1977.   "The Developer's Role in 208," Urban Land
Institute.   Available from the EPA Regional Offices.

     Two articles  in this issue of Urban Land deal with 208.  One
     documents how 208 plans currently being prepared will affect the
     development industry.  The other describes the interrelationships
     of Section 208 to Sections 303, 402, and 201.
                                   11

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Guide 1 — Effective Public Meetings
Guide 2 — Working Effectively with Advisory Committees,   PDS 6040
Guide 3 — Effective Use of Media
May 1977.

     These guides give planners and other 208 agency staff useful, in-depth
     information about running effective public meetings, making the best
     of advisory committees, and using sound media techniques.  Each is
     organized to provide basic practical  tips, as well  as guidance for
     organizing a public participation program over the  long term.  These
     guides are meant to be used as reference materials  with a full
     range of suggestions to fit many specific local  situation.

Where Do We Go From Here?  The Challenge of WQM for Elected Officials.
July 1977.  Available from Office of Public Awareness, A-107, Washington,
D.C.  20460.

     The major focus of the pamphlet is on the role elected officials can
     play in preventing and controlling pollution problems, especially
     those related to land use and nonpoint sources.  A  major intent of
     the report is to increase local officials interest  in and under-
     standing of the water quality management program and local  governments'
     role in the program specifically, and in pollution  abatement generally.
     9 pages.
The Public Benefits of Cleaned Hater. Emerging Greenway  Opportunities.
August 1977.Available from the EPA Regional Offices and/or the Public
Information Center, PM-215, Washington, D.C.   20460.

     This publication highlights opportunities for greenway development
     and protection.  It encourages careful  management in the use of
     waterfront land, early planning for public access and enjoyment
     of cleaned rivers, streams and harbors,  and efforts  to ensure that
     these bodies of waters are not repolluted by new, indiscriminate
     development attracted to their shores.

Community Guide.  1977.  "Getting in the Swim:   How Citizens Can Influence
Water Quality Planning."  League of Women  Voters Education Fund.   Available
from the EPA Regional Offices.

     A six page guide for citizens and community groups who wish to become
     involved in Section 208 planning and  implementation.

It's Time,  Speak Up.  Available from EPA Regional  Offices and the Public
Information Center,  PM-215, Washington,  D.C.   20460.

     An 8-page brochure describing the general  nature of  the 208 program.
     The 208 process is broken  down into 5 basic steps.   Each is described
     and at each step suggestions are given  as to how citizens can get
     involved.
                                  12

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                            GPO PUBLICATIONS
Evaluation of Water Quality Models:  A Management Guide for Planners.
EPA 600/5-76-004.  U.S. EPA, July 1976.  Available from GPO.
Price $2.50.

     Report  is designed as a handbook specifically oriented to
     water quality and water resources planners and managers.  It
     presents basic information on water quality modeling, including
     procedures for:  model evaluation, model selection, integration
     of modeling with planning activities, and contracting modeling
     projects.

     Information regarding the applicability and availability of
     other specific water quality models is available from:  Harry
     Torno,  Office of Research and Development (RD-682), U.S. EPA,
     Washington, D.C.  20460.  202/426-0810.

Municipal Sewage Treatment:  A Comparison of Alternatives.  Council
on Environmental Quality and U.S. EPA, Washington, D.C.  Available
from GPO.  Price:  $4.85.

     Provides a single document which can be utilized on a compara-
     tive basis, to develop preliminary selections of appropriate
     wastewater treatment schemes for a municipality.  The format
     of the  text allows the reader to compare various treatment
     strategies on an energy, environmental or economic basis and
     to develop cost figures which may better reflect a particular
     local situation.
Summary Appraisals for the Nation's Ground Water Resources --
(by drainage basins).U.S. Department of the Interior, Geological
Survey Professional Papers 813-A thru H.  Available from GPO.
Variously priced.

     Provides a comprehensive summary of each Region's ground water
     resources—characteristics of quantity, quality, problems
     indigenous to each Region, planning for resource management,
     and other approaches uniquely important to each Region.

Methods of Quickly Vegetating Soils of Low Productivity,
Construction Activities.   EPA No. 440/9-75-008.  U.S. EPA,
Washington,  D.C.  July 1975.   Available from GPO.   Stock No.
055-001-010-43-5.  Price:   $6.40.

     Documents prepared for use by planners, engineers, and resource
     managers who need to provide for the rapid establishment of
     a protective vegetative cover on construction sites bare soils.
                                  13

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                           NTIS PUBLICATIONS


 Public  Involvement in the Corps of Engineers Planning Process.
 James R. Hanchey.  U.S. Army Engineer Institute for Water Resources.
 NTIS AD A017 946.

     The approach to public involvement program development here
     assumes that planning should consist of sequential  stages
     with definable decision points, and that explicit consideration
     of public viewpoints must be undertaken before decisions are
     made.  Contains specific "how to" information on obtaining
     citizen input, disseminating information, budgeting for
     public involvement and evaluating its effectiveness.  44
     pages.

 Public Participation in Water Resources Planning:  An Evaluation
 of the Programs of 15 Corps of Engineers Districts.  James F.
 Ragan, U.S. Army Engineer Institute for Water Resources.  NTIS AD A019 966.

     This report examines the public involvement programs of
     fifteen Army Corps of Engineers field offices.  First, the
     programs are described, and two are used as detailed case
     studies.  The bulk of the report divides planning into five
     basic stages, gives guidance as to what could be done to
     involve the public at each state, and finally describes what
     is being done,by the Corps.  An interesting last chapter
     describes the constraints on effective public participation
     both from the bureaucratic system,  and from citizens themselves.

 Water Resources Decision Making on the Basis -of the Public Interest.
 Report No.  IWR Contract Report 75-1.  U.S. Army Engineer Institute
 for Water Resources.   NTIS AD A010 402.   Price:  $4.25.

     The concept of water resources decision making in the public
     interest is both fundamental  and elusive.  This report discusses
     alternative perspectives that have been suggested for defining
     the public interest and provides an overview of the decision
     making involved  in a typical  water resources planning study.
     It then examines various approaches to determining  the public
     interest in pre-authorization planning and decision making.

Design  Criteria for Mechanical.  Electric. Fluid Systems  and Component
Reliability.  U.S.  EPA^Available from NTIS PB 227-5584.

     Amplifies and supplements the Federal guidelines for design,
     operation,  and maintenance of wastewater treatment  facilities
     with  regard to establishing minimum standards of reliability
     for mechanical,  electric and fluid systems and components.
     Stresses component back-up to attain system reliability.
                                  14

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Structuring Communications Programs for Public Participation in
Water Resources Planning.Utah State University, Department of
Civil and Environmental Engineering, and the United States Army Engineer
Institute for Water Resources, May 1975.  NTIS AD A012 208.

     The report describes the Corps of Engineers' planning and defines
     the information generated during the planning activities.  The
     planning process  is related to various communication models and an
     approach to development of public participation is suggested.
     Various techniques and methods for communication with the public
     are presented.  The report concludes with several examples of
     public participation programs and the relation of these programs to
     environmental impact assessment and water quality management.

Communication for Urban Water Resources Management—A Review and
Annotated Bibliography.R.M. Males and T.J. Cooke, W.E.  Gates and
Associates Inc., February 1974.  NTIS PB 233-332.

     The review is intended as a source-book for professionals interested
     in utilizing the  findings of communications research on the design
     and conduct of public involvement programs for urban water resources.
     A basic presentation of the fundamental findings of communications
     theory, in the areas of basic communications processes, mass
     communications/persuasions, small group processes and face to  face
     communications is included.
The Role of Citizen Advisory Groups in Water Resources Planning.
Radge Ertel, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Water Resources
                                m
                                :hi
Research Center, July 1975.   NTIS  PB 240-877.
     This report is a result of systematic, case study observation of
     the citizen advisory groups operating in conjunction with three
     observation recognizance level planning studies of the New England
     River Basins Commission.  Citizen Advisory groups can serve as one
     component of a public participation program, and can provide a
     valuable link to other strategies included in the program.  The
     report includes a set of practical guidelines for the use of planning
     agencies seeking to maximize the effectiveness of citizen advisory
     groups.

Evaluation of Cost-Effectiveness of Nonstructural Pollution Controls:
A Manual for Water Quality Management Planning.CONSAD Research~
Corp., April 30, 1976.  NTIS No. PB 260-513.

     Develops and illustrates a procedure for estimating the cost of
     nonstructural  pollution controls for use in evaluating the cost-
     effectiveness of implementing such controls.  The procedure provides
     consistency in the evaluation of structural and nonstructural
     pollution controls, and permits systematic comparison of the control
     applications.   70 pages
                                   15

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Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Municipal  Wastewater Reuse.   U.S.  EPA,
April 1976.NTIS No.

     A description of procedures to assist local  governmental  agencies
     in properly assessing the cost-effectiveness of alternative  wastewater
     reuse systems.  Contains two case studies and a complete  bibliography
     of current information regarding the economics and  practice  of
     wastewater reuse.

Problems and Approaches to Areawide Water Quality Management.   Vols.
I-IV.U.S. EPA and School of Public and  Environmental Affairs, Indiana
University, 1973.  NTIS PB 239-808.

     This report deals with the issues of the adequate authority  of
     designated waste treatment management agencies to perform as required
     by Section 208(c)(2) and related sections of the Act.   "Adequate
     authority" includes both the legal  authority and the management
     capability of the agencies.  The report is based on a legal  analysis
     of the laws of the fifty States and  of Federal  legislation,  and on
     a survey of existing waste treatment management agencies. The
     study consists of a main report, an  executive summary and two
     separately bound appendices:   Appendix .A—Suggested Representative
     or Model  legislation, and Appendix  B—State  Reports.

Modeling Nonpoint Pollution From the Land Surface.  EPA  No.  600/3-76-083.
U.S. EPA, July 1976.  Available from NTIS  PB 257-189.

     Report describes the development and initial testing of a mathematical
     model  for continuously simulating pollutant  contributions to stream
     channels  for nonpoint sources.  The  NPS model is composed of subprograms
     to represent the hydrologic response of a watershed,  including snow
     accumulation, generation, and washoff from the land surface.

Development of Residuals Management Strategies — Executive  Summary.
U.S. EPA.  NTIS PB 251-011/AS.

     Study of the development of strategies for managing residuals. Con-
     tains step-by-step guidelines for identifying alternative residuals
     management strategies and then evaluting and selecting  a  strategy.
     Presents  a residuals generation and  discharge model  which identifies
     different methods for complying with recent  Federal  legislation that
     requires  a specified level  of environmental  quality and identifies
     many points in the residuals generation and  discharge process at
     which physical methods can be introduced or  changes made, to reduce
     or alleviate the effect of discharging residuals into the environment.
                                   16

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Residual Waste Best Management Practices:   A Water Planner's Guide to
Land Disposal.  RFP No. WA-76-R045.  Available from NTIS PB 251-031/AS.

     This document describes residual wastes from nine most frequently
     encountered sources and relates management of these wastes to exhaus-
     tive enumeration of BMP's.  This provides the potential user —
     planners, engineers, lawyers, elected officials and other — with a
     reference for carrying out their residual waste management responsi-
     bilities under areawide or State water quality management planning
     programs and other regional/local activities.

Sludge Processing, Transportation and Disposal/Resource Recovery:  A
Planning Perspective.  EPA No. 440/9-76-022.  U.S. EPA, December 1975.
NTIS PB 251-013/AS.

     Reports on the methodology for use by planners in the evaluations of
     alternatives for the ultimate disposal of residual wastes generated
     by municipal wastewater treatment plants.  The methodology considers
     technical, economic, social, and institutional factors pertinent to
     a thorough review of alternatives.

     An application of this methodology is presented in Demonstration of
     A Planning Perspective for Haste Water Sludge Disposition Ohio/
     Kentucky/Indiana, EPA 440/9-76-001-B, NTIS PB 250-684/AS,
     Demonstration of a Planning Perspective for Waste Water S1udge_Disp_gsition
     —Knoxville/Knox County, EPA 440/9-76-001-A, NTIS PB 250-936/AS:"

Resource Recovery Information for Municipal Officials.  Two volumes
combined.EPA No. 440/9-76-018.Vol. I - February 1976, Vol. II —
August 1976.  NTIS No.

     Presents an overview of administrative, institutional, and technical
     solutions for recovering useful elements such as aluminum, paper and
     energy from municipal solid wastes.  Vol. I, Section A is concerned
     with central processing facilities.  It deals with policy issues,
     financing, procurement, and contracts and includes a nationwide survey
     of resource recovery activities.  Section B of Volume I provides a
     cursory review of source separation.   Vol. II is a continuation of
     Section A, dealing with market and products, accounting format, and
     technologies.

Implementing A BMP for Residuals, The Waste Exchange.  EPA No. 440/9-76-019.
Alan K. Vitberg and Christopher H. Porter.June 1976.  Available from NTIS
PB 258-068/AS.

     This document characterizes waste exchange systems which will  help
     local  jurisdictions and industry to deal with industrial wastes and
     residuals through resource conservation and utilization.  It is in-
     tended to demonstrate a residual BMP; namely, that one industry's
     waste has the potential to be another industry's feedstock.


                                  17

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Contributions of Urban Roadway Usage to Water Pollution.   EPA No.
bUU/2-75-004.U.S. EPA, March 19/b.Available from NTIS PB 245-854/5BE.

     Study of contributions of motor vehicle usage to urban roadway loading
     factors.  Specific roadway study sites within the nonindustrial
     Washington, D.C. area were collected so as to provide minimal
     interference from non-traffic related land use activities and
     thus isolate, as much as possible, the traffic related dispositions.

Practice in Detention of Stormwater Runoff.  Herbert G.  Poertner, American
Public Works Association, 19/4.  Nils Pb 234-554.

     On-site detention of runoff was investigated  as an  alternative to
     other methods of urban stormwater runoff management.  It was found
     that this method, which involves collecting excess  runoff before
     it enters the main drainage system, can often be applied as an
     effective and economical means of reducing peak runoff, slow rates
     to lessen or eliminate problems of flooding,  pollution, soil erosion,
     and siltation.

Urban Stormwater Management and Technology:  An Assessment.  EPA No.
670/2-74-040.U.S. EPA, National  Research Center, 1974.Available from
GPO and NTIS PB 240-687/AS.

     The results of a comprehensive investigation  and assessment of
     promising, completed and ongoing urban stormwater projects which are
          representatives of the state-of-the-art  in abatement theory and
          technology.  Presented in a textbook format, provides a compendium
          of project information on management and technology alternatives
          within a project framework of problem identification, evaluation
          procedures and program assessment and selection.

Water Quality Management Planning for Urban Runoff.  EPA  No. 440/9-75-004.
U.S. EPA, December 19/4.Available from NTIS PB 241-689/AS.

     Provides technical assistance to State and local  water quality
     management planners to enable them to quantify within reasonable
     limits the urban nonpoint water pollution problem in a local planning
     area without extensive data generation, and to make  a preliminary
     evaluation of cost-effective abatement and control  practices.
     Prescribes procedures for several  levels of input,  each requiring
     more self-generated data, with increasingly sophisticated results.

Water Resources Protection Measures in Land Development:   A Handbook.
U.S. Department of Interior, 19/4.Available from NTIS  PB 236-049.

     Description of measures that  can become an integrated part of  urban
     development to lessen problems that would otherwise  adversely  affect
     water resources.  Measures are presented in groups  and related
                                  18

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directly to the problems of runoff, erosion, sedimentation, flooding,
runoff pollution and increased sewage effluent discharge.   Each
group is preceded by a flow chart that relates individual  measures
to each other and can aid in the selection of alternative  techniques
that follow a logical sequence.

Proceedings:  Urban Stormwater Management Seminars.   WPD No.  03-76-04.
U.S. EPA, January 1976.Available from NTIS PB 260-889.  Price:   Paper
copy $12.75; Microfiche $3.00.

     These proceedings are intended to give the reader a general  overview
     of the urban stormwater problem.  It is directed towad:   a character-
     ization of the problem, discussion on the viewpoint of the modeling.
     Section 2 covers alternative techniques of stormwater management.
     Issues concerning implementation are addressed  in the last section
     and include financial, legal, and institutional  problems.   This
     document does not purport to contain all answers to the reader's
     specific stormwater problems, but will  provide  guidance through the
     formal presentations, questions, responses, and  bibliographies  that
     it contains.

Preventive Approaches to Stormwater Management.  EPA  No. 440/9-77-001.
U.S. EPA, January 1977.Available from NTIS PB 268-546.

     This manual is designed to introduce the nature  of the stormwater
     problems to concerned officials and suggests preventive approaches,
     including a discussion of the legal, financial,  and institutional
     issues which must be addressed if these preventive approaches sug-
     gested in this manual are intended to help State and  local officials
     in refining and implementing BMP's.

Methodology for the Study of Urban Storm Generated Pollution Control.
EPA No. 600/2-76-145.U.S. EPA, August 1976.Available from NTIS.

     Report contains recommendations for standard procedures to be
     followed in the conduct of projects dealing with pollution assess-
     ment and abatement of stormwater generated discharges.

Development and Application of a Simp!ified  Stormwater Management Model.
EPA No. 600/2-76-218.U.S. EPA, August 1976.Available from NTIS.

     Report describes a simplified stormwater management model  developed
     to provide an inexpensive, flexible tool for planning and  preliminary
     sizing of stormwater facilities.  The model  successfully introduces
     time and probably into stormwater analysis,  promotes  total system
     consciousness on the part of the user,  and assists in establishing
     size-effectiveness relationships for facilities.
                                  19

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 Wastewater Flow Measurement  in  Sewers Using Ultrasound.  EPA No.
 6UU/2-/6-243.   U.S.  EPA,  November  19/6.  Available from NTIS.

      Report covers the demonstration and evaluation of new techniques for
      measurement of sewage volume  flow utilizing ultrasonic measurement
      of depth  and velocity.   The technique, requiring no costly construc-
      tion  for  installation,  is  usable for open channel or partia.ly full
      pipe  measurements.

 Research Status on Effects of Land Application of Animal Wastes.  EPA No.
 IIO/2-/5-010.   OiS EPA.   Available from Nils PB 243-4/2/»Bh.

      Report primarily  reviews research results.  However, in one chapter
      it outlines a procedue  for estimations of the effects of animal wastes
      on crop utilization  nutrients.

 Control  of Hater Pollution from Cropland  Volume II - An Overview.  EPA No.
 600/2-75-026b  and/or ARS-H-5-2, prepared jointly by USDA Agricultural
 Research Service and U.S. EPA.  Available from GPO and NTIS.

      This  report,  a  comparison to Vol. I (a manual for guideline
      development),  provides  documentation for the general guidance on
      control practices  provided in Vol.  I.

 Use  of  Climatic Data in Estimating Storage Days for Soils Treatment
 Systems.EPA  No.  600/2-76-250.U.S. EPA,  November 1976.Available
 from NTIS  PB

      Report  describes  results of an evaluation of 20 to 25 years of daily
      climatological  data  at  selected stations in cold and wet regions of
      the U.S.  to  identify the number of days each year that the soil
      would  be  frozen or saturated and could not accept wastes.

 Logging Roads  and  Protection  of Water Quality.  EPA No. 910/9-75-007.
 U.S.  EPA, Seattle, Washington, March 19/5.Available from NTIS
 PB 243 703/6BE.

      This report,  issued under Section 304(e), provides general information
      on the nature of silviculture pollution control problems and on
      control methods.  General predictive techniques and criteria and
      management programs are  included.

Groundwater Pollution in the South Central  States.  M.R. Scalf, J.W. Keely,
C.J.  LaFevers.   LPA No. R-Z,73-268.  June 1973.  Available from NTIS
PB 222-178  and  GPO.

     The area comprises Arkansas,  Louisiana, New Mexico,  Oklahoma  and
     Texas.   Mineralization  by natural  causes is the most  influential
     quality factor.  Large  quantities of saline groundwater  are present
     with several natural  saline springs.   Oilfield activities  are the
                                  20

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     principal man-made cause mostly with disposal of oilfield brines
     and  imperfectly completed or plugged oil and gas wells and test
     holes.  Overpumping fresh groundwater causes salt water intrusion
     inland and along the Gulf Coast.  Research and other needs are
     specified.

Monitoring Grpundwater Quality:  Methods and Costs.  Lome G. Everett,
Kenneth D. Schmidt, Richard M. Tinlin and David K. Todd.  General  Electric
Company,  May 1976.  GE 75TMP-69, EPA No. 600/4-76-023.  Available from
NTIS PB 257-113/9WP.

     The  report describes various groundwater monitoring methods and
     provides  a generalized cost breakdown of all the major economic
     factors for each method.  All possible groundwater related measuring
     techniques applicable at the land suface, topsoil, vadose zone and
     zone of saturation are presented.  Each monitoring method is described,
     referenced and illustrated.  Estimates of itemized capital and oper-
     ational costs are presented.  The material is presented for in-depth
     reference purposes without recommendation for least-cost techniques,
     a least-cost mix of ground water monitoring approaches, or an optimal
     information system.  152 pages

A Guide to the Selection of Cost-Effective Wastewater Treatment.  July
T97^MDC-II.Available from NTIS PB 244-417/AS.

     The  data  provided is a guide for planners, engineers, and decision-
     makers at all levels of government.

Performance Controls for Sensitive Lands:  A Practical Guide for Local
Administrators;EPA No. 600/5-75-005.U.S. EPA, March 1975.Available
from NTIS PB 245-177/LBE.

     Intended  as a handbook for use by local planning officials in planning
     for  and regulating use of streams and creeks, wetlands, woodlands,
     hillsides, and ground water and aquifer recharge areas.  Discusses
     ecology and value of sensitive areas, and recommends regulatory pro-
     grams.  Includes appendices on obtaining technical assistance.

Ecosystem Impacts of Urbanization:  Assessment Methodology.  EPA No.
6W3-76-072.  July 1976.  NTIS No.	

     A methodology is developed to use space-time analysis and ecosystems
     modeling  to assess the secondary impacts of wastewater treatment
     facilities (i.e., urbanization) on the ecosystem.  The existing state of
     the  ecosystem is described with emphasis on the dynamic, periodic
     trend, and gradient processes.   Ecosystem models are used to project
                                   21

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each facility  alternative and its consequences.   Ecosystem models
are described and the literature on impacts is reviewed.   A case
study of urbanization at Lake George, NY emphasizes the usefulness
of the components of ecosystem models by linking  units from several
studies with a new model (LAND).

Restoring the Willamette River:  Costs and Impacts of Mater Quality Control,
E. Scott Huff, Peter C. Klingeman, Herbert H. Stoevener,  and Howard F.
Horton.  Oregon State University, Corvallis, Water Resources Research
Institute, September 1976.  EPA No. 600/5-76-005.  Available from NTIS
PB 259-907/4WP.

     The means by which the water quality of the  Willamette River has
     been upgraded over the past four decades are documented.  Two
     strategies -- nonpoint source wastewater treatment and flow augmenta-
     tion from a network of Federal reservoirs — have been responsible
     for this improvement in water quality.

Our Natural Resources:  What Is Our Water Worth.   1975-1978.  Water
Quality Management Planning Program, North Central Texas Council of
Governments.  Available from NTIS PB 256-976/2WP.

     What Is Our Water Worth presents the adopted work plan for the North
     Central Texas Council of Governments in areawide water quality manage-
     ment planning pursuant to requirements of Section 208 of the Federal
     Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972.  The document
     describes the continuing planning process to date, the anticipated
     content of the annual plans, detailed NCTCOG staff work activities,
     each anticipated consultant contract, and the resources being devoted
     to the program.  Integration of functional planning efforts at NCTCOG
     is being addressed primarily through the formulation and adoption of
     a Preferred Regional Development Policy.

Land Application of Sewage Effluents and Sludges:  Selected Abstracts.
EPA No. 660/2-74-042.  U.S. EPA National Environmental Research Center,
Corvallis, Oregon, 1974.  Available from NTIS PB  235-386.

     Combines selected abstracts from previous publications and updates
     sources abstracted into the year 1973.  The  568 abstracts selected
     for inclusion are arranged in chronological  groupings and are identi-
     fied as to emphasis on effluent or sludge.

Secondary Impacts of Transportation and Wastewater Investments:  Review
and Bibliography.  EPA No. 600/5-75-002.  U.S. EPA, January 1975.
Available from NTIS PB 246-085/5BE.

     A review of over  50 major studies and 300 relevant reports related
     to secondary environmental impacts on various forms of public invest-
     ments,  e.g., land based transportation and wastewater collection
     systems.
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Ground Water Contamination in the Northwest States.  Fritz van der Leeden,
Lawrence A. Cerrillo, and David W. Miller.U.S. EPA, Corvallis, Oregon,
May 1975.  EPA No 660/3-75-018.  Available from NTIS PB 242-860/AS.

     Evaluates ground water contamination problems in the six Northwestern
     States.  Natural and man-made groundwater problems are identified
     and assessed.  Research and control needs are identified.

Ground Water Contamination in the Northeast States.  D.W. Miller, F.A. DeLuca
and T.L. Tessier.EPA No. 660/2-74-056.Available from GPO.  Stock No.
EP1.23/2:660/2-74-056.  Also available from NTIS PB 235-702/AS.

     Evaluates ground water contamination problems in the 11 Northeast
     States.  Natural and man-made ground water problems are identified
     and assessed.  Research and control needs are identified.

Secondary Impact of Transportation and Wastewater Investments:  Research
Results.  EPA No. 600/5-75-013.U.S. EPA, July 1975.Available from
NTIS PB 246-085/5BE.

     The second report of a two-part research study.  This report presents
     the ressults of original research on the extent to which secondary
     development can be attributed to highways and wastewater treatment
     and collection, and the conditions under which causal relations
     appear to exist.

Water Pollution Economics, Volume II.  1975-July 1976.  (A bibliography
with abstracts).Edward J. Lehmann.Available from NTIS PS-76-0666/8WP.

     This updated bibliography contains 86 abstracts, 51 of which are
     new entries to the previous edition.

Selected Irrigation Return Flow Quality Abstracts.  Gaylord V. Skogerboe,
Wynn R. Walker, Stephen W. Smith.  EPA No. 600/2-76-019.  November 1974.
Available from NTIS PB 235-385/2.

     Abstracts derived for 100 sources of material published during
     calendar year 1974.  Includes technological and institutional articles
     pertinent to action programs regarding the control of water quality
     degradation resulting from irrigated agriculture.

Solid Waste Management - Available Information Materials.  U.S. EPA,
Office of Solid Waste Management Programs, November
1975.  Available from NTIS PB 234-931/4.

     Booklet lists publications, films, exhibits, information kits,
     training programs, OSWMP and NTIS publications and reports.  Indexes
     by subject, title and author.
                                  23

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The Potential Contribution of Fertilizers to Water Pollution:   Lowell  A.
Douglas.  Rutgers, June 1976.  Available from NTIS PB 259-609/6WP.

     Field studies were undertaken to determine the magnitude of leaching
     of fertilizer N03, NH4, and P04.  The common fertilizer efficiency
     measure of N in crop/N applied in fertilizer N that may be used as
     an indication of the amount of fertilizer N that will  be leached.
     Studies of nutrients in streams were undertaken to related land use
     to N03, NH4 and P04 concentrations in surface waters.   Sewage treat-
     ment plants and"illegal drains" were major sources of  all  three
     ions.  This study was designed to find out if the agronomic operations
     commonly used on New Jersey farms produced nitrate and phosphate
     levels in water that are compatible with the standards that have
     been established for these ions.  96 pages

Proceedings of the Third Federal  Inter-Agency Sedimentation Conference. 1976.
Prepared by the Sedimentation Committee of the Water Resources  Council.
Available from NTIS PB 245/100.

     Contains sections on sediment yield and sources, erosion and sediment
     control, physical and chemical  properties of sediment, sediment trans-
     port and deposition, channel  adjustments, coastal  zone sedimentation,
     and instrumentation.

Impact of Construction Activities  in Wetlands of the United States.
Rezneat M. Darnell, Willis E. Pequegant, Bel a M.  James, Fred J.  Benson,
and Richard A. Defenbaugh.  EPA No.  600/3-76-045.  April  1976.   Available
from NTIS PB 256-674/3WP.

     This publication presents the primary types of construction activity
     which severely impact wetland environments of the United States:   the
     type of physical and chemical  modification shown to induce a derived
     set of biological effects; the most environmentally damaging effects
     of construction activities in wetland areas; major construction-
     related impacts derived from  altered water temperature, pH, nutrient
     levels, oxygen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen sulfide,  and  certain  pollu-
     tants such as heavy metals,  radioactive isotopes and pesticides.

Conservation Districts and 208 Water Quality Management.  National
Association of Conservation Districts and EPA, June 1977.   Available from
NTIS PB 274-411.

     Highlights potential conservation district involvement in  the
     preparation  and implementation  of State and areawide water quality
     management plans developed pursuant to Section 208 of  the  Federal
     Water Pollution Control  Act Amendments of 1972 (PL 92-500).  It is
     keyed to the 16 required water quality management planning elements
     specified in EPA regulations.   The document is directed primarily
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     to water quality planners, conservation districts, and State soil
     conservation agencies (boards, commissions, committees, councils or
     equivalent).  Those Federal and State agencies with whom conservation
     districts have cooperative working arrangements, as well as various
     public interest groups may also find the material of interest.

Characterization and Treatment or Urban Land Runoff.  EPA No. 670/2-74-096.
December 1974.Available from NTIS PB 240-987/8BE.

     Urban land runoff from a 1.67 square-mile urban watershed in Durham,-
     North Carolina, was characterized with respect to annual pollutant
     yield.  Regression equations were developed to relate pollutant
     strength to hydrograph characteristics.  Urban land runoff was  found
     to be a significant source of pollution when compared to the raw
     municipal waste generated with the study area.  On an annual basis,
     the urban runoff suspended solids yield was 20 times that contained
     in raw municipal wastes for the same area.  Downstream water quality
     was judged to be controlled by urban land runoff 20% of the time.
     In urban drainage basins, investments in upgrading secondary municipal
     waste treatment plants with concomitant steps to moderate the adverse
     effects of urban land runoff are questionable in view of the apparent
     relative impact of urban land runoff on receiving water quality.

Institutional Assessment of the Implementation of the Planning Requirements
of the Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972TNational Commission
on Water Quality, August 1975.Available from NTIS PB 244-907/LK.

     The planning sections of the FWPCA Amendments of 1972 are examined
     along with their administration by the U.S. EPA and the States.  The
     authors believe the planning is not yet fulfilling its role of
     ordering and integrating the big parts of the law, the National
     Pollutant Discharge Elimination System and the municipal facilities
     construction program.  An important reason is the constraint of time
     and need for the Federal and State agencies to implement these
     programs quickly.

Residual Waste:  Model State Legislation.  EPA No. 440/9-76-004.  March
1976.Available from NTIS PB 251-031/AS.

     The focal point of this handbook is a model statute entitled "A State
     Residual Waste Management and Resource Recovery Act."  The statutory
     scheme is structured to support the implementation of areawide  plan-
     ning.  The approach taken toward the use of areawide planning is an
     integrated one.  The suggested legislative model addresses all  phases
     of the disposal of residual wastes on land or in subsurface excava-
     tions.
                                   25

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Development of Residuals Management Strategies — A Report.  January 1976.
Available from NTIS PB 2bl-0l2/lbh.

     The purpose of the report is to provide a comprehensive and systematic
     approach for developing and evaluating strategies for residuals manage-
     ment.  It is based on the concept that wastes (materials and energy
     residuals) which adversely affect the environment are generated as a
     result of all human activity.

Urban Stormwater Runoff:  Determination of Volumes and Flow Rates.
February 1976.  EPA No. 600/2-76-116.  Available from NTIS PB Zb3-410/5BE.

     An investigation is made to (a) develop a method of depth-duration
     frequency analysis for precipitation events having short return
     period (high frequency) for urban stormwater runoff management and
     control purposes; (b) develop a new high accuracy urban stormwater
     determination method which when verified can be used for projects
     requiring high accuracy detailed runoff results and can also be
     used as the calibration scale for the less accurate urban runoff
     prediction methods; and (c) compare and evaluate selected urban
     stormwater runoff prediction methods.

Costs of Wastewater Treatment by Land Application.  June 1975.  Available
from NTIS PB 257-439/OBE.

     Cost information for two stages of planning is presented for
     alternative land application systems: (1) preliminary cost screening
     and (2) detailed cost categories include land, preapplication treat-
     ment, transmission, storage, land application and recovery of
     renovated water.

Handbook for Sewer System Evaluation and Rehabilitation.  U.S. EPA,
December 1975.Available from NTIS PB 257-457/2BE.

     The handbook contains chapters on methodology for conducting
     infiltration/inflow analysis; methodology for conducting sewer system
     evaluation survey; information on current state-of-the-art techniques
     for sewer rehabilitation; and costs associated with conducting sewer
     system evaluation survey and rehabilitation in compliance with the
     Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972.

A Compilation of Papers Presented at the 208 Areawide Water Quality
Management Workshop.   April-May 1976.  National Association of Regional
Councils.Available  from NTIS PB 254-663.

     The papers provide an introduction and overview of the institutional
     aspects of the water quality management program required by Section
     208 of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments.
                                   26

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                           OTHER PUBLICATIONS

A Practical Guide for 208 Areawide Water Quality Management.   November 1976.
Available upon request from the National Association of Regional  Councils,
1700 K Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.  20006 or EPA Regional  Offices.

     This practical guide is the first of several to provide  technical
     assistance to local agencies with responsibility in the  area of
     water quality management.  The report summarizes most of the infor-
     mation gained at three technical assistance workshops held by NARC.
     Topics include guidelines for supplementation, regulatory procedures,
     financing methods, community involvement and environmental programs
     integration.

Listening to Metropolis:  An Evaluation of the New York Region's  CHOICES
FOR '76 Mass Media Town Meetings and a Handbook on Public Participation
in Regional Planning.William B. Shore, Regional Plan Association,  New
York, New York.  Available upon request from the U.S. Department  of Housing
and Urban Development.  December 1974.

     CHOICES FOR '76 was a mass media town meeting series in  which all
     New York Urban Region's television stations presented five one-hour
     programs on planning issues:  some 60,000 households watched each
     show, 26,500 persons submited a ballot on the issues after each town
     meeting, more than 20,000 persons took part in at least  one  discussion
     group after watching the film, and about 100,000 background  books
     were distributed.  This book evaluated a road map for those
     considering such a project with how-to-do-it advice.

1971 Suggested State Legislation (1971); 1972 Suggested State Legislation
19/1 Suggested btate Legislation (19/i;;  wit Suggested  state  Legisia
(1972); 1973 Suggested State Legislation  (1973);  1974  Suggested  State
Legislation (1974); 1975 Suggested State  Legislation  (1975): 1976  Sug
State Legislation (1976); 1977 Suggested State Legislation (1977).   Council
of State Governments.Available from Order Department, Iron Works  Parkway,
Lexington, Kentucky  40511.  $5.00 for each volume dated before 1975
and $6.50 for those dated thereafter.

     Includes suggested legislation that would be relevant for
     implementing 208 plans.

Waste Load Allocations in River Basin Plans.  Available from State
agencies concerned with Section 303 (Water Pollution Control Board).

     River basin plans required under Section 303 of the Act contain
     waste load allocations for segments of streams designated water
     quality limited.  These allocations would, of course, be useful in
     defining industrial treatment levels.
                                    27

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Process Design Manual for Sludge-Treatment and Disposal.   EPA No.
635-41-74-006.  October 1974.  Available upon request from the U.S. EPA
Office of Technology Transfer, CM#2, RD/677, Washington,  D.C.  20460.

     Presents a contemporary review of sludge processing  technology and
     the specific procedures to be considered, modified,  and applied to
     meet unique conditions.  Emphasizes operational  considerations and
     interrelationships of the various sludge treatment processes  to be
     considered before selecting the optimum design.   Also presents case
     histories of existing wastewater treatment plants to illustrate
     the various unit processes and results.

Manure Harvesting Practices:  Effects on Waste Characteristics and Runoff.
R.W. Hansen, J.M. Harper, M.W. Stone, G.M. Ward and R.A.  Kidd.  Colorado
State University, Fort Collins, Colorado.  December 1976.  EPA No.
600/2-76-292.  Available from U.S. EPA, Robert S.  Kerr Environmental
Research Lab, Ada Oklahoma  74820.

     To develop a basis for better manure harvesting  management practices
     a combined field and laboratory study was conducted.

     The effect of management practices on manure  qualities and runoff
     pollution potential  were compared on three feedlot pens with  fully
     surfaced, partially surfaced and unsurfaced conditions.

Urban Stormwater Management Research and Planning  Projects for FY  1975
and FY 1976"U.S. EPA, Washington, D.C.20460, January  1977.

     Information contained in this report is concerned with urban  storm-
     water management.  Well over two hundred projects were reviewed and
     those selected to be included within this report were chosen  because
     of their contribution to the planning process for urban stormwater
     management.  Five areas within the planning process  are identified
     and projects are categorized appropriately.  Also includes a  list
     of bibliographies where information on the projects  done prior to
     FY 75 is available.

Stormwater Management Model:  Level 1 - Preliminary Screening Procedure.
EPA No. 600/2-76-275.Available from the Office of Research & Development,
U.S. EPA, Washington, D.C.  20460.

     This document contains the procedures which allows the user to
     estimate the quantity and quality of urban runoff in the combined,
     storm,  and unsewered portions of each urban area in  his jurisdiction.
     This procedure covers storage and treatment,  and does not include
     evaluating non-structural source controls. It will  be useful in
     those areas with combined sewers and areas that  will have to  treat
     their stormwater to meet water quality goals.
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Erosion and Sediment Yield Methods.  Report on the Pacific Southwest
Interagency Committee, 1974.A"vaTlable from USDA-SCS, Portland,  Oregon.

     The summaries of 12 methods together with bibliography of related
     papers should provide sufficient background information to allow
     an individual to use the method that seems most suited to a  particular
     watershed problem.

Water Pollution Caused by Inactive Ore and Mineral Mines - A National
Assessment"!Harry W. Martin and William R. Mills, Jr., December 1976.
Toups Corp., 1010 N. Main Street, Santa Ana, California  92711.  EPA No.
600/2-76-298.  Available from U.S. EPA Industrial  Environmental Research
Laboratory, Cincinnati, Ohio  45268.

     The report identifies the scope and magnitude of water pollution
     from inactive ore and mineral cites.  Descriptions of the mineral
     industry are presented, including a summary of economic geology,
     production methods, historic mineral production methods, and histori-
     cal mineral production.  The mechanisms of formation, transportation,
     and removal of pollutants are detailed.  State-by-State summaries of
     mine related pollution are presented.  An assessment of current
     water pollution abatement procedures used for inactive mines is given
     and research and development programs for necessary improvements are
     recommended.

Methods for Separation of Sediment from Stormwater at Construction Sites.
J.F. Ripken, J.M. Killen, J.S. Gulliver, January 1977.  EPA No.
600/2-77-033. 'Available from Municipal Environmental Research Lab,
U.S. EPA Office of Research & Development, Cincinnati, Ohio  45268.

     Large construction sites, when exposed to rainfall, yield runoff
     which may transport an objectionable load of mineral solids from
     the site.  This report discusses the nature and amount of solids
     which may be employed to remove the transported solids from the
     effluent water.  The principal focus is on the use and characteristics
     of modern, available, commercial equipment for the secondary treatment
     process necessary to remove fine mineral solid suspensions.   Specific
     recommendations are made for equipment selections and for additional
     studies to more clearly characterize these selections for construction
     site use.

Private Property and the Public Interest:  The Brandywine Experience.
Anne L. Strong, John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland  21218.
1975.

     Documentary case study analyzes why a watershed program failed to
     receive public and political support; shows how accepted methods of
     participation were thwarted by a persistent interest group.   206
     pages, illustrated.
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The Uses of Values:   Public Participation in the Planning Process.   James
L. Creighton, Synergy Consultation Services, UlZb Douglass  Lane,  Saratoga,
California  95070

     If the purposes of public participation are to ensure that the full
     range of values held by the public be incorporated in the planning
     process, not just those values normally accepted by agencies,  then
     it will be necessary to learn to recognize and deal with emotional
     value-laden contributions of the public, not just the factual  infor-
     mation with which the planner is more comfortable.  The techniques
     of developing alternatives based on all major values positions held
     by the public ensures that the planner is not an advocate for some
     groups, and an adversary of others.  It is also a clear communication
     to the public that the agency is responsive and accountable to all
     publics.

Citizen Involvement in OCPC 208 Planning - A Progress Report.  Old Colony
Planning Council, April 1976.  Available from OCPC, 232 Main Street,
Brockton, Massachusetts 02401.

     This detailed progress report discusses the OCPC public participation
     program to date.  Fifteen mechanisms used by OCPC to get the public
     involved are explained, including citizen committees, discussions
     with town/city officials, technical assistance to town  governments,
     involvement of local schools, visits to problem areas with local
     citizens and others.  Obstacles to 208 public participation,  signifi-
     cant local issues and areawide problems, as well as staff response
     to them are analyzed.  Finally, the OCPC 208 public participation
     program is evaluated against its stated objectives.

Soil Erosion and Sedimentation Guidelines for Forestry.  Pennsylvania
Department of Environmental Resources, Cambria County Conservation Service.
Available from the Department of Environmental Resources, Room 114,
Evangelical Press Building, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania  17120.

     Prepared to assist logging operations compliance with Rules and
     Regulations adopted under the Pennsylvania Clean Stream Law for the
     control of accelerated soil erosion and sedimentation.

Effects of Log Handling and Storage on Water Quality.  Gerald S. Schuytema
and Robert D. Shankland.September 1976.EPA No. 600/2-76-262.  Available
from U.S. EPA Office of Research & Development, Industrial Environmental
Research Lab, Cincinnati, Ohio  45268.

     The biological  and chemical effects of three types of log storage on
     water quaity were investigated.  Three flow-through log ponds, two
     wet deck operations and five log rafting areas were studied.   Both
     biological and chemical aspects of stream quality can be adversely
     affected by flow-through log ponds and runoff from wet  decks.
     Severity of degradation varies widely with each situation.  Runoff
     from wet decks has pollution characteristics equal to or greater than
     most of the waters from the flow-through log ponds studied.


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A Guide to State Programs for the Reclamation of Surface Mined Areas
Edgar A. Imhoff, Thomas 0. Fritz and James R. LaFevers.U.S. Department
of the Interior, Geological Survey.  Free on application to Branch Distribu-
tion, U.S Geological Survey, 1200 South Eads Street, Arlington, Virginia
22202.

     A primer of surface mining activities and related reclamation
     practices and problems.  Contains a table designed for the notation
     and elaboration of information pertaining to the mined area reclama-
     tion programs and a listing of non-Federal governmental  controls
     applicable to reclamation.

Selected Techniques for Soliciting Community Participation in Transportation
Planning.  Julie Hetrick Schermer, 1974.  Copies of this paper available
upon request from Director of Publications, Parson, Brinckerhoff, Quade 4
Douglass, Inc., 1 Penn Plaza, 250 W. 34th Street, New York, New York  10001

     Five techniques for greater community participation recently employed
     in major transportation planning projects are reviewed and assessed
     in this paper.  They are equally applicable to waste treatment
     management planning and include "citizen committees", "randomly
     selected participation groups", "open door policy", "direct funding
     to community groups", and "planning balance sheet".

Assessment of Mathematical Models for Storm and Combined Sewer Management.
Albin Brandstetter, August 1976.EPA No. 600/2-76-175a.Available from
NTIS PB 259-597/3WP.

     Mathematical models for the nonsteady simulation of urban runoff were
     evaluated to determine their suitability for the engineering assess-
     ment, planning design and control of storm and combined sewerage
     systems.  The models were evaluated on the basis of information
     published by the model builders and model users.  Several models were
     also tested by computer runs using both hypothetical and real catch-
     ment data.  Most of the models evaluated included the nonsteady simu-
     lation of the rainfall-runoff process and flow routing in sewers.

Areawide Assessment Procedures Manual. Vols. I. II, III.  EPA No.
600/9-76-014.July 1976.Available from U.S. EPA, Cincinnati, Ohio.

     This manual summarizes and presents in condensed form a range of
     available procedures and methodologies that are available for
     identifying and estimating pollutant load generation and transport
     from major sources within water quality management planning areas.
     Although an annotated chapter is provided for the assessment of non-
     urban pollutant loads, the major emphasis of the manual  is directed
     toward the assessment of problems and selection of alternatives in
     urban areas, with particular concern for stormwater related problems.
     Also included in the manual are methodologies for assessing the
     present and future water quality impacts from major sources, as well
     as summaries of structural and nonstructural control alternatives.
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Assistance Available from USDA Agencies in Section 208 (PL  92-500
Developed by USDA Agencies in Florida.Available upon request fronT
U.S. EPA Region IV, Atlanta or Bob Craig,  SCS,  Federal Building,
P.O. Box 1208, Gainesvile, Florida  32601.

     The report addresses specific requirements outlined in the regulation
     40 CFR 130.  The doucment should be of considerable help to those
     requiring expert assistance in agriculturally related  nonpoint source
     pollution evaluation.

Land Availability, Crop Production, and Fertilizer Requirements in the U.S.
October 1975.EPA No. 530/SW-166.  Available upon request  from U.S.  EPA,
Solid Waste Information, Cincinnati, Ohio   45268.

     Contains information about the kinds  and amounts  of fertilizer
     used in the U.S.

Control of Water Pollution From Cropland -- A Manual  for Guidelines
Development.  Volume 1, EPA No. 600/2-75-062a.   Available from the U.S.
EPA Office of Research & Development (RD-682),  Washington,  D.C.  20460.

     This technical report was designed for use in the development of
     management guidelines for water quality management planning and
     should be used in conjunction with local  expertise.  The scope of the
     report is limited and is based on  current  understanding.

Direct Environmental Factors at Municipal  Wastewater  Treatment Works.
Ernes Leffel.  U.S. EPA.  Available from MCD-20/6SA 8FFF, Centralized
Mailing List Services, Building 41, Denver Federal  Center,  Denver,
Colorado  80225.

     The purpose of this report is to provide the methodology and reference
     information to ensure that the design of wastewater treatment works
     provides for construction and operation compatible with the environ-
     ment.  Environmental  factors considered in the report  include odors,
     noise, aerosols, site planning, architecture,  lighting,  aesthetics,
     subsurface conditions, construction nuisances, and solid waste
     disposal and treatment during construction.

Land Development and Natural Environment:   Estimating  Impacts.   Dale  L.
Keyes.The Urban Land Institute.Available from the  Publications Office,
The Urban Land Institute,  2100 M Street, N.W.,  Washington,  D.C.  20037.
Order No. 1350.

     This report, one of a series, focuses on ways to  estimate the
     impacts of residential, commercial  and industrial development
     on the natural environment --primarily air quality,  water quality and
     quantity, noise, wildlife, and vegetation.  It also discusses
     potential hazards for land development from natural  disasters.
                                   32

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The intent is to provide elected officials, educated lay persons,
urban planners, and others concerned with the impacts of land
development with basic information on the state-of-the-art.
A complete discussion of each analytical technique is not
included.  Instead, a brief, simplified overview of basic
scientific principles related to each specific impact is pre-
sented, followed by a discussion of impact measures and alterna-
tive data analysis procedures.  References to original  and
additional reading are also given.

Measuring Impacts of Land Development:  An Initial Approach.   Phillip S.
Schaenmen and Thomas Muller.Available from The Urban  Land  Institute,
Publications Office, 2100 M Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.  20037.
Order No. 86000.

     This report is the first in a series on land use impact evaluation
     published by the Urban Land Institute and sponsored by  the U.S.
     Department of Housing and Urban Development.  A second  report  on
     fiscal impacts to the natural environment will be  available  in the
     near future.  Other reports will follow on such topics  as social
     impacts to the private economy.  This report is an overview.   It
     sets forth measures and procedures for assessing the impact  of land
     developments on economic, environmental, aesthetic, public and private
     service, housing and social concerns.  The report  concentrates on
     ways to develop comprehensive data on the expected impacts of
     development.

Fiscal Impacts of Land Development:  A Critique of Methods and Review of
Issues.  Thomas Muller.  Available from The Urban Land  Institute, 2100 M
Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.  20037.  Order No. 98000.

     This report, second in a series, discusses in greater detail the
     state-of-the-art in calculating the fiscal impact  of land develop-
     ments for local governments.  The applicability of various approaches
     is discussed and guidance is given to those sponsoring  or reviewing
     work in the fiscal impact area.  The author attempts to show the
     best of current practice while indicating some of  the gaps or  defects
     that require the special attention of analysts.

Manual for Preparation of Environmental Impact Statements for Wastewater
Treatment Works, Facilities Plans, and 208 Areawide Waste Treatment
Management Plans.U.S. EPA, 1974.Available upon request from U.S.  EPA
Office of Federal Activities (A-104), Washington, D.C.   20460.

     Provides the framework for preparing environmental impact statements
     (EIS's) when required on wastewater treatment works, facilities plans,
     or 208 areawide waste management plans.  Provides  certain minimum
     standards or completeness and consistency in those EIS's prepared by
     EPA in the above category.
                                   33

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Model Facility Plan for a Small Community — Supplement To:   Guidance for
Preparing a Facility FTan^September 1975.No.  MCD-08.Available rrom
the GSA Centralized Mailing Lists Services, Building 41, Denver Federal
Center, Denver, Colorado  80225.

     This model facility plan prepared in accordance with the Guidance for-
     Preparing a Facility Plan illustrates an acceptable plan for a waste-
     water treatment project for a small  community with elatively simple
     pollution problems.  It complies with EPA facility planning regulat-
     tions and examines alternatives for  effective and environmentally
     sound waste treatment works.  The problems addressed are typical of
     many small communities which do not  have an  infiltration/inflow
     problem; are located within effluent limitation segments; have few
     environmental constraints; and have  no industries.

First Joint USA/USSR Symposium on Physical/Chemical  Treatment from Municipal
and Industrial Sources.  November 1975,  EPA No.  600/9-75-004. Available
from the EPA Warehouse, Forms and Publications Center, Mail  Drop 41,
Research Triangle Park, N.C.  27711.  Order No. PDS 3163 and include EPA
number as well.

     The sixteen papers that were presented at the symposium in November
     1975, sponsored under the auspices of the Working Group on the
     Prevention of Water Pollution From Municipal  and Industrial Sources,
     are presented here in English.

Alternative Waste Management Techniques for Best  Practicable Waste
Treatment.  MDC-13.  Available from GSA Centralized Mailing  List Service,
Building 41, Denver Federal  Center, Denver, Colorado  80225.

     This document is intended to provide information pursuant to Section
     301(b)(2)(b) of the Federal Water Pollltion  Control Act Amendments
     of 1972 on the best practicable waste treatment technology criteria
     which must be met by all municipal wastewater treatment plants by
     July 1, 1983.

Model Plan of Study, Supplement To:  Guidance for Preparing  a Facility
Plan.  MCD-24.  Available from GSA Centralized Mailing Services, Building
41, Denver Federal Center, Denver, Colorado  80225.

     This document illustrates what should be contained in a plan of study
     (POS) submitted to EPA as a required part of an application for a
     Step 1 grant to develop a facility plan for  a wastewater treatment
     project.  This model  POS presents the level  of detail appropriate
     for a small  or medium-sized community.
                                  34

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Guidance for Preparing a Facility Plan.  May 1975.  MCD-46.   Available
from GSA Centralized Mailing List Services, Building 41,  Denver Federal
Center, Denver, Colorado  80225.

     This document provides essential guidance to municipalities,
     consulting engineers and others on how to prepare a  Step 1 facility
     plan -- one of the first major steps in the EPA construction  grants
     program for wastewater treatment facilities.  Discussed are methodol-
     ogies for preparing the plan, Federal requirements and  proper'content
     and format.

All You Need to Know About U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency Sewage
Treatment Construction Grants.  October 1976.  MCD-47.  Available  from
GSA Centralized Mailing List Services, Building 41, Denver Federal Center,
Denver, Colorado  80225.

     This pamphlet indicates how local governments can get their fair
     share of the Federal funds to build sewage treatment facilities.

Building for Clean Hater.  MCD-48.  Available from GSA Centralized Mailing
List Services, Building 41, Denver Federal Center, Denver, Colorado  80225.

     This booklet details the highlights of today's construction grant
     program, describes how it works, what it accomplishes,  and how it
     fits into the Nation's overall environmental control strategy.

Handbook of Procedures -- Construction Program for Municipal Wastewater
Treatment Works.February 1976.MCD-03.  Available from GSA Centralized
Mailing List Services, Building 41, Denver Federal Center, Denver,
Colorado  80225.

     Procedures employed by EPA personnel in reviewing construction grant
     plans and applications are set forth in detail.  Major requirements
     of the program are discussed.

How to Obtain Federal Grants to Build Municipal Wastewater Treatment Works.
May 1976.MCD-04.Available from GSA Centralized Mailing Lists Services,
Building 41, Denver Federal Center, Denver, Colorado  80225

     A concise description of basic objectives and requirements of the
     EPA construction grants programs.

Evaluation of Land Application Systems.  April 1976, MCD-07.  Available
from the GSA Centralized Mailing List Services, Building 41, Denver Federal
Center, Denver, Colorado  80225.

     This bulletin provides information and  program guidance to EPA
     Regional Offices for analyzing and evaluating municipal applications
     for Federal grants for the construction of publicly-owned treatment
     works using land-application methods.   It also provides information
     and assistance to other Federal  agencies, to  interstate organizations,
     to State water pollution control agencies, to the wastewater industry
     and to consultants and designers of  land-application methods.

                                  35

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Economic Incentives for Land Use Control.  Frederick H.  Rueter and Phillip
Kushner.February 19//.EPA No. 600/5-77-001.  Available from the U.S.
EPA Office of Air, Land and Water Use, RD/682, 401 M Street,  SW,
Washington, D.C.  20460.

     This report performs a theoretical economic analysis of the incentives
     embodied within a variety of existing and proposed  land use control
     technqiues and then employs this analytical framework to examine the
     social desirability of supplementing or replacing the existing body
     of land use control mechanisms with any of several  innovative policies
     for the regulation of the use of land.

Cost-Effective Comparison of Land Application and Advanced Wastewater
Treatment.  November 1975.  EPA No. 430/9-75-016.  MCD-17.  Available
from GSA Centralized Mailing List Services,  Building 41, Denver, Federal
Center, Denver, Colorado  80225

     The objectives of this report are to illustrate the sensitivity of
     land application system costs to variations in major design factors
     and to compare these costs with those for conventional  advanced
     wastewater treatment systems.

Urban Runoff Pollution Control Technology Overview.  September 1976.
Richard Field, Anthony Tafuri  and Hugh Masters.Available from the U.S.
EPA Office of Research & Development, Municipal Environmental  Research
Laboratory, Cincinnati, Ohio  45268.

     Over the past decade, much research effort has been expended and
     a large amount of data has been generated, primarily through the
     actions and support of the EPA's Storm  and Combined Sewer Research
     and Development Program.   As presented  here, the products of the
     Program will  be divided into the following areas:   problem definition,
     user assistance tools (instrumentation, computers), land  management,
     collection system control, storage, treatment, sludge and solids,
     integrated systems, and technical  assistance and technology transfer.

Model  State Water  Monitoring Program.  National Water Monitoring Panel,
June 1975.  EPA No.  440/9-74-022.   Available  from the EPA Monitoring and
Data Support Division (WH-553).

     Developed by  a panel  of Federal  and State professionals  actively
     engaged in managing and operating monitoring programs.   It is
     presented to  others in monitoring and the field of  water  pollution
     control  in order to:
          provide  some basis to the States for building  and  operating
          water monitoring programs;
          illustrate the various  typs of monitoring activities, their
          costs and their uses; and
          suggest  to EPA Regions  and States  how they can best  use
          monitoring resources in carrying out their responsibilities
          in pollution control and abatement.


                                   36

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Federal Guidelines:  State and Local Pretreatment Programs.   3 Volumes.
EPA No. 430/9-76-017a, b, c.  January 1977.  U.S. EPA.  Available from
GSA Centalized Mailing List Services, Building 41, Denver Federal  Center,
Denver, Colorado  80225.

     These guidelines were developed by EPA in accordance with Section
     304(f) of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of
     1972 for the purpose of assisting States and municipalities in
     carrying out programs under Section 402 including NPDES permit
     requirements.

Residential Storm Hater Management:  Objectives, Principles  and Design
Considerations.  Urban Land Institute, American Society of Civil Engineers
and the National Association of Homebuilders, 1975.  Available from the
Urban Land Institute, 1200 18th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.  20036.

     This report evolved from an assessment of current practices to a
     guide toward a more creative and thoughtful approach to storm water
     runoff management.  While not rejecting past practice,  it clearly
     identifies and articulates a new underlying philosphy and approach
     which diverges significantly from the past.

Cleaning Up Europe's Waters:  Economics, Management and Policies.   Ralph
M. Johnson and Gardner M. Brown, Jr.New York:Praeger.1976.

     The authors examine the implementation of comprehensive water quality
     management concepts in Europe, specifically in France,  the Netherlands,
     West Germany, Hungary, Sweden and England.  The experience of regional
     water quality management in several of these countries  is evaluated.

Ecological Modeling in a Resource Management Framework.  Clifford S.
Russel, ed.  Available from the John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore
Maryland  21218.  RfF Working Paper.  1975.

     A group of papers analyzing progress in the field of ecological
     modeling with specific regional water quality management applications.

Environmental Improvement Through Economic Incentives.  Frederick
Anderson, Allen V. Kneese, Serge Taylor, Phillip Reed, and Russell
Stevenson.  Baltimore:  John Hopkins University Press, 1978.

     Addresses the economic, technical, legal and political  aspects of
     monetary charges as a means of achieving environmental  improvement.
     The contents include:  An Economic Rationale for Charges, a Survey
     of Charge Applications, Structuring a Charge System—the Monitoring
     Problem, the Law of Charges, and the Politics of Charges.
                                  37

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The Governance of Common Property Resources.   Edwin T.  Haefele,  ed.,
Baltimore:  John Hopkins University Press, 1975.

     Contributors explore the decision-making processes that surround
     environmental issues and attempt to provide  realistic models for
     making policy decisions.

Environmental Quality Management/An Application to the  Lower Delaware
Valley.  Walter  0. Spofford, Jr., Clifford S.  Russell  and Robert A.
Kelly.  RfF Research Paper R-l, 1977.  Available  from the John Hopkins
University Press.  Baltimore, Maryland  21218.

     A detailed presentation of a pioneering  effort in  quantitative
     analysis of regional residuals-environmental  quality management.
     Four points distinguish this report:   1) it  is one of the very few
     quantitive analyses of integrated residuals  management with a manage-
     ment orientation; 2) it represents an innovative effort to explore
     the problems of incorporating a nonlinear  aquatic  ecosystem model
     explicitly within the framework of an optimization analysis for
     management decisions; 3) the research has  already  had substantial
     influence on both research and management  decisions in various parts
     of the world; and 4) the research represents the importance and  use-
     fulness of, and payoffs from, interaction  between  management plans for
     particular regions.  The research was completed between 1972 and 1975.

Incentives for Managing the Environment.  Blair T. Bower, Charles N.  Ehler
and Allen V. Kneese.  In Environmental Science  &  Technology, Vol. II,
No. 3, March 1977.  pp. 250-254.

     A brief, systematic description of the role  of incentives in environ-
     mental quality management strategies  are developed.

Integrated Residuals Management:  A Regional  Environmental Quality Manage-
ment ModeTiWalter 0. Spofford, Jr.In Models for Environmental Pollution
Control TRolf A. Deininger, Editor), 1976.  Available from Resources  for
the Future, 1755 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.,  Washington, D.C.  20036,
as reprint No. 130.

     A brief description of the RfF Lower  Delaware Valley regional
     residuals management model.
A Linear Programming Model  of Residuals Management for Integrated Iron
and Steel Production.Clifford S. Russell  and William J.  Vaughan.Jo
Journal
Enviromental Economics and Management.   Vol.  1,  1974,  pp.  17-42.
Available from Resources for the Future, 1755 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.,
Washington, D.C.  20036, as reprint No.  114.

     The paper briefly describes a linear model  designed to allow the
     exploration of questions surrounding the management of the environ-
     mental impacts of the integrated iron and steel  facilities.   In
                                   38

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     particular, the model can show how plant discharges,  with such vari-
     ables as product mix, steel-furnace type, casting technology,  and  the
     scrap-ore price ratio.  In addition, the costs implied by placing
     restrictions on discharges of specific residuals (e.g., BOD,  oil,
     suspended solids, particulates) may be estimated or response  to
     proposed effluent charges may be predicted.   Models of this type can
     play a significant role as components of larger regional  analyses.

Regional Residuals-Environmental Quality  Management Modeling.  Blair T.
Bower, ed.  RfF Research Paper R-7.  Baltimore:   John Hopkins University'
Press, 1976.

     The proceedings of a joint WHO-RfF conference held in Rotterdam in
     1974 on modeling for regional residuals-environmental quality
     management (RREOM) from the standpoint of generating  information
     needed for management decisions.  Papers outline the  basic concepts
     of RREQM and present case studies, applying the concepts, in  the
     Lower Delaware Valley, the Upper Colorado River Basin, Ljubljana
     (Yugoslavia), and Ostrava (Czechoslovakia).

"Regional Residuals-Environmental Quality Management Models:  Applications
to EPA's Regional Management Programs."  Walter 0. Spofford and Charles N.
Ehler.  In Environmental Modeling and Simulation (Wayne R. Ott, Editor).
Washington, U.S. EPA, 1976.pp. 407-413

     The use of quantitative, comprehensive regional environmental  quality
     model—the RfF Lower Delaware Valley model —in the context of EPA's
     regional programs, such as 208 and Air Quality Maintenance, is
     examined.  The generation of data on the interrelationships of the
     three forms of pollutants—gaseous, solid and liquid—and the three
     environmental media—air, land, and water—as well as the associated
     management costs of alternative strategies are highlighted.

"Residuals-Environmental Quality Management:  The Role of Regional
Modeling."  Blair T. Bower and Samuel P. Mauch.   Journal of Environmental
Management.  No. 4, 1976.  pp 275-292.  Available from Resources for the
Future, 1755 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C.   20036,  as
reprint No. 132.

     The paper describes planning and analysis as but one of five  links
     in a chain composing the total Regional Environmental Quality Manage-
     ment process of problem perception, analysis, legislation/regulation,
     implementation/enforcement/monitoring and feedback.  Criteria for
     the design of regional REQM modeling efforts are developed with
     emphasis on the sensitivity of the data and submodels used, relative
     to the strategies developed.
                                  39

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Steel  Production:   Processes}  Products and Residuals.   Clifford S.  Russell
and William J. Vaughn.Baltimore:John Hopkins University Press.   1976.

     Addresses the problems of determining the implications of different
     environmental standards and public policies by investigating their
     effect on industrial  costs and resource use within a  linear-
     programming framework.  Models of this type can play  a significant
     role as components of larger regional  analyses.

"Studies of Residuals Management in Industry."  Blair T. Bower.  Economic.
Analysis of Environmental  Problems.  (Edwin S. Mills,  Editor).  New York:
Columbia University Press, 1975.  pp 275-324.

     The basic concepts of RfF's approach to analyzing the industrial
     response to water quality regulations, and other forms of incentive
     are presented.  An overview of studies of the beet sugar, pulp and
     paper, petroleum refining, steel, steel  scrap, and coal-electric
     energy industries is  given.  The utility of these models in connection
     with analyses of regional  environmental  quality management (like  208)
     is discussed.

Water Quality Assessment - A Screening Method for Nondesignated 208 Areas.
EPA 600/9-77-023.August  1977.Available from U.S. EPA Environmental
Research Laboratory., Athens, Georgia  30605.

     This manual presents  a methodology for the preliminary screening  of
     surface water quality applicable for use by nondesignated 208  planning
     agencies. The major emphasis is on procedures and methodologies for
     the assessment on nonurban pollutant loads and their  impacts of
     receiving waters.   The analyses are designed to be performed with, at
     most, the assistance  of a desk top calculator and with a minimal
     amount of data input.

Evaluation of Land Application Systems.  Technical  Bulletin, EPA
430/9-75-001.U.S. EPA, March 1975.Available from Environmental  Research
Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.

     Procedures are set forth  to assist EPA personnel  in evaluating
     treatment systems  that employ land application of municipal  wastewater.
     In addition,  information  is provided which may be of  value to  State,
     local  and other Federal agencies.  Consists of an Evaluation Checklist,
     parallel background information and is divided into three major parts
     dealing with:  (1) facilities plans; (2)  design plans and specifica-
     tions; (3) operation  and  maintenance manuals.

Effluent Guidelines and Development Documents.  U.S. EPA.   Available from
Effluent Guidelines Division (WH-552), U.S. EPA.

     The Effluent  Guidelines Division of the Office of Water and Waste
     Management, EPA, has  published effluent guidelines for existing
     industrial sources, and standards of performance and  pretreatment
                                 40

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     for new industrial sources.  Effluent limitation guidelines  and
     standards have been published for each of a number of different
     industrial categories.  In addition, for each industrial  category
     development documents have been published which contain supportive
     data and rationales for the development of the applicable effluent
     limitation guidelines and performance standard.

Loading Functions for Assessment of Water Pollution From Nonpoint Sources.
U.S. EPA Office of Air, Land and Water Use.EPA 600/2-76-151.May 1976.

     Analyzes the development of nonpoint pollution loading functions
     for significant sources and pollutants.  Presents loading functions
     together with methodologies for their use, provides data, references
     to other data, and suggests approaches for generations of data when
     available data is inadequate.  445 pages.

Water Cleanup and the Land:  Securing Full Value on the Public's  Investment
in Water Pollution ControTIU.S. EPA Office of Land Use Cooridnation
(A-101)

     To dramatize the land-use impacts of the Federal clean water programs
     and the recreational opportunities now unfolding as a result of a
     conference entitled "Water Cleanup and the Land:  Securing Full
     Value on the Public's Investment in Water Pollution Control" held
     in Boston, November 1975.  The conference was sponsored by the U.S.
     EPA, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of the Interior and the
     Conservation Foundation of Washington, D.C.  Out of the conference came
     a number of recommendations for action, which are summarized in this
     booklet.

Conservation Districts and Nonpoint Pollution Control.  October 1975.
National Association of Conservation Districts.  Available from NACD
Service Department, P.O. Box 855, League City, Texas  77573.

     The role of conservation districts in 208 planning and implementation
     is examined.  Suggestions are given as to how Conservation Districts
     might become more involved.

Erosion and Sediment Control Handbook.  EPA No. 440/3-78-003.   May 1978.
Available from Director, California Department of Conservation, Sacramento,
California  95814.
                                 41

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APPENDICES
        42

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MAY  1978
VOLUME 1
208    DATA
vvEPA
CLfANNGHOUSE
         Director Announces
           Clearinghouse
             By Merna Kurd
      Director, Water Planning Division
      Local 208 agencies are now experienc-
  ing many of the same types of obstacles to
  plan completion and implementation.  The
  solutions found by one agency may fre-
  quently aid another.

      208 Data Clearinghouse lets you know
  what other local agencies have experienced.
  Their technical reports may contain solu-
  tions applicable to your local problems.

      208 Data Clearinghouse contains ab-
  stracts of technical documents issued by
  local 208 agencies. The abstracts also
  tell you where to obtain a copy of a report
  you desire.

      When you produce a Water Quality Man-
  agement technical report from which other
  agencies may benefit, please send a copy
  of its bibliography and a short indication
  of its contents to:

      Kim Smith
      208 Data Clearinghouse
      U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
      401 M Street, S.W., (WH-554)
      Washington, D.C. 20460

      Your contributions may save other
  agencies much time and frustration.
                         1. AGRICULTURAL NONPOINT SOURCES

                         1.1.1. "Agricultural BMP Report," Balti-
                             more Regional Planning Council.
                         1.1.2. "Summary of 1976 Agricultural In-
                             ventory," Northeastern Illinois
                             Planning Commission, June, 1977.
                         1.1.3. "Agricultural Pollution Sources,"
                             Greater Egypt Regional Planning
                             and Development Commission, March,
                             1978, 36 pages.
                         1.1.4. "Agriculture Land Use," Blue Rib-
                             bons of the Big Sky County Areawide
                             Planning Organization.
                         1.1.5. "Agriculture Study," Blue Ribbons
                             of the Big Sky County Areawide
                             Planning Organization.
                         1.1.6. "Compilation of Information Per-
                             taining to Pollutants in Runoff
                             from Agricultural Land," South-
                             eastern Council of Governments,
                             October, 1977, 99 pages, $3.00.
                         1.1.7. "Farm Water Quality Management
                             Manual," Snohotnish County Planning
                             Department, September, 1977, 57
                             pages.
         Yours Sincerely,
         Merna Hurd
                         -TOPICS
                      Water Planning Division Director
                         Announces the 208 Data Clearinghouse.

                      Outline of Reports on:

                         1. Agricultural Nonpoint Sources;
                         2. Institutional Assessment;
                         3. Inventory.and Sampling;
                         4. Land Use;
                         5. Lakes.

                      How to Use the 208 Data Clearinghouse.

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1.1.8. "A Method for Assessing Rural Non-
       Point Sources and It's Application
       in Control and Management," Ohio-
       Kentucky-Indiana Regional Council
       of Governments, September , 1975 ,
       66 pages.  Topics include: esti-
       mates of the quantity ar
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 1.2.11.  "Legal-Institutional Arrangements
         for Areawide Waste Treatment
         Management Planning," Southern
         Kennebec Valley Regional Planning
         Commission, March, 1976.
 1.2.12.  "Management Alternatives Includ-
         ing Institutional Arrangements,
         Financial Alternatives, and Re-
         quired Authority," Coastal Bend
         Council of Governments, Septem-
         ber, 1977, 160 pages.
 1.2.13.  "Management of Public Wastewater
         Treatment Plants," Indiana Heart-
         land Coordinating Commission,
         November, 1976, 74 pages.
 1.2.14.  "The Relationship Between 201
         Facilities Planning and the 208
         Areawide Wastewater Treatment
         Program," Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana
         Regional Council of Governments,
         September, 1975.
 1.2.15.  "Special Report #2," Snohomish
         County Planning Department, May,
         1977, 25 pages.
 1.2.16.  "Technical Memorandum:  Water
         Quality Districts," Baltimore
         Regional Planning Council.
 1.2.17.  "Water Supply and Conveyance
         Facilities," East Central Michi-
         gan Planning and Development
         Region, March, 1977,'61 pages.
3.  INVENTORY AND SAMPLING

1.3.1.  "Areas, Places,  and Boundaries,"
       West Michigan Shoreline Regional
       Development Commission, September,
       1977, 52 pages
1.3.2.  "Assessment of Groundwater Qual-
       ity," West Michigan Shoreline
       Regional Development Commission,
       December, 1977,  139 pages.
1.3.3.  "Assessment of Hydrological and
       Ambient Quality  of Region's Major
       Streams," Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana
       Regional Council of Governments,
       October, 1975.
1.3.4.  "Biological Survey of the Des
       Plains River," Northeastern
       Illinois Planning Commission,
       September,  1976.
1.3.5.  "Environmental Assessment,"
       Greater Egypt Regional Planning
       and Development Commission, April,
       1978.   Topics Include:  Strategy
       of the national plan; construction
       needs.
1.3.6.  "Environmental Impact Assessment,"
       Snohoinish County  Planning Depart-
       ment,  November, 1977, 117 pages.
1.3.7.  "Estimate of Wasteloads and Flows,"
       West Michigan Shoreline Regional
       Development Commission, August,
       1977,  98 pages.
1.3.8.  "Existing Water Quality Data and
       Standards,"Southeastern Council of
       Governments, May, 1977, 258 pages,
       $10.00.
1.3.9.  "Identification of Existing Water
       Quality Problem Areas," Coastal
       Bend Council of Governments,
       January, 1977, 55 pages.
1.3.10. "Illinois  EPA Water  Quality
        Sampling Stations in Northeastern
        Illinois," Northeastern Illinois
        Planning Commission, November,
        1976.
1.3.11. "Inventory and Analysis of Avail-
        able  Point Source Information,"
        Southeastern Council of Govern-
        ments, February, 1977, 108 pages,
        $5.00.
1.3.12. "Inventory and Data  Collection,"
        Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana Regional
        Council of Governments,  Septem-
        ber,  1975.


1.3.13. "Inventory and Available Point
        Source  Information," South-
        eastern Council of Governments,
        May,   1977, 63 pages, $3.00.
1.3.14. "Inventory of Conditions Affec-
        ting  Nonpoint Source Pollution,"
        Chariton Valley Regional Services
        Agency.
1.3.15. "Inventory of Methods and Non-
        point Conditions in the Chariton
        Valley," Chariton Valley Regional
        Services Agency.

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1.3.16. "Land Use Inventory by Drainage
        Area," Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana Re-
        gional Council of Governments,
        August, 1975.
1.3.17.  "Monitoring  and  Sampling of Non-
         point  Sources, and Development of
         Water  Quality Surveillance Plan,"
         Southeastern Council of Govern-
         ments, November, 1977, 32 pages,
         $1.00.
1.3.18.  "Point Sources," Greater Egypt
         Regional Planning and Develop-
         ment Commission, March, 1978.
         Topics include:  Compilation  of
         impacts of point sources in the
         planning area.
1.3.19.  "Report to Indiana Stream Pol-
         lution Control Board Water Qual-
         ity Task Force," February, 1978,
         52  pages.  Topics include: Class-
         ification of streams.
1.3.20.  "Selected Illinois EPA Water
         Quality Data," Northeastern
         Illinois Planning Commission,
         March, 1977.
1.3.21.  "Soico-Economic  Inventory and
         Projections," East Central
         Michigan Planning and Develop-
         ment Region, February, 1977,
         246 pages.
1.3.22.  "Stream Reach Inventory," Blue
         Ribbons of the Big Sky Country
         Areawide Planning Organization
1.3.23.  "Test  Watershed  Monitoring and
         Sampling Program," Fox Valley
         Water  Quality Planning Agency,
         February, 1978,  300 pages.
         Topics include:  Study of 2 rural
         nonfann; 2 agricultural and 5
         urban  test watersheds.

1.3.24. "Water Clarity Investigation,"
        Fox Valley Water  Quality  Planning
        Agency, April,  1977,  30 pages.
        Topics include:   Results  of
        public participation,
1.3.25. "The Water Quality  of  Bear Creek
        and the Middle Rogue  River Basin,"
        Rogue Valley  Council  of Govern-
        ments,  September, 1976, 125  pages.
        Topics include:   Water Quality
        assessment  and  monitoring.
1.3.26. "1976 Water Quality Data of Bear
        Creek Basin, Medford, Oregon,"
        Rogue Valley Council of Govern-
        ments, January, 1977, 180 pages.
1.3.27. "Water Quality Investigation in
        Rendt Lake and Cedar Lake,"
        Greater Egypt Regional Planning
        and Development Commission,
        March, 1978, 180 pages.
1.3.28. "Water Quality Modelling Pro-
        gram," Indiana Heartland Coordi-
        nating Commission, June, 1976,
        43 pages.  Topics include:
        Sampling.
1.3.29. "Water Quality Report," Indiana
        Heartland Coordinating Commission,
        July, 1977, 197 pages.  Topics
        include:  Modeling and Sampling.
1.3.30. "Water Quality Sampling,"
        Snohomish County Planning Depart-
        ment, November, 1977, 171 pages.
1.3.31. "Water Quality Sampling and
        Analysis in the 208 Program,"
        Northeastern Illinois Planning
        Commission, January, 1977.
4. LAMP USE

1.4.1. "Agricultural Land Use," Blue
       Ribbons of the Big Sky Country
       Areawide Planning Organization.
1.4.2. "The Effects of Land Use Practices
       on Trout Populations in Rocky
       Creek, Montana," Blue Ribbons of
       the Big Sky Country Areawide
       Planning Organization.
1.4.3. "Estimates of Land Cover and Use,"
       West Michigan Shoreline Regional
       Development Commission, April,
       1977, 69 pages.
1.4.4. "Existing and Projected Population,
       Land Use and Employment," Coastal
       Bend Council of Governments, No-
       vember, 1976, 67 pages.

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1.4.5. "Future Land Use Plan, Chariton
       Valley Region, Iowa," Chariton
       Valley Regional Services Agency.
1.4.6. "Lakeshed Study Areas - Detailed
       Studies of Land Use - Water Qual-
       ity Relationships in the Southern
       Kennebec Region," Southern Kenne-
       bec Valley Regional Planning
       Commission, April, 1977.
1.4.7- "Land Capabilities," Blue Ribbons
       of the Big Sky Country Areawide
       Planning Organization.
1.4.8. "Land Capability, Chariton Valley
       Region," Chariton Valley Regional
       Services Agency.
1.4.9. "Land Use Evaluation Areas,"
       Southern Kennebec Valley Regional
       Planning Commission, February,
       1976.
1.4.10. "land Use Inventory by Drainage
        Area," Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana
        Regional Council of Governments,
        August, 1975.
1.4.11. "Land Use Regulatory Control
        System," Baltimore Regional
        Planning Council.
1.4.12. "Land Use Report," Greater Egypt
        Regional Planning and Develop-
        ment Commission, April, 1978.
1.4.13. "Land Use Trends and Projections,"
        Southern Kennebec Valley Regional
        Planning Commission, March, 1976.
1.4.14. "Nonpoint Source Pollution from
        Land Use Activities," North-
        eastern Illinois Planning
        Commission, August, 1977.
1.4.15. "Preliminary Land Use Con-
        straints," Southern Kennebec
        Valley Regional Planning
        Commission, June, 1976.
1.4.16. "Recommended Land-Use Plan,"
        Chariton Valley Regional Services
        Agency.
1.4.17. "Special Interim Report," Snoho-
        mish County Planning Department,
        May, 1977, 25 pages.  Topics
        include:  Population and employ-
        ment, land use, waste load pro-
        lections.
1.4.18. "Technical Appendix:   Aroostook-
        Prostile Water Quality Plan,"
        Northern Maine Regional Planning
        Commission, July, 1977, 98 pages.
        Topics:   Historical Tend of Land
        Use.
1.4.19. "Water Quality - Land Use Rela-
        tionships," Northeastern Illinois
        Planning Conraission,  May    1976.
5. LAKES

1.5.1. "Future Lake and Stream Quality
       to 1998," West Michigan Shore-
       line Regional Development
       Commission,  July,  1977, 194
       pages.
1.5.2. "Hebgen Lake Studies," Blue
       Ribbons of the Big Sky Country
       Areawide Planning  Organization,
1.5.3. "Lake Michigan Water Quality
       Trends and Monitoring Programs,"
       Northeastern Illinois Planning
       Commission,  December, 1976.
1.5.4. "Lakeshed Study Areas," Southern
       Kennebec Valley Regional Planning
       Commission,  April, 1977.
1.5.5. "Nonpoint Sources  of Pollution
       to Lakes," Southern Kennebec
       Valley Regional Planning Com-
       mission, April, 1977.
1.5.6. "Phosphorus Release from Sedi-
       ments," Fox Valley Water Quality
       Planning Agency, December, 1977,
       30 pages, Topics include:
       Analysis of core samples of bottom
       sediments to discover phosphorus
       release.
1.5.7. "Public Health Studies in Winne-
       bego Pool Lakes,"  Fox Valley
       Water Quality Planning Agency,
       December, 1978, 60 pages.  Topics
       include:  Septic Tanks.
1.5.8. "Technical Supplement to Lake and
       Stream Quality Study," West
       Michigan Shoreline Regional De-
       velopment Commission, September,
       1977, 138 pages.

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1.5.9. "Trophic Status of Lake Winnebego
       Pool," Fox Valley Water Quality
       Planning Agency, June, 1978, 50
       pages.
1.5.10. "Trophic Study of Lower Green
        Bay," Fox Valley Water Quality
        Planning Agency, June, 1978,
        50 pages.
1.5.11. "Water Quality Investigation in
        Rendt Lake and Cedar Lake,"
        Greater Egypt Regional Planning
        and Development Commission,
        March, 1978, 180 pages.
1.5.12. "Water Quality Problems of In-
        and Lakes," Northeastern
        Illinois Planning Commission,
        August, 1976.
HOW TO USE THE 208 DATA CLEARINGHOUSE

     Use the 208 Data Clearinghouse  to
access WC# information already avail-
able.  It's far less expensive and time
consuming than generating the informa-
tion yourself.

     It's simple.  Write or telephone
the agency that authored the report  you
want.  They will inform you of any costs
associated with sending the report to
you.

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                    United States
                    Environmental Protection
                    Agency
                     August 1978
                     Volume!.
xvEPA       208 Data
                    Clearinghouse
      Thanks  to all of the  agencies and
  regional offices who have  submitted ab-
  stracts for  this edition of  the "208 Data
  Clearinghouse," for only your help and
  cooperation  can make information sharing
  possible.

      If you  find an abstract of interest,
  please contact the agency  listed.  You can
  make arrangements with them  to acquire the
  document.

      This is also a reminder to all those
  who have not yet responded to the phone
  requests for abstracts to  please vsend them
  to:

      208 Data Clearinghouse
      EPA Water Planning Division (WH-554)
      401 M Street, S.W.
      Washington, D.C.  20460
       Included this month:

       VII.   Capitalization/Financing
       VIII.  General Nonpoint Sources
       IX.    Groundwater
       X.     Legal
       XI.    Modeling
       XII.   Sedimentation and Erosion
       XIII.  Sewers
       XIV.   Socio-Economic Impact
       XV.    Urban Runoff
       XVI.   Draft and Final  Plans
VII.  CAPITALIZATION/FINANCING

2.7.1.  "Alternative Financial Subarea
       Plans," First Tennessee-Virginia
       Development District,  June, 1977,
       20 pages.
2.7.2.  "Analysis  of Initial Financial
       Alternatives," First Tennessee-
       Virginia Development District,
       June, 1977, 15 pages.
2.7.3.  "Analysis  of Tax/Cost Impact of
       Alternative Areawide and  Subarea
       Management and Financial  Structure,
       First Tennessee-Virginia  Develop-
       ment District, January, 1978, 39
       pages.
2.7.4.  "Application of the Call-Three
       Model to the Lower Fox River to
       Simulate Wasteload Allocations,"
       Fox Valley WQ Planning Agency,
       February,  1977, 300 pages.
2.7.5.  "Assessment of Institutional and
       Financial  Arrangements for WQ
       Management," Baltimore Regional
       Planning Council.
2./.6.  "Concepts  for User Charge and In-
       dustrial Cost Recovery System,"
       Indian Nations COG, April, 1978.
2.7.7.  "Cost Effectiveness Evaluations of
       Point and  Nonpoint Source Control
       Needs," East Central Florida
       Regional Planning Council.

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2.7.8. "Cost and Effectiveness of Non-
       Structural Management Practices
       for Reduction of Pollution from
       Nonpoint Sources," S. Alabama RFC,
       May, 1977.
2.7.9. "Cost and Financial Analysis/Stra-
       tegy, " Erie and Niagara Counties
       RPB, February, 1978 227 pages.
2.7.10.  "Cost Functions for Wastewater
         Management Options," Indian
         Nations COG, January, 1978.
2.7.11.  "Costs for Applying Recommended
         Management Practices on Agricul-
         tural Land," Southeast Michigan
         Council of Governments, April,
         1978, 55 pages.
2.7.12.  "Detailed Discussion of Cost
         Comparisons Memorandum," Wash-
         ington COG, March. 1978.

2.7.13. "Documentation of Cost  Estimating
        Procedures for Physical Wastewater
        Management Alternatives,"  Indian
        Nations COG,  March,  1978
2.7.14. "Energy Impacts of Wastewater
        Treatment in Metropolitan  Wash-
        ington," Washington COG, February,
        1978.
2.7.15. "An Evaluation of the Distribu-
        tion of Costs and Benefits in
        Areawide Waste Treatment Manage-
        ment," Southern Maine Regional
        Planning Commission,  December,
        1975.
2.7.16. "Existing Financial Structures
        for Wastewater Treatment," First
        Tennessee-Virginia Development
        District,  December,  1976,  53 pgs.
2.7.17. "Financial Analysis," Indian
        Nations COG,  April,  1978.
2.7.18. "Financial Aspects of Water Quality
        Management," Indiana Heartland
        Coordinating Commission, August
        26, 1977,  54 pages.
2.7.19. "Financial Impact of Expenditures
        for Improved Wastewater Treatment
        on Major Dischargers on the Lower
        Fox River," Fox Valley WQ  Ping.
2.7.20. "Financial & Management Practices
        In Selected Sewer Systems of
        Southwest Florida," S.W. Florida
        RPC, April, 1977.
2.7.21. "Financial Requirements of Manage-
        ment Agencies, User Charges and
        Industrial Cost Recovery," S.
        Alabama RPC, December, 1976.
2.7.22. "Financial Strategies for Areawide
        Water Resources Management in  the
        Metropolitan Washington Area,"
        Washington COG, December, 1977.
2.7.23. "Financial Wastewater Treatment
        in Cherry Valley and Leicester
        Center," Central Mass. RPC, Feb.
        1977.
2.7.24. "Financing Wastewater Treatment
        in the Oxford-Rochdale Sewer
        District," Central Mass. RPC,
        December, 1976.
2.7.25. "Fiscal Alternatives for Waste-
        water Management," Southeastern
        Regional Planning and Economic
        Development Commission, March,
        1977, 17 pages.
2.7.26. "Governmental Assistance tor
        Financing Pollution Control
        Systems and 208 Management,"
        Boston MAPC, January, 1977.
2.7.27. "Identification and Description
        of Existing Regulatory Authority
        in the State of Delaware Relating
        to Water Quality Control and
        Fiscal Management," Coastal Sussex
        Water Quality Program, December,
        1977.
2.7.28. "Identifying Constraints and
        Deficiencies in Existing Manage-
        ment and Fiscal Programs," Coastal
        Sussex Water Quality Program,
        August, 1977.
2.7.29. "Industrial Cost Recovery  in New
        Castle County, Delaware,"  New
        Castle County 208, June. 1977.

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2.7.30. "Initial Financial Alternatives,"
        First Tennessee-Virginia Develop-
        ment District, January, 1977, 21
        pages.
2.7.31. "Inventory of Existing Water Qual-
        ity Management and Fiscal Program,"
        Coastal Sussex Water Quality Pro-
        gram, July, 1977.
2.7.32. "Legal, Institutional, Financial
        Arrangements," Berkshire County
        RFC, November, 1976.
2.7.33. "Management Alternatives Including
        Institutional Arrangements, Finan-
        cial Alternatives and Required
        Authority," Coastal Bend COG, Sep-
        tember, 1977, 160 pages.
2.7.34. "Management Subplans," Lower Rio
        Grand Valley Regional Development
        Commission.
2.7.35. "Methodology to  Assess the  Impact
        of  Increased Wastewater Treatment
        Charges on Households," Indiana
        Heartland Coordinating Commission,
        January 17, 1978, 24 pages.
2.7.36. "Nonsewered Areas Wastewater Dis-
        posal Systems,"  Southern Kennebec
        Valley RPC, January, 1977,  155
        pages.
2.7.37. "Plan Needs and  Scheduling  of
        Capital Sources," Greater  Egypt
        Regional Planning and Development
        Commission, April,  1978.
2.7.38. "Projected Costs of Recommended
        Improvements to  Wastewater  Systems
        for Incorporated Municipalities,"
        SECOG, May, 1977, 7 pages.

 2.7.39.  "Recommended  Financial Structure,"
         First Tennessee-Virginia Develop-
         ment District,  April,  1978, 13
         pages.
 2.7.40.  "Report  on Financial Analysis of
         County Wastewater Collection
         Systems," New Castle County 208,
         December,  1975.
 2.7.41.  "Review of Existing Financial and
         Regulatory Arrangements," Missi-
         ssippi-Arkansas-Tennessee COG
        Memphis Delta Developmental Dis-
        trict,  February,  1977.
2.7.42.  "Section 7 - Federal Funding for
        Water Quality Management," Re-
        gional Planning Council.
2.7.43.  "Small Areas Forecast:  Policies,
        Forecasts, and Evaluation."
        Southeast Michigan Council of
        Government,  March, 1978, 182
        pages.
2.7.44.  "The S.W. Florida Economy.  A
        Survey of the Region,"  S.W.
        Florida RPC.
2.7.45.  "Summary Cost Estimates,"  Indian
        Nations COG, February,  1978.
2.7.46.  "Summary of  Most  Cost-Effective
        Wastewater Management Alterna-
        tives," Indian Nations  COG, March,
        1978.
2.7.47.  "Technical Handbook: User  Charge
        and Industrial Cost Recovery Re-
        quirements," Baltimore  Regional
        Planning Council.
2.7.48.  "Technical Subplan," Lower Rio
        Grande Valley Regional  Development
        Commission.
2.7.49.  "User Charge Handbook," Indiana
        Heartland Coordinating  Commission,
        February 15, 1977, 9 pages.
2.7.50.  "User Charge and Industrial Cost
        Recovery Information,"  East Central
        Florida Regional Planning  Council.
2.7.51.  "User Charge/Industrial Coat Re-
        covery -  A Case Study," New Caatle
        County 208,  August, 1977.
2.7.52.  "User Charge and Industrial Cost
        Recovery Systems, Phase II Fiscal
        Analysis - Interim Report," New
        Castle County 208, June, 1976.
2.7.53.  "Wastewater Treatment Processes
        and Cost Estimating Date," North-
        eastern Illinois Planning Com-
        mission, April, 1977.

2.7.54. "Water Treatment  Costs,"  Southern
        Maine Regional Planning Commission,
        June, 1976.

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        "Working Paper III: Preliminary
        Draft - Fiscal Analysis Back-
        ground," New Castle County 208,
        February, 1975.
VIII.  GENERAL NONPOINT SOURCES

2.8.1. "Areawide Planning Advisory
       Committee Briefing - Pittsfield,"
       Berkshire County RFC, May,  1976.
2.8.2. "Assessment of Non-point Source
       Pollution for the INCOG 208 Study
       Area," Indian Nations COG,  Feb-
       ruary, 1978.
2.8.3. "Best Management Practices  for
       Non-point Sources," S. Alabama
       RFC, July, 1977.
2.8.4. "Best Management Practices  for Non-
       Point Source Pollution Reduction in
       Waters of Summit, Wasatch and Utah
       Counties," July, 1976.
2.8.5. "Best Management Practices  for Non-
       Point Source Water Pollution in
       Utah," Mountainland Association of
       Governments, April,  1977.
2.8.6. "Compendium: Non-Point Source Con-
       trol Measures," Phoenix Urban
       Study, February, 1977.
2.3.7. "Control of Water Pollution From
       Non-point Sources," Lakes Region
       Planning Commission,  August, 1977.
2.8.8. "Critical Non-Point Source  Pollution
       Areas," Central Mass. RFC,  February,
       1977.
2.8.9. "Cropland Sedimentation in  South-
       east Michigan:  Methodology  for Iden-
       tifying Potential Problem Areas,"
       Southeast Michigan Council  of COG
       Governments, March,  1978, 72 pages.
2.8.10. "Current Agricultural Practices
        Inventory and Review - Non-Metro
        Area (Working Paper)," Maricopa
        Association of Governments 208
        Program, October, 1977.
2.8.11.  "Definition of Subwatershed Moni-
        toring Program," First Tennessee-
        Virginia Development District,
        September, 1977, 22 pages.

2.8.12. "Evaluation of  Continuous Non-
        Point Sources in the Planning
        Area," New Castle County  208,
        December, 1975.
2.8.13. "Field Data on  Non-point, Urban
        Stormwater, Comprehensive and
        Routine Sampling Runs," S.  Alabama
        RFC, January, 1977.
2.8.14. "Identification, Evaluation and
        Control of Non-point Source Pol-
        lution: A State-of-the-Art  Liter-
        ature Review,"  Mountainland Assoc-
        ciation of Governments, September,
        1975.
2.8.15. "Initial  Quantification of  Non-
        Point Sources for Berkshire 208
        Study," Berkshire County  RFC,
        February, 1976.
2.8.16. "Inventory and  Analysis of  Study
        Area Data on  StormwaterRunoff,"
        First Tennessee-Virginia  Develop-
        ment District,  April,  1977, 24
        pages.
2.8.17. "Inventory of Point and Non-point
        discharges in Summit,  Wasatch and
        Utah Counties in the  State  of
        Utah," Mountainland Association of
        Governments,  February,  1976.
2.8.18. "Inventory of Storm Sewer Systems,"
        First Tennessee-Virginia  Develop-
        ment District,  September, 1977,  18
        pages.
2.8.19. "Literature Review and Analysis
        of  Techniques for  Identification
         and Evaluation  of  Non-point Sources
        of  Pollutants," Greater Portland  COG
        Council  of Governments,  January,
        1978.
2.8.20. "Measures to  Control  Non-point
        Source  Pollution," Central Mass.
        RFC,  March,  1977.  -

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2.8.21. "Methodology for Ranking of Non-
        point Pollution Sources," South-
        eastern Regional Planning and
        Economic Development Commission,
        March, 1977, 32 pages.
2.8.22. "Monitoring Non-point Source Pol-
        lution in Coastal Sussex County,"
        Coastal Sussex Water Quality Pro-
        gram, November, 1977.
2.8.23. "Monitoring of Selected Subwater-
        sheds," First Tennessee-Virginia
        Development District, November,
        1977. 30 pages.

2.8.24. "Non-point Estimation Analysis for
        Critical Urban Areas," Central
        Mass. RPC, February, 1977.
2.8.25. "Non-point Pollution from Land
        Disposal Sites," S. Alabama RPC,
        July, 1977.
2.8.26. "Non-point Pollution/Water Quality
        Analysis," Mississippi-Arkansas-
        Tennessee COG Memphis Delta De-
        velopmental District, Mar^ch, 1977.
2.8.27. "Non-point Source Assessment,
        Draft Summary Rt. //6," S. Alabama
        RPC, September, 1977.
2.8.28. "Non-point Sources," Berkshire
        County RPC, November, 1976.
2.8.29. "Non-point Sources," S. Alabama
        RPC, July, 1977.
2.8.30. "Non-point Sources—By Type, Lo-
        cation and Quantity," Central
        Mass. RPC, March, 1977.
2.8.31. "Non-point Sources Report," Lower
        Rio Grande Valley Development
        Commission.
2.8.32. "Non-point Source Control Plan
        for the INCOG 208 Study Area
        with Appendix," Indian Nations
        COG, February, 1978.
2.8.33. "Non-point Source Control Technol-
        ogies and Cost Effectiveness,"
        Androscoggin Valley RPC.
2.8.34. "Non-point Source Pollution,"
        Southern Kennebec Valley Regional
        Planning Commission, March, 1976.
2.8.35.  "Non-point Source Pollution Po-
        tential and Control Measures,"
        Phoenix Urban Study,  November,
        1977.
2.8.36.  "Non-point Sources Water Quality
        Study," Southern Maine Regional
        Planning Commission,  June,  1977.
2.8.37.  "Non-point Sources Working  Paper,"
        Brevard County Planning and Zoning
        Department, February, 1978, 153
        pages.
2.8.38*.  "An Overview of Non-point Source
        Pollution in the Ten Town 208
        Area,"  Androscoggin Valley  RPC.
2.8.39.  "Preliminary Report of Potential
        Nonpoint Sources in the Lakes
        Region," Lakes Region Planning
        Commission, April, 1976.
2.8.40.  "Preliminary Suggested Strategy
        for Controlling Non-point Source
        pollution," Central Mass. RPC,
        April,  1977.
 2.8.41. "Relationships Between Non-point
        Conditions and Water Quality,"
        Chariton Valley Regional Services
        Agency.
 2.8.42. "Restoration and Maintenance of
        High Quality Water," Greater Egypt
        Regional Planning and Development
        Commission, February, 1978, 80
        pages.
 2.8.43. "Results of Routine Run, Theodore
        Non-point Sampling and Fairhope
        Landfill Sampling," S. Alabama
        RPC, October, 1976.
 2.8.44. "Section 208 Areawide Nonpoint
        Source Emissions Analysis,"
        Central Mass. RPC, September, 1976,
 2.8.45. "Section 208 Nonpoint Source
        Emissions Analysis," Central Mass.
        RPC, August, 1977.
 2.8.46. "Southwest Virginia 208 Plan,"
        Lenowisco Planning District
        Commission.

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2.8.47. "Subbasin Pollution Loading
        Assessments and Non-point Pol-
        lution Reduction Potentials for
        Summit, Wasatch and Utah Counties,"
        Mountainland Association of
        Governments, July, 1976.
2.8.48. "Subsurface Water Management -
        Interim Report - 2," Clark County
        208, September, 1977.
2.8.49. "Summary of Non-point Sources,"
        Fox Valley WQ Planning Agency,
        February, 1978.
2.8.50. "208 Report Vol. IV - Non-point
        Abatement Sub-plan for Mahoning
        and Trumbull Counties," Eastgate
        Development and Transportation
        Agency.
2.8.51. "Water Quality Data: Non-point
        Sources," Central Mass. RPC,
        November, 1977.
IX.  GROUNDWATER

2.9.1. "Analysis of the Impact of Septic
       Systems on the Surface of Ground-
       water in Acton, Mass.," Boston
       MAPC, June, 1977-
2.9.2. "Assessment of Groundwater Quality
       in the Mountainland Association
       of Governments Area," Mountainland
       Association of Governments, July,
       1976.

2.9.3.  "Atkinson Groundwater Report,"
       Southern Rockingham Regional
       Planning District Commission,"
       May,  1976,  6 pages.
2.9.4.  "Deep-Water Sediments and Springs
       of Utah Lake," Mountainland Assoc-
       iation of Governments,  January,
       1976.
2.9.5.  "The  Effect of Agricultural Activity
       on Groundwater Quality Near Mills-
       boro,  Delaware,"  Coastal Sussex
       Water  Quality Program,  August, 1977.
2.9.6. "Groundwater Analysis Trout Brook
       Aquifer, Avon, MA G/Z," Old Colony
       Planning Council, 1976.
2.9.7. "Groundwater and Water Supply in
       Central Massachusetts," Central
       Mass. RPC, November, 1977.
2.9.8. "Groundwater Assessment," Ocean
       County Planning Board, March, 1978,
       410 pages.
2.9.9. "Groundwater Conditions," Nassau-
       uffolk Regional Planning Board,
        December, 1977, 59 pages.
2.9.10. "Groundwater Pollution," Berkshire
        County RPC, March, 1976.
2.9.11. "Groundwater Problems/Analysis,"
        Erie and Niagara Counties RPB,
        December, 1977, 65 pages.
2.9.12. "Groundwater Protection," Berkshire
        County RPC, November, 1976.
2.9.13. "Groundwater Quality," Northeastern
        Illinois Planning Commission, De-
        cember, 1976.
2.9.14. "Groundwater Quality in the Study
        Area," Lakes Region Planning
        Commission, November, 1977.
2.9.15. "Groundwater Resources in the Old
        Colony Planning Council 208 Area
        (plus maps)." Old Colony Planning
2.9.15. "Groundwater Quality in the Study
        Area," Lakes Region Planning
        Commission, November, 1977.
2.9.16. Groundwater and Water Supply,"
        Berkshire County RPC, September,
        1976.
2.9.17. "Gallatin Groundwater Study,"
        Blue Ribbons of the Big Sky Coun-
        try.
2.9.18. "Madison Groundwater Study," Blue
        Ribbons of the Big Sky Country.
2.3.19. "Map Showing the Potential for
        Groundwater Recharge in New Castle
        County, Delaware," New Castle
        County 208, February, 1976.

2.9.20. "Non-point Sources Water Quality
        Study," Southern llaine Regional
        Planning Commission, June, 1977.

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2.9.21. "Part VI - Appendix C: Assessment
        of Groundwater Quality," West
        Michigan Shoreline Regional  De-
        velopment Commission, December,
        1977, 139 pages.
2.9.22. "Preliminary Assessment of Drain-
        age Well Situation," East Central
        Florida Regional Planning Council.
2.9.23. "The Quality and Potential Problems
        of Groundwater in Coastal Sussex
        County, Delaware," Coastal Sussex
        Water Quality Program, March,  1977.
2.9.24. "Report on Groundwater Conditions-
        Southwest Florida," S.W. Florida
        RPC.
2.9.25. "Solid Waste and Groundwater Re-
        lationships in Metropolitan  Wash-
        ington," Washington COG, February,
        1978.
2.9.26. "Summary of Stream Water Quality
        in the Mountainland Association
        of Government Area," Mountainland
        Association of Governments,  Feb-
        ruary, 1977.
2.9.27. "Surface Water Quality Standards
        and Goals  for Effluent Dominated
        Streams,"  208 Phoenix, February,
        1978.
2.9.28. "Technical Memorandum: Defining
        Groundwater Well Protection  Areas,"
        Old Colony Planning Council, 1977.
2.9.29. "Toward Clean Water: Alternatives
        for Action, Volume  1,  Draft  En-
        vironmental Impact Assessment,
        Chapter 3: Groundwater Protection,"
        Old Colony Planning Council, 1977.
2.9.30. "Toward Clean Water: A Program for
        Action," Old Colony Planning
        Council, 1978.
2.9.31. "Water Quality  Impact  Assessment
        Methodologies,"  Southeastern
        Regional Planning  and  Economic
        Development Commission,  September,
        1976,  123  pages.
2.9.32. "Water Supply on the Greater
        Portland Area,"  Greater  Portland
        Council of Governments,  January,
        1978.
X.  LEGAL

2.10.1. "Assessment of Legal Authority for
        Water Quality Management in the
        Baltimore Region," Baltimore
        Planning Council.
2.10.2. "Basic Stormwater  Management and
        Pollution Abatement Ordinance,"
        East Central Florida Regional
        Planning Council.
2.10.3. "A Citizen's Guide to Enforcement
        of Laws Protecting Water Quality
        in Mass.," Central Mass. RPC, July,
        1977.
2.10.4. "Eutrophication:  A Threat to New
        Hampshire Lakes and Ponds.  What
        Legal Tools are Available?,"
        Southern Rockingham Regional Ping.
        District Commission, 1976,  42 pages.
2.10.5. "Exerpts from the  Florida Statutes
        Regarding Programs and Provisions
        for Implementing the 208 Plan," East
        Central Florida Regional Planning
        Council.
2.10.6. "Existing Management Programs for
        Water Quality in the Cedar  and Green
        River Basins in King County," Munici-
        pality of Metro Seattle, 1978, 75
        pages.
2.10.7. "Identification and Description of
        Existing Regulatory Authority in the
        State of Delaware  Relating  to Water
        Quality Control and Fiscal  Manage-
        ment," Coastal Sussex Water Quality
        Program, December, 1977.
2.10.8. "An Index to Regulations Governing
        Land Development and Environmental
        Resources in New Castle County,"
        New Castle County 208, September,
        1975.
2.10.9. "Inventory and Analysis of  the Legal
        Aspects of Area-wide Water  Quality
        Management," Southeastern Council
        of Governments, January, 1977, 268
        pages.

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2.10.10. "Inventory of Local Regulator Con-
         trols Pertinent to Water Quality,"
         Southeastern Regional Planning and
         Economics Development Commission,
         December, 1975, 75 pages.
2.10.11. "Inventory of Existing Governments
         Structures and their Management,
         Financial, and Legal Functions and
         Capabilities in Summit, Utah and
         Wasatch Counties," Mountainland
         Association ofGovernments, August,
         1976.

2.10.12. "Land Use Regulatory Control
         System," Baltimore Regional
         Planning Council.
2.10.13. "Legal Aspects of  Preventing Pol-
         lution of the Wachusett Water
         Supply," Central Mass.  RFC, July,
         1976.
2.10.14. "Legal, Institutional,  Financial
         Arrangements," Berkshire County
         RFC, November, 1966.
2.10.15. "Legal Authority for Guiding
         Growth," Berkshire County RFC,
         November, 1975.
2.10.16. "Legal and Institutional Approaches
         for the Management of Erosion and
         Sedimentation in the Montachusett-
         Nashua 208 area,"  Montachusett-
         Nashua Areawide WQMP, 1977, 45  pgs.
2.10.17. "Legal-Institutional Arrangements,"
         Southern Maine Regional Planning
         Commission,  February, 1976.
2.10.18. "Legal-Institutional Arrangements
         for Areawide Waste Treatment
         Management Planning," Southern
         Kennebec Valley Regional Planning
         Commission,  March, 1976.
2.10.19. "Management  Alternatives Including
         Institutional Arrangements, Finan-
         cial Alternatives  and Required
         Authority,"  Coastal Bend COG,
         September, 1977, 160 pages.
2.10.20. "Management  Subplans," Lower Rio
         Grande Valley Regional Development
         Commission.
 2.10.21. "The National Pollutant  Discharge
         Elimination System," Washington
         COG, April, 1977.
 2.10.22. "Planning Law in  Southeastern
         Wisconsin," Southeast Wisconsin
         Regional Planning Council,  April,
         1977, 126 pages.
 2.10.23. "Proceedings of Elected  Officials'
         Water Quality Workshop," Munici-
         pality of Metro Seattle,  December,
         1976, 51 pages.
 2.10.24. "Regulatory Programs and Laws Re-
         lating to Water Quality," Indiana
         Heartland Coordinating Commission,
         June, 1977, 66 pages.
 2.10.25. "Report on Existing Legal Authority
         in the State of Delaware Relating
         to Wastewater Management," New
         Castle County 208, February,  1976.

2.10.26. "Review and Evaluation of  Existing
         Federal and State Legislation  and
         Regulations Pertinent to Water
         Quality:  Summary," Southeastern
         Regional Planning and Economic
         Development Commission, March,
         1966, 18 pages.
2.10.27. "Resolving Interlocal Disputes
         Concerning Environmental Manage-
         ment Issues," Indiana Heartland
         Coordinating Commission, October
         4, 1977,  11 pages.
2.10.28. "Rules and Regulations Relating to
         the Use of the Public Sewer
         System," New Castle County  208,
         August,  1975.
2.10.29. "Rules of Orange County Pollution
         Control Board," East Central
         Florida Regional Planning Council,
2.10.30. "State Policies Concerning Package
         Treatment Plants," Indiana Heart-
         land Coordinating Commission,
         September,.1977, 9 pages.
2.10.31. "State Control of Sedimentation in
         Indiana," Indiana Heartland Coor-
         dinating Commission, August, 1977,
         18 pages.

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2.10.32. "State Regulation and Land Appli-
         cation of Wastewater Effluent,"
         East Central Florida Regional
         Planning Council.
2.10.33. "State Standards and Regulations,"
         Baltimore Regional Planning
         Council.
2.10.34. "Study of Legal and Institutional
         Arrangements," Greater Portland
         Council of Governments, January
         1978.
2.10.35. "Summary of Legislation and Regu-
         lations Dealing With Water Quality
         Management Agencies," Southeastern
         Regional Planning and Economic
         Development Commission, January,
         1977, 4 pages.
2.10.36. "Summary of Existing and Projected
         Pollution Sources Relative to Po-
         tential Regulation," October, 1977.
2.10.37. "Synopsis of Local Ordinances,
         Regulations and Plans," East Cen-
         tral Florida Regional Planning
         Council.
2.10.38. "208 Management Elements," Boston
         MAPC, March, 1977.
2.10.39. "Water Law  in Southeastern Wis-
         consin," Southeast Wisconsin Re-
         gional Planning Council, April,
         1977, 93 pages.
2.10.40. "Water Quality Standards and Reg-
         ulations in the Washington Metro
         Area," Washington COG, December,
         1976.
2.10.41. "Water Quality Standards Review,
         Virgin and  Muddy Rivers, Clark
         County 208  Agricultural Manage-
         ment, March, 1978.
2.4.42.  "Water Supply and Water Use in the
         OCPC 208 Area," Old Colony Ping.
         Council, 1976.
XI.  MODELING

2.11.1. "Application and Calibration of the
        Dynamic Estuary Model (DEM), Mobile
        Bay, Alabama," S. Alabama RPC, Jan-
        uary, 1978.
2.11.2. "Application of the Call-Three
        Model to the Lower Fox River to
        Simulate Wasteload Allocations,"
        Fox Valley WQ Planning Agency,
        February, 1977, 300 pages.
2.11.3. "Coliform Bacteria Loadings and
        Dynamics," Coastal Sussex Water
        Quality Program, November,  1977.
2.11.4. "Computerized Land-Based Data
        Management System - Description
        and Instructions for Use," Greater
        Portland Council of Governments.
2.11.5. "Consequences of a Non-Action Al-
        ternative on Urban Nonpoint Pol-
        lution in Southeast Michigan,"
        Southeast Michigan Council of
        Governments, February, 1978, 49
        pages.
2.11.6. "Development of Water Quality
        Modeling Approach for Lakes Region
        208 Study," Lakes Region Planning
        Commission,  September, 1976.
2.11.7. "Future Lake and Stream Quality,
        1977 to 1998," West Michigan
        Shoreline Regional Development
        Commission,  July, 1977,  194 pages.


2.11.8. "Hydrodynamics of Coastal Sussex
        County Estuaries," Coastal Sussex
        Water Quality Program, November,
        1977.
2.11.9. "Literature Review and Analysis of
        Techniques for  Identification and
        Evaluation of Nonpoint Sources of
        Pollutants," Greater Portland
        Council of Governments, January,
        1978.

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2.11.10. "Mathematical Water Quality Model
         of the Provo River through the
         Heber Valley, Utah," Mountainland
         Association of Governments, July,
         1976.
2.11.11. "Model Applications and Nutrient
         Budget Calculations," Lakes Region
         Planning Commission, February,
         1977.
2.11.12. "Modeling Analysis of Water Qual-
         ity for the INCOG Planning Area,"
         Indian Nations COG, March, 1978.
2.11.13. "Modeling Nonpoint Source Pollution
         in Coastal Sussex County," Coastal
         Sussex Water Quality Program,
         November, 1977.
2.11.14. "Modeling Report," Lower Rio
         Grande Valley Development
         Commission.
2.11.15. "Report on Nonpoint Source Pol-
         lution," Greater Portland Council
         of Governments, January, 1978.
2.11/16. "Sewer Analyzer Model," Regional
         Planning Council.
2.11.17. "Treatment Planning/Costing Model,"
         Indian Nations COG, February, 1978.
2.11.18. "Water Quality Model for Coastal
         Sussex County," Coastal Sussex
         Water Quality Program, November,
         1976.
2.11.19. "Water Quality Modeling," North-
         eastern Illinois Planning Com-
         mission, May 15, 1976.
2.11.20. "Water Quality Modeling," Snohomish
         County Planning Department, Decem-
         ber, 1977, 236 pages.
2.11.21. "Water Quality Modeling and Anal-
         ysis," Coastal Sussex Water Qual-
         ity Program, November, 1977
2.11.22. "Water Quality Mideling for the
         Lakes Region 208 Project," Lakes
         Region Planning Commission,  Octo-
         ber, 1977.
2.11.23. "Water Quality Modeling Needs,"
         Berkshire County RFC,  June,  1976.
2.11.24. "Water Quality Modeling Program,"
         Indiana Heartland Coordinating
         Commission,  June,  1976,  43 pages.
2.11.25. "Water Quality and Quantity Sim-
         ulation," Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana
         Regional Council of Governments,
         November, 1975.
2.11.26. "Water Quality Report," Indiana
         Heartland Coordinating Commission,
         July, 1977, 197 pages.
XII.  SEDIMENTATION AND EROSION

2.12.1. "Computerized Land-Based Data
        Management System," Greater Port-
        land Council of Governments, Jan-
        uary, 1978.
2.12.2. "Construction, Agriculture and
        Sedimentation," Boston MAPC.,
        June, 1977.
2.12.3. "Cost for Applying Recommended
        Management Practices on Agricul-
        tural Land," Southeast Michigan
        Council of Governments, April,
        1978," 55 pages.
2.12.4. "Cropland Sedimentation in South-
        east Michigan: Methodology for
        Identifying Potential Problem
        Areas," Southeast Michigan Council
        of Governments, March, 1978, 72
        pages.
2.12.5. "Handbook on Erosion and Sedimen-
        tation Control," Montachusett-
        Nashua Areawide WQMP, 1976, 73
        pages.
2.12.6. "Interim Report No. 2," Clark
        County 208, October, 1977.
2.12.7. "Nonpoint Sources Water Quality
        Study," Southern Maine Regional
        Planning Commission, June, 1977.
2.12.8. "Phospherous Release from Sedi-
        ments," Fox Valley WQ Planning
        Agency, December, 1977, 30 pages.

2.12.9. "Pollutant Accumulation and Sed-
        imentation Problems/Analysis," Erie
        and Niagara Counties RPB, December.
        1977, 50 pages.
                                          10

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2.12.10. "Preliminary Identification of
         Literature Models and Data for
         Evaluating Rural Nonpoint Nu-
         trient, Sediment and Pathogen
         Sources," Minnesota Pollution
         Control Agency, July, 1977, 2220
         pages.
2.12.11. "Preliminary Sedimentation at
         Deer  Island," Boston MAPC, Feb-
         ruary, 1977.
2.12.12. "Report on Facilities Planning
         Update, Urban Runoff and Storm
         Drainage, Sedimentation and
         Erosion, and Sludge Disposal,"
         Southern Kennebec Valley RPC,
         September, 1976, 22 pages.
2.12.13. "Report on Nonpoint Source Pol-
         lution," Greater Portland Council
         of Governments, January, 1978.
2.12.14. "SCS-Sediment Erosion Report,"
         Baltimore Regional Planning Coun-
         cil.
2.12.15. "Sediment and Erosion Survey of
         Cumberland County," Greater Port-
         land  Council of Governments,
         January, 1978.
2.12.16. "Sediment Oxygen Demand," North-
         eastern Illinois Planning Com-
         mission, January, 1978.
2.12.17. "Sediment Source Commercial and
         Industrial Areas and Delivery
         Rate  Study," Fox Valley WQ Ping.
         Agency, February, 1978, 80 pages.
2.12.18. "State Control in Sedimentation
         in Indiana," Indiana Heartland
         Coordinating Commission, August,
         1977. 18 pages.
2.12.19. "Subsurface Water Management-In-
         terim Report 1," Clark County
         208,  May, 1977.
2.12.20. "Summary of Data Analysis on Sedi
         ments and Bentric Invertebrates
         from  Certain Massachusettes
         Rivers," Boston MAPC, September,
         1977.
2.12.21. "Technical Appendix: Aroostook-
         Prestile Areawide WQ Plan,"
         Northern Maine RP July, 1977,
         98 pages.
  2.12.22.  "Two Methods for Reducing Sedi-
           ment Oxygen Demand in Sediment
           Deposits in Lower Fox River,"
           Fox Valley WQ Ping.  Agency,
           October, 1977,  20 pages.
  2.12.23.  "Windham Soils Report," Southern
           Rockingham Regional Planning Dis-
           trict Commission," June,  1978,
           35 pages.
  XIII. SEWERS

  2.13.1. "Combined Sewers," Berkshire County
           RPC, November,  1976.
  2.13.2. "Combined Sewer  Overflow Problems/
           Analysis Report 8,  Addendum," Erie
           and Niagara Counties  RPB,  December,
           1977, 154 pages.
  2.13.3. "Infiltration/Inflow Analysis of
           the Town of Dudley Sewer System,"
           Central Massachusetts RPC,  July,
           1977.
  2.13.4. "Infiltration/Inflow Analysis of
           The Town of Rutland Sewer  System,"
           Central Massachusetts RPC,  June,
           1977.
  2.13.5. "Infiltration/Inflow Analysis of
           the Town of Southbridge Sewer
           System," Central Massachusetts RPC,
           December, 1976
  2.13.6. "Infiltration/Inflow Analysis of
           the Town of Webster Sewer  System,"
           Central Massachusetts RPC,  June,
           1977.
  2.13.7. "Initial Combined Sewer Planning,"
           Berkshire County RPC, August, 1976.
  2.13.8. "Interim Report  No.  3," Clark
           County 208 Wastewater Treatment and
           Reuse, December, 1977.
- 2.13.9. "Rutland Sewer Use Ordinance,"
           Central Massachusetts RPC,  June,
           1977.
  2.13.10. "Sewer Disposal Alternatives/A
            Look at the Problem of Failing
            Septic Tank Systems and Alternative
            Methods of Sewage Disposal - 1977,"
            Municipality of Metro Seattle, 94
            pages.
                                           11

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2.13.11. "Sewer System Evaluation for the
         City of Newark Interceptor System,"
         New Castle County 208, July, 1976.
2.13.12. "Study of Sewerage Needs, Evalua-
         tion of Alternatives for Ashby,
         Massachusetts," Montachusett-Nashua
         Areawide WQMP, 1977, 58 pages.
2.13.13. "Study of Sewerage Needs, Evalua-
         tion of Alternatives for Groton,
         Massachusetts," Montachusett-Nashua
         Areawide WQMP, 1977, 60 pages.
2.13.14. "Study of Sewerage Needs, Evalua-
         tion of Alternatives for Shirley,
         Massachusetts," Montachusett-Nashua
         Areawide WQMP, 1977, 42 pages.
2.13.15. "Study of Sewerage Needs, Evalua-
         tion of Alternatives for Sterling,
         Massachusetts," Montachusett-Nashua
         Areawide WQMP, 1977, 51 pages.
2.13.16. "Study of Sewerage Needs, Evalua-
         ation of Alternatives for Townsend,
         Massachusetts," Montachusett-Nashua
         Areawide WQMP, 1977, 47 pages.
2.13.17. "Combined Sewer Inventory Report,"
         Montachusett-Nashua Areawide WQMP,
         83 pages.

XIV.  SOCIO-ECONOMIC IMPACT
2.14.1. "Alternative Land Use Futures,"
        Greater Portland Council of Govern-
        ments, January, 1978.
2.14.2. "Analysis of the Impact of Popula-
        tion and Infiltration/Inflow on
        Cost-Effective Wastewater Manage-
        ment Alternatives," Indian Nations
        COG, March, 1978.
2.14.3. "Bozeman Growth Study," Blue Rib-
        bons of the Big Sky Country.
2.14.4. "Cooperative Forecasting Summary -
        1976," Washington COG, December,
        1976.
2.14.5. "Cultural and Aesthetic Resources,"
        New Castle County 208, May, 1977.
2.14.6. "Demographic Trends and Projec-
        tions," Southern Kennebec Valley
        Regional Planning Commission,
        January,  1976.
2.14.7. "Draft Interim Output: Population,
        Employment and Wastewater Flow
        Projections," Washington COG,
        August, 1977.
2.14.8. "Draft Progress Report: Employment
        and Population Projections," Nqw
        Castle County 208, March, 1975.
2.14.9. "An Economic and Population Profile
        of the OCPC Region," Old Colony
        Planning Council, 1977.
2.14.10. "Economic Conditions in the
         Southern Kennebec Valley,"
         Southern Kennebec Valley Regional
         Planning Commission, November,
         1975.
2.14.11. "Employment Projections for the
         INCOG 208 Study," Indian Nations
         COG, January, 1978.
2.14.12. "Employment Projections for the
         Old Colony Region," Old Colony
         Planning Council, 1977.
2.14.13. "Environmental Analysis and
         Baseline Projection of Physical,
         Biological, Socio-economic and
         Cultural Conditions," South
         Eastern Council of Governments,
         May, 1977, 50 pages.
2.14.14. "Environmental and Socio-Economic
         Impact Matrices," Lakes Region
         Planning Commission, April, 1977.
2.14.15. "Environmental Assessment of
         Corpus Christi 208 Plan," Coastal
         Bend Council of Governments,
         April, 1978.
2.14.16. "Environmental Settings Report,"
         GLS Region V Planning and Develop-
         ment Commission, April, 1978.
2.14.17. "Existing and Projected Population,
         Employment and Land Use," Boston
         MAPC, April, 1976.
2.14.18. "Existing and Projected Population,
         Land Use, and Employment," Coastal
         Bend Council of Governments, No-
         vember, 1976, 67 pages.
2.14.19. "Financial and Economic Impacts Of
         Plan Recommendations," Southeast
         Michigan Council of Governments,
         March, 1978, 58 pages.
                                          12

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2.14.20. "Future  Environmental  and  Socio-
         Economic Conditions  in the Lakes
         Region," Lakes  Region  Planning
         Commission,  July,  1977.
2.14.21. "Future  Population Projections and
         Growth Constraints," Mountainland
         Association  of  Governments,  May,
         1976.

2.14.22. "General Development Plan," Balti-
         more Regional Planning Council. RFC
2.14.23. "Growth Trends," Municipality  of
         Metro-Seattle, December, 1976.
2.8.24.  "Housing Report,"  SW Florida RFC -
         Part of the  Regional Comprehensive
         Plan Series.
2.14.25. "Impact Assessment:  1980,  1995
         Water Resource  Implications of
         Growth Forecasts," Washington  COG,
         May, 1977.
2.14.26. "Industrial  Program  Elements:
         Impact on Economic Growth, Anti-
         degradation  Policy and Water
         Quality," Southeastern Regional
2.14.27. "Inventory and Analysis of Economic
         and Population  Factors to  the  year
         2000," SECOG, January, 1977, 92
         pages.
2.14.28. "Local Growth Policies," South-
         eastern Regional Planning  and
         Economic Development Commission,
         December, 1975, 108  pages.
2.14.29. "National Conference on iess
         Costly Wastewater  Treatment
         Systems for  Small  Communities,"
         U.S. EPA, April 12-14, 1977.
2.14.30. "Natural Resources and Growth:
         The Limits and Opportunities,"
         Southern Rockingham  Regional
         Planning District  Commission,
         April, 1977, 118 pages.
2.14.31. "Part II - Estimates of Population
         and Housing," West Michigan  Shore-
         line Regional Development  Commis-
         sion, March, 1977, 56  pages.
2.14.32. "Phase V - Preliminary Population
         and Flow Data," 208  Phoenix, De-
         cember, 1976.
2.14.33.  "Plan of Study Area Population
         Projections," GLS Region V Planning
         and Development Commission,  June,
         1977.
2.14.34.  "Population,  Economy and Land Use
         Base Data," S. Alabama RFC,  March,
         1977.
2.14.35.  "Population,  Employment, and Land
         Use Projections for Coastal  Sussex
         County," Coastal Sussex WQ Program,
         October, 1977.


2.14.36. "Population, Employment and Land
         Use  Report," GLS Region V Planning
         and  Development Commission,  July,
         1977.
2.14.37. "Population Estimates and Projec-
         tions for Water Quality Study,"
         Indian Nations COG, 1977.
2.14.38. "Population Projections," Chariton
         Valley Regional Services Agency.
2.14.39. "Population Projections," South-
         eastern Regional Planning and
         Economic Development Commission,
         December, 1975, 14 pages.
2.14.40. "Population Projections and Aver-
         ages by Drainage Area," Ohio-Ken-
         tucky-Indiana Regional Council of
         Governments, June, 1975.
2.14.41. "Population Projections in the
         OCPC 208 Area," Old Colony Planning
         Council, 1977.
2.14.42. "Population/Socio-Economic
         Analysis: Present and Future,"
         Erie and Niagara Counties RPB,
         March, 1978,  100 pages.
2.14.43. "Preliminary Assessment of En-
         vironmental and Socio-economic
         Impacts of Present Water Quality,"
         Lakes Region  Planning Commission,
         April, 1977.
2.14.44. "Preliminary Methodology for De-
         termination of Best Management
         Practices Cost/Effectivensss for
         Mobile, Alabama," S. Alabama RFC,
         June, 1977.
                                           13

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2.14.45. "Preliminary Population Projec-
         tions," Berkshire County RPC,
         February, 76.
2.14.46. "Recreation, Pollution, and the
         Regional Economy," Southern Maine
         Regional Planning Commission,  June,
         1976.
2.14.47. "A Report on the Characteristics
         and Attitudes  of New Residents in
         the Coastal Sussex Water Quality
         Program Study  Area," Coastal
         Sussex Water Quality Program,
         November. 1977.
2.14.48. "Report on Population and Employ-
         ment Trends and Projections in the
         Montachusett Region," Montachusett-
         Nashua Areawide WQMP, 1977, 161
         pages.
2.14.49. "Rogue Valley  Council of Govern-
         ments," Rogue  Valley Council of
         Governments, August, 1976,  220
         pages.
2.14.50. "Small Areas Forecast: Policies,
         Forecasts, and Evaluation," South-
         east Michigan  Council of Govern-
         ments, March,  1978, 182 pages.
2.14.51. "Socio-Economic and Water Data
         Base Report -  Killeen-Temple 208
         Program," Vol. 1 - Narrative,  158
         pages, Vol. 2  - Appendices, 174
         pages, Central Texas COG, June,
         1977.
2.14.52. "Socio-Economic Data Base,"
         Lower Rio Grande Valley Develop-
         ment Council.
2.14.53. "Social and Economic Resources,"
         New Castle County 208, May, 1977.
2.14.54. "Socio-Economic Inventory and
         Projections,"  East Central
         Michigan Planning and Development
         Region, February, 1977, 246 pages.
2.14.55. "Socio-Economic Study," Fox Valley
         WQ Planning Agency, November,  1977,
         200 pages.
2.14.56. "Special Interim Report," Snoho-
         mish County Planning Department,
         May, 1977, 25  pages.
                                          14
2.14.57. "Statistical Data of  the  208
         Planning Area: 1970-2000,"  East
         Central Florida Regional  Planning
         Council.
2.14.58. "Summary of Population  Projections
         for Summit, Utah and  Wasatch
         Counties 1975-95," Mountainland
         Association of Governments, April,
         1976.
2.14.59. "Summit County Sub-Basin  Growth
         Constraints and Projections 1975-
         95 for Population and Land  Use,"
         Mountainland Association  of Govern-
         ments, May, 1976.

2.14.60. "Utah County Sub-Basin  Growth Con-
         straints and Projections  1975 —
         1995 for Population and Land  Use,"
         Mountainland Association  of Govern-
         ments, February, 1975.
2.14.61. "Wasatch County Sub-Basin Growth
         Constraints and Projections 1975."
         Mountainland Association  of Govern-
         ments, May, 1976.
2.14.62. "Wastewater Treatment Community
         Profiles," Indian Nations COG,
         January, 1978.

XV. URBAN RUNOFF

2.15.1. "Analysis of Urban Stormwater  Run-
        off and Combined»Sewer Overflows
        in the Boston Metropolitan Area,"
        Boston MAPC, March, 1978.
2.15.2. "Basic Stormwater Management and
        Pollution Abatement Ordinance,"
        East Central Florida Regional
        Planning Council.
2.15.3. "Bozeman Creek Urban Pollution
        Study," Blue Ribbons of  the Big
        Sky Country.
2.15.4. "Calibration of Storm Water
        Load Generation Model  (STORM),"
        S.  Alabama RPC, April, 1977.
2.15.5. "Characteristics of Non-point
        Source Pollution and Urban Runoff,"
        Southeastern-Regional Planning and
        Economic Development Commission,
        December, 1975, 72 pages.

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2.15.6. "Consequences of a No-Action Alter-
        native on Urban Nonpoint Pollution
        in Southeast Michigan," Southeast
        Michigan Council of Governments,
        February, 1978, 49 pages.
2.15.7. "Ellis Brett Pond Section  314
        Application, 1976," Old Colony
        Planning Council.
2.15.8. "Inventory of Non-Domestic Dis-
        chargers to the Wastewater Collec-
        tion Systems in New Castle County,"
        New Castle County 208, December,
        1975.
2.15.9. "Local Options for Controlling
        Pollution from Septic Tanks and
        Stormwater Runoff," Central Mass.
        RPC, March, 1977.
 2.15.10.  "Modeling in Coastal Sussex County
          for Nonpoint Source Pollution,"
          Coastal Sussex Water Quality Pro-
          gram,  November, 1977.
 2.15.11.  "Methodological Procedures for
          Areawide Non-Point Loading Estima-
          tion,  E.E.A.," Old Colony Planning
          Council, 1977.
 2.15.12.  "Monitoring Non-point Source Pol-
          lution in Coastal Sussex County,"
          Coastal Sussex Water Quality Pro-
          gram,  November, 1977.
 2.15.13.  Non-Point Estimates Analysis for
          the City of Brockton, E.E.A.," Old
          Colony Planning Council, 1976.
 2.15.14.  "Nonpoint Source Pollution Control
          Needs,  Little Rock Metropolitan
          Area Urban Study, Pulaski and
          Saline Counties, Arkansas," Draft
          Report -  September 19, 1977, 175
          pages.
 2.15.15.  "Non-Point Sources Pollution Poten-
          tial and List of Feasible Control
          Measures," Phoenix Urban Study,
          May,  1977.
 2.15.16.  "Non-Point Sources Report," Lower
          Rio Grande Valley Regional Develop-
          ment Commission.
2.15.17.  "Possible Methods to Control Urban
         Runoff Pollution," Municipality
         of Anchorage,  May, 1978.
2.15.18.  "Preventative  and Corrective
         Measures for Stormwater Pollu-
         tion," Northeastern Illinois
         Planning Commission, December,
         1977.
2.15.19.  "Quantitative  Estimation of Urban
         Stormwater Runoff Leadings to
         Mobile Bay, Alabama," S.  Alabama
         RPC, October,  1977.
2.15.20.  "Projections of Non-Point Sources
         and Urban Runoff," Southeastern
         Regional Planning and Economic
         Development Commission, Sept.,
         1976, 71 pages.
2.15.21.  "Rainfall Analysis for the OCPC
         Area, E.E.A.," Old Colony Planning
         Council, 1976.
 2.15.22. "Report  on Facilities  Planning Up-
         date, Urban Runoff  and Storm
         Drainage,  Sedimentation and Erosion,
         and  Sludge Disposal,"  Southern
         Kennebec Valley  RPC, September,
         1976, 22 pages.
 2.15.23. "Report  on Non-Point Source Pol-
         lution," Greater  Portland Council
         of  Governments.
 2.15.24. "A  Report  and  Perspective on  Storm-
         water Management,"  New Castle
         County  208, August,  1976.
 2.15.25. "A  Report  and  Perspective on  Storm-
         water Management  -  Two Volumes,"
         New Castle County 208, November,
         1976.
 2.15.26. "Review  of Management  Options  for
         Control  of Stormwater  Runoff,"
         Central  Mass.  RPC,  March, 1977.
 2.15.27. "Analysis  of  Stormwater Pollution
         Control  Management  Options,"  Mon-
         tachusett-Nashua Areawide WQMP,
         1976, 50 pages.
 2.15.28. "Review  of Management  Options for
         Control  of Stormwater  Runoff,"
         Montachusett-Nashua Areawide  WQMP,
         1977, 66 pages.
                                           15

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2.15.29. "Section 208 -Stormwater Ueasure-
         ment Program Results, E.E.A.,"
         Old Colony Planning Council, 1977.
2.15.30. "State of the Art of Water Pol-
         lution Control for Southeastern
         Wisconsin," Vol 3. Urban Stormwater
         Runoff, Southeast Wisconsin RP
         Council, July, 1977, 61 pages.
2.15.31  "Stormwater Management," Ocean
         County Planning Board, March,
         1978, 157 pages.
2.15.32. "Stormwater Management Practices
         Manual," East Central Florida
         Regional Planning Council.
2.15.33. "Stormwater Management Procedures
         and Methods," Snohomish County
         Planning Department, September,
         1977, 273 pages.
2.15.34. "Stormwater Pollutant Generation
         Functions," East Central Florida
         Regional Planning Council.
2.15.35. "Stormwater Quality Summary," New
         Castle County 208, September, 1975.

2.15.36. "Structural and Non-Sturctural
         Techniques Summary for Management
         and Control of Stormwater Pol-
         lution," New Castle County 208,
         November, 1975.

2.15.37. "Summary of Responses to Stormwater
         Management Questionnaire," Central
         Mass. RPC, February, 1977.
2.15.38. "Surface Water Management: Interim
         Report No. 1," Clark County ?08,
         June, 1977.

2.15.39. "Toward Clean Water: A Program for
         Action," Old Colony Planning Coun-
         cil,  1978.
2.15.40. "Toward Clean Water: Alternatives
         for Action,  Volume 1, Draft En-
         vironmental Impact Assessment,
         1977, Chapter 6: Urban Runoff/
         Construction and Development," Old
         Colony Planning Council.
^.15.41. "208 Report Vol. Ill-- Preventive
         Measures to Abate the Pollution of
         Stormwater Runoff as Part of  an
         Areawide WQM Plan," Eastgate
         Development and Transportation
         Agency.
2.15.42. "Upstream Phosphours: Loadings
         Attributable to Stormwater Runoff
         (Blackstone River above UBWPAD),"
         Central Mass. RPC, March, 1977.
2.15.43. "Urban Land Use Category: Pol-
         lutant Loadings," East Central
         Florida Regional Planning Council.
2.15.44. "Urban Nonpoint Methodology Re-
         port," Indiana Heartland Coordi-
         nating Commission, August, 1977.
         178 pages.
2.15.45. "Urban Nonpoint Source Pollution
         in GLS Region V," GLS Region  V
         Planning and Development Commis-
         sion, April, 1978.
2.15.46. "Urban Runoff," Berkshire County
         RPC, March, 1976.
2.15.47. "Urban Runoff," Bekshire County
         RPC, November, 1976.
2.15.48. "Urban Runoff," Package I, Minne-
         sota Pollution Control Agency,
         May, 1978.

2.15.49. "Urban Storm Runoff Problems/
         Analysis," Erie and Niagara
         Counties RPB, December, 1977,
         174 pages.
2.15.50. "Urban Stormwater Data on Residual
         and Commercial Sampling Sites,"
         S. Alabama RPC, April, 1977.
XVI.  DRAFT AND FINAL PLANS

2.16.1.  "An Appendix to the 208 Planning
         Base Report," Eastgate Development
         and Transportation Agency, April,
         1976.
2.16.2.  "Application for Waste Treatment
         Management Planning Grant," S.
         Alabama RPC, May, 1975.
                                           16

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2.16.3.



2.16.4.




2.16.5.


2.16.6.



2.16.7.




2.16.8.



2.16.9.


2.16.10.

2.16.11.




2.16.12.

2.16.13.


2.16.14.



2.16.15.
 "Areawide Management Strategy         2.16.16.
 Plan," Greater Egypt Regional
 Planning and Development
 Commission, May, 1978.                2.16.17.
 "Areawide Waste Treatment Manage-
 ment Plan - Wastewater  Planning
 Parameters," Eastgate Development     2.16.18.
 and Transporation Agency, May,
 1976.
 "Areawide Waste Treatment Manage-     2.16.19.
 ment Planning Program," 208  WQM
 Program - Phoenix,  Arizona.
 "Areawide Water Quality Management    2.16.20.
 Plan," Snohomish County Planning
 Department, November, 1977,  141
 pages.                                2.16.21.
 "Areawide Water Quality Plan -
 Cedar/Green River  Basins, King
 County Washington  - 1977," Munici-    2.16.22.
 pality of Metro Seattle,  1977,  111
 pages.                                2.16.23.
 "CUP  (WQM) Plan, Vol. 1,  Main
 Report," Central Upper  Peninsula     2.16.24.
 Planning and Development Region,
 March, 1978, 300 pages.
 "CUP  (WQM)  Plan, Vol.  II," Central     2.16.25.
 Upper Peninsula  Planning and  Develop-
 ment Region, March,  1978, 1,025  pages.
, "Cayuga County  Subplan," Central New- 2.
 York RP&D  Board, June,  1978, 300 pgs.
  "City of Seattle Drainage Management
  Program - Thornton Creek/Lake Union
  Implementation Area Plans," Munici-
  palj-ty of Metropolitan Seattle,
  1977, 200 pages.
  "Clarification of Strategies," Wash-
  ington COG,  December, 1977.
  "Cortland County Subplan," Central
  New York RP&D Board, June, 1978, 300
  pages.
  "Des Moines 208 Waste Treatment
  Management Plan," Central Iowa
  Regional Association of Local
  Governments, April, 1977, 80 pages.
  "Definition of the 1983 Water Quality
  Goals - Discussion Document," New
  Castle County 208, September, 1976.
                                       2.
  16.26.

  16.27.
2.16.28.
2.16.29.
2.16.30.
"Designation Package for a Waste
Treatment Management Planning Grant,"
S. Alabama RFC, March,  1975.
"Draft Executive Summary," Central
New York RP&D Board, May, 1978, 150
pages.
"Draft Plan for Public  Review,"
Coastal Sussex Water Quality  Program,
December, 1977.
"Draft Rules and Regulations  Relating
to the Use of the Public Sewer Sys-
tem," S. Alabama RFC, September, 1977.
"Draft 201 Facility Plan for  Upgrading
Metro Puget Sound Plants," Municipal-
ity of Metropolitan Seattle,  1977.
"Environmental Inventory, Draft
Report," 208-Phoenix, Arizona, October
1977.
"Draft Work Plan," 208  WQM Program-
Phoenix, Arizona, July,  1976.
"Dudley-Webster Facilities Plan,"
Central Mass. RFC, November,  1977.
"Environmental Screening of Options
and Subplans," S. Alabama RFC, Jan-
uary, 1978.
"Executive Summary for  Citizens, 208
Plan for Southwest Florida,"  S.W.
Florida RFC, May, 1978.
"Executive Summary Report," Erie and
Niagara RPB, March, 1978, 105 pages.
"Executive Summary of the Final Water
Quality Report for the  Big Cypress
Study Area," S.W. Florida RFC.

"Executive Summary of the Final Water
Quality Report for the Caloosahatchee
River Study Area," S.W.. Florida RFC,
January, 1978.
"Executive Summary of the Final Water
Quality Report for the Charlotte Har-
bor  Study Area,"  S.W. Florida RFC,
November, 1977.
"Executive Summary for the Final
Water Quality Report for the Phillippi
Creek Study  Area," S.W. Florida RFC,
October, 1977.
                                             17

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2.16.31. "Executive Summary, 208 Program Water
         Quality Study of the Lemon Bay Com-
         plex Study Area," S.W. Florida RFC,
         November, 1977.
2.16.32. "Existing Environmental Setting,
         Memorandum No. 1," 208 WQM-Phoenix
         Arizona, April, 1978.
2.16.33. "Facilities Design Summary," Indiana
         Heartland Coordinating Commission,
         January, 1977, 223 pages.
2.16.34. "Final Des Moines Report," Central
         Iowa Regional Association of Local
         Governments, April, 1977, 50 pages.
2.16.35. "Final Draft 208 Water Quality
         Management Plan," First Tennessee-
         Virginia Development District,
         June, 1978.
2.16.36. "Final Report and Technical Appen-
         dix of the Productivity Study for
         the Estero Bay Study Area," S.W.
         Florida RFC, February, 1978.
2.16.37. "Final Report on Industrial Treat-
         ment Works Program," First
         Tennessee-Virginia Development
         District, May, 1978, 34 pages.
2.16.38. "Final Report: Markets Study for
         Composted Sewage Sludge in the
         Metropolitan Washington Area,"
         Washington COG.
2.16.39. "Final Report on Municipal Treat-
         ment Works Program," First
         Tennessee-Virginia Development
         District, May, 1978, 60 pages.
2.16.40. "Final Water Quality Report for
         the Big Cypress Study Area," S.W.
         Florida RPC, January, 1978.

2.16.41. "Final Water Quality Report for
         the Caloosahatchee River Study
         Area," S.W. Florida RPC, Novem-
         ber, 1977.
2.16.42. "Final Water Quality Report for
         the Charlotte Harbor Study Area,"
         S.W. Florida RPC, November, 1977.
2.16.43. "Final Water Quality Report of The
         Lemon Bay Study Area," S.W. Florida
         RPC, August, 1977.
2.16.44. "Final Water Quality  Report  for
         the Phillippi Creek Study  Area,"
         S.W. Florida RPC, October, 1977.
2.16.45. "Future Environmental Setting,
         Draft Memorandum No.  2.,"  Phoenix,
         Arizona 208, February,  1978.
2.16.46. "Future Environmental Setting  Re-
         vised Memorandum No.  2.,"  Phoenix,
         Arizona 208, March, 1978.
2.16.47. "Future Environmental Setting,
         Final Memorandum No.  2.,"  Phoenix,
         Arizona 208 (WQM), April,  1978.
2.16.48. "Great Barrington Summary, Water
         Quality Management Plan for  the
         Upper Housatonic River," Berkshire
         County RPC, March, 1978.
2.16.49. "Hinsdale Summary, WQM Plan  for
         Upper Housatonic River," Berkshire
         County RPC, March, 1978.
2.16.50. "Implementation of an Areawlde
         Water Quality Management Program
         in Ocean County, N.J.," Ocean
         County Planning Board.
2.16.51. "Information Needs for New
         Castle County Areawide Waste
         Management Planning Program,"
         New Castle County 208, October,
         1974.
2.16.52. "Initial Municipal Facilities
         Planning," Berkshire  County
         RPC, July, 1976.
2.16.53. "Institutional Arrangements
         for the INCOG Area Water
         Quality Management Plan,"
         Indian Nations COG, March,
         1978.
2.16.54. "Interim Report: Everett Drain-
         age Basin," Snohomish County
         Planning Department,  September,
         1977, 273 pages.

2.16.55. "Interim Report on Regional Water
         Quality," S.W.  Florida RPC, Feb.,
         1978.
2.16.56. "Interim Water Resources Policy
         Statement," Washington, COG,
         September. 1977.
                                            18

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2.16.57. "Juanita Creek Basin Plan - A
         Multiple Purpose Surface Water
         Management Program," Munici-
         pality of Metro Seattle, 1977,  100
         pages.
2.16.58. "Lanesborough Summary, WQM Plan
         for the Upper Housatonic River,"
         Berkshire County RFC, March, 1978.
2.16.59. "Las Vegas Washington-Interim Re-
         port 1," Clark County 208, June,
         1977.
2.16.60. "Lee Summary, WQM  Plan for the
         Upper Housatonic River," Berkshire
         County RFC, March,  1978.
2.16.61. "Lenox Summary, WQM Plan for the
         Upper Housatonic River," Berkshire
         County RPC, March,  1978.
2.16.62. "MRPC Implementation Strategy,"
         Montachusett-Nashua Areawide WQMP,
         1976, 13 pages.
2.16.63. "Madison County Subplan," Central
         New York RP&D Board, June, 1978,
         400 pages.
2.16.64. "Management Planning Report,"
         Central Texas COG,  December, 1977.
         238 pages.
2.16.65. "Mobile and Baldwin Counties 208
         Planning Process Strategy Refined
         Technical Supplement,"  S. Alabama
         RPC,  February,  1976.
2.16.66. "The Montachusett-Nashua Areawide
         Wastewater Treatment Management
         Planning Grant  Application," Mon-
         tachusett-Nashua Areawide WQMP,
         1975, 71 pages.
2,16.67. "Montachusett-Nashua 208 Area-
         Agency Designation Proposal," Mon-
         tachusett-Nashua Areawide WQMP,
         1975, 114 pages.
2.16.68. "Monterey Summary,  WQM  Plan  for
         the Upper Housatonic River," Berk-
         shire County  RPC,  March,  1978.

2.16.69. "Monterey Summary,  WQM Plan  for
         the Upper Housatonic River," Berk-
         shire County  RPC.
2.16.70.  "Oswego County Subplan," Central
         New York RP&D Board,  June,  1978,
         350 pages.
2.16.71.  "Part 1:  Areas,  Places,  and Boun-
         daries," West Michigan Shoreline
         Development Commission,  September,
         1977, 52 pages.

2.16.72.  "Pittsfield Summary,  WQM Plan
         for the Upper Housatonic River,"
         Berkshire County RPC,  March,  1978.
2.16.73.  "Preliminary Wastewater  Manage-
         ment Strategies," Indian Nations
         COG, January, 1978.
2.16.74.  "Program of Work for  the New
         Castle County Areawide Waste
         Treatment Management  Program,"
         New Castle  County 208, June,  1975.
2.16.75.  "Project Control Plan,"  Berkshire
         County RPC, November,  1975.
2.16.76.  "Project Design  Report," Central
         Texas COG,  October,  1976,  157
         pages.

2.16.77.  "Proposed Areawide 208 Water
         Quality Management Plan  -  Task
         8 Report,"  Mountainland  Associa-
         tion of Governments,  January,
         1977.
2.16.78.  "Proposed Scope  of Work: West
         Boylston Facilities Plan," Cen-
         tral Mass.  RPC,  April, 1977.
2.16.79.  "Proposed Water  Quality  Stan-
         dards," Indian Nations COG,
         January, 1978.
2.16.80.  "Recommended Land-Use Plan,"
         Chariton Valley  Services Agency,
2.16.81.  "Regional Sludge Plan for South-
         east Wisconsin," Southeast Wis-
         consin Regional  Planning
         Commission, December, 1977, 392
         pages.
2.16.82.  "The Regulatory  Program Associated
         with Areawide Water Quality Man-
         agement in Ocean County, N.J.,"
         Ocean County Planning Board,
         April, 1978, 51 pages.
                                           19

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2.16.83. "Review Draft Executive Summary,"
         First Tennessee-Virginia Develop-
         ment District, May, 1978, 32 pages.
2.16.84. "Revised Final Plan Outline," New
         Castle County 208, November 8,
         1976.
2.16.85. "Revisions to Douglas Sewer Use
         Ordinance and Assessment Plan,"
         Central Mass. RFC, November, 1976.
2.16.86. "Sewerage Facilities Plan for
         Cherry Valley Sewer District,
         Leicester, Mass.," Central Mass.
         RFC, August, 1977.
2.16.87. "Southwest Virginia 208 plan -
         Summary Report," Lenowisco
         Planning District Commission
2.16.88. "State of the Art of Pollution
         Control in SE Wisconsin," South-
         east Wisconsin Plounerl, August,
         1977, 71 pages.
2.16.89. "Stockbridge Summary, WQM Plan for
         the Upper Housatonic River,"
         Berkshire County RFC, March, 1978.
2.16.90. "Summary: Des Moines Condensed
         Wastewater Treatment Plan," Cen-
         tral Iowa Regional Association of
         Local Governments, March, 1977,
         50 pages.
2.16.91. "Summary of Existing Environmental
         Setting, Draft Memorandum No. 7,"
         "Existing Environmental Setting,
         Draft Memorandum No. 1," "Existing
         Environmental Setting, Re-Draft
         Memorandum No. 1," 208 Phoenix,
         Arizona.
2.16.92. "Summary of Existing Environmental
         Setting, Memorandum No. 7,"
         "Existing Environmental Setting,
         Memorandum No. 1," 208 WQM -
         Phoenix, Arizona.
2.16.93. "Summary of Existing Environmental
         Setting Revised Memorandum No. 7,"
         "Existing Environmental Setting,
         Re-draft Memorandum No. 1," 208
         WQM - Phoenix, Arizona.
2.16.94. "Summary of Future Environmental
         Setting, Draft Memorandum No. 8,"
         "Future Environmental Setting,
         Draft Memorandum No. 2," 208 WQM
         Phoenix, Arizona.

2.16.95.  "Summary  of  Future  Environmental
          Setting,  Revised Memorandum No.
          8,"  "Future  Environmental  Setting
          Revised Memorandum  No.  2," 208
          WQM  -  Phoenix,  Arizona.
2.16.96.  "Summary  of  Future  Environmental
          Setting,  Memorandum No. 8,"
          "Future Environmental  Setting,
          Memorandum No.  2,"  208  WQM -
          Phoenix,  Arizona.
2.16.97.  "Summary  of  Evaluation  of  Westsidt
          Alternatives, Draft Memorandum
          No.  9," "Environmental  Evaluation
          of Westside  Alternatives,  Draft
          Memorandum No.  4,"  208  WQM -
          Phoenix,  Arizona, April, 1978.
2.16.98. "A Summary of Goals, Objectives,
         Policies and  Programs for New
         Castle  County,"  New  Castle  County
         208.
2.16.99. "Summary of Studies  Relevant to
         Planning Activities  in New
         Castle  County,"  New  Castle
         County  208, September, 1976.
2.16.100. "Technical Appendix Final  Water
          Quality Report, Water Quality
          Data for  Caloosahatchee River
          and  Big Cypress Basin," S.W.
          Florida RFC.
2.16.101. "Toward Clean Water: A  Program
          for Action," Old Colony Planning
          Council,  1978.
2.16.102. "Toward Clean Water: Alternatives
          for Action,  Volume  1, Draft En-
          vironmental  Impact Assessment,"
          Old Colony Planning Council,
          1977.
2.16.103. "Transcript  - Final 208 Public
          Hearing," Eastgate Development
          and Transportation Agency,  May,
          1977.
                                          20

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2.16.104.


2.16.105.


2.16.106.




2.16.107.




2.16.108.




2.16.109.




2.16.110.




2.16.111.


2.16.112.

2.16.113.




2.16.114.
'208 Planning Base Report," East-
gate Development and Transporta-
tion Agency, April, 1976.
"208 Report Vol. II," Eastgate
Development and Transportation
Agency.
"208 Water Quality Management
Program, Revised Work Plan,"
208 WQM - Phoenix Arizona, March,
1978.

"Waste Treatment Facilities Plan
Vol. 1," Mississippi-Arkansas-
Tennessee COG, Memphis Delta
Developmental District, March,
1977.
"Waste Treatment Facilities Plan
Vol. 11," Mississippi-Arkansas-
Tennessee COG, Memphis Delta
Developmental District, March,
1977.
"Waste Treatment Facilities Plan
Vol. Ill," Mississippi-Arkansas-
Tennessee Council of Governments,
Memphis Delta Developmental
District, March, 1977.
"Waste Treatment Facilities Plan
Vol. IV," With Appendices,
Mississippi-Arkansas-Tennessee
COG, Memphis Delta Developmental
District, March, 1977.
"Wastewater Facilities Plan for
SUVPA," Mountainland Association
of  Governments, September, 1976.
"Water Quality Management Plan,"
S.  Alabama RFC, April, 1978.
"WQ Management Plan and  Facili-
ties Study of Ashland, Oregon,"
Montgomery Consultants,  Rogue
Valley Council of Governments,
October, 1977, 150 pages.
"Water Quality Plan for  the Upper
Housatonic River, Draft  Plan/
Environmental Impact Statement,"
Berkshire County RFC,  December,
1977.
2.16.115".  "Water Quality in the  San Diego
          Region in 1977,"  Comprehensive
          Planning Organization  of  the
          San Diego Region,  August,  1977,
          110 pages.
2.16.116.  "Water and Wastewater  Technical
          Report,  Plan of Study,  Appendix
          C," 208  WQM Program -  Phoenix,
          Arizona, August,  1975.
                                 21

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                   United States
                   Environmental Protection
                   Agency
                                            February 1979
                                            Volume 3
c/EPA
208 Data
Clearinghouse
      Included this month:

      XVII.    Alternatives
      XVIII.    Conservation
      XIX.     Construction
      XX.      Hydrologic Modification
      XXI.     Industry
      XXII.    Landfills
      XXII I.    Point Sources
      XXIV.    Public Participation
      XXV.     Septic Systems
      XXVI.    Standards
                           Thanks to all  of the agencies and
                       regional offices who have submitted ab-
                       stracts  for this edition of the "208 Data
                       Clearinghouse," for only your help and
                       cooperation can make information  sharing
                       possi ble.

                           If  you find an abstract of interest,
                       please contact the  agency listed.  You can
                       make arrangements with them to acquire the
                       document.

                           This is also a reminder to all those
                       who have not yet responded to the phone
                       requests for abstracts to please  send them
                       to:

                           208 Data Clearinghouse
                           EPA Water Planning Division  (WH-554)
                           401 M Street,  S.w".
                           Washington, D.C.  20460

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XVII.  ALTERNATIVES

3.17.1. "Nonsewered Areas Wastewater Disposal
        Systems," Southern Kennebec Valley
        RFC, January, 1977,  155  pages.
3.17.2. "Physical Alternatives for Non-point
        Sources," Chariton Valley Regional
        Services Agency.
3.17.3. "Formulation and Evaluation of Alter-
        natives," Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana  Re-
        gional Council of Governments,
        February, 1976.
3.17.4. "Combined Management and Technical
        Alternatives," Coastal Bend Council
        of Governments, November, 1978,  19
        pages.
3.17.5. "Alternative Control Strategies  for
        Point and Nonpoint Dischargers,"
        Coastal Bend Council of  Governments,
        October, 1977 — Chapters I - VIII
3.17.6. "Alternative Structural  and Non-
        structural Plans and Their Conse-
        quences," East Central Michigan
        Planning & Development Region,
        March, 1978 — 492 pages.
3.17.7. "Alternative Structural  and Non-
        structural Tactics," East Central
        Michigan Planning & Development
        Region, September, 1977  — 471 pgs.
3.17.8. "On-Site Wastewater Disposal,"
        Snohomish County Planning Dept.,
        December, 1977, 126 pages.
3.17.9. "Develop and Screen Alternative
        Areawide Strategies," SECOG, October,
        1977, 81 pages, $3.00.
3.17.10. "Development of Systems Alternatives
         for Control of Nonpoint Pollution
         Sources," SECOG, June 1977, 87  pgs.,
         $5.00.
3.17.11. "Preliminary Control Alternatives
         for Phillipi Creek," Southwest
         Florida Regional Planning Council,
         October, 1977, 44 pages, $3.70.
3.17.12. "Technical Subplans," Lower Rio
         Grande Valley Regional  Development
         Commission.
3.17.13.  "Preliminary Control Alternatives
         for the Charlotte Harbor Study
         Area," Southwest Florida Regional
         Planning Council, November, 1977,
         $9.10.
3.17.14.  "Small Areas Forecast:  Policies,
         Forecasts and Evaluation," South-
         east Michigan Council of Govern-
         ments, March 1978,  182  pages.
3.17.15.  "Development and Assessment of Al-
         ternative Areawide  Strategies," East
         Central Florida Regional Planning
         Council.
3.17.16.  "State Regulations  and  Land Appli-
         cation of Wastewater Effluent,"
         East Central Florida Regional  Ping.
         Council.
3.17.17.  "Development of Technical & Manage-
         ment Plan Alternatives:  Choices for
         the Future," Coastal Sussex Water
         Quality Program,  October 1977.
3.17.18.  "Overview of Technical  Alterna-
         tives," Coastal Sussex  Water
         Quality Program,  September 1977.
3.17.19.  "Analysis of Alternatives for  Dis-
         posal of Residual Wastes," Coastal
         Sussex Water Quality Program,  April
         1976.
3.17.20.  "Preliminary Study  of Wastewater
         Disposal Alternatives," Coastal
         Sussex Water Quality Program,  April
         1976.
3.17.21.  "Point Source Report,"  Lower Rio
         Grande Valley Regional  Development
         Commission.
3.17.22.  "Consequences of a  No-Action Al-
         ternative on Urban  Nonpoint Pollu-
         tion in Southeast Michigan," South-
         east Michigan Council of Govern-
         ments, February,  1978,  49 pages.
3.17.23.  "The Conversion of  Seasonal to Year-
         Round Homes," Southern  Rockingham
         Regional Planning District Commis-
         sion, September 1976, 145 pages.
3.17.24.  "Water Quality Impacts  of 208  Plan
         Alternatives," Lakes Region Ping.
         Commission,  June, 1977.

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3.17.25.  "Regional Land Use:  Alternative       3.17.37.
         Futures," Lakes Region Planning
         Commission, April, 1977.
3.17.26.  "Comparison and Evaluation of Water    3.17.38.
         Quality Control Alternatives," Lakes
         Region Planning Commission, Oct.,
         1977.
3.17.27.  "Preliminary Findings Relating to
         Alternative Techniques for Con-        3.17.39.
         trolling Non-point Source Pollution
         in the Lakes Region," Lakes Region
         Planning Commission, July, 1976.
3.17.28.  "An Analysis of Anticipated Plans
         and Alternative Waste Handling Pro-    3.17.40.
         cedures," Southeastern Regional
         Planning & Economic Development        3.17.41.
         Commission, March, 1976, 36 pages.
3.17.29.  "Areawide Water Quality Management
         Alternatives," Boston MAPC, January,
         1978.
3.17.30.  "Toward Clean Water: Alternatives      3.17.42.
         for Action, Vol. 1, Draft Envir.
         Impact Assessment, Chapter 4: Mu-
         nicipal Wastewater Disposal," Old
         Colony Ping. Council, 1977.            3.17.43.
3.17.31.  "Toward Clean Water: Alternatives
         for Action, Vol. 1, Draft Environ-
         mental Impact Assessment, Chapter
         8: Residuals Mgmt.," Old Colony        3.17.44.
         Planning Council, 1977.
3.17.32.  "Non-Structural Solutions of Waste-
         water Disposal A.N.C.O.," Old
         Colony Ping. Council, 1976.
3.17.33.  "Conference Proceedings: Alterna-      3.17.45.
         tives to Sewers," Old Colony Ping.
         Council, 1976.
3.17.34.  "Management Subplans," Lower Rio
         Grande Valley Regional Development     3.17.46.
         Commission.
3.17.35.  "208 Management Options: Alternative
         Institutional Frameworks for Water
         Quality Management," Northeastern      3.17.47.
         Illinois Planning Commission, May,
         1977.
3.17.36.  "Methodology for Alternative Envi-
         ronmental Evaluation, Revised Draft    3.17.48.
         Memorandum No. 3," 208-Phoenix,
         l.'b., 1978
"Environmental  Evaluation  of  West-
side Alternatives, Draft Memorandum
No. 4," 208-Phoenix, March, 1978.
"Water Quality  Evaluations of Al-
ternative Discharge Sites  for a
Combined Waste  Treatment Facility
for the Theodore Industrial Park,"
S. Alabama RPC, Nov., 1976.
"Management Alternatives. Including
Institutional Arrangements, Finan-
cial Alternatives, and Required Au-
thority," Coastal Bend Council of
Governments, Sept., 1977,  160 pgs.
"Home Sewage Disposal," Penn. State
University.
"Alternatives for Small Wastewater
Treatment Systems - On-Site Dis-
posal/Septage Treatment &  Disposal,"
EPA Technology Transfer Seminar
Publication.
"Alternatives for Small Wastewater
Treatment Systems - Pressure  Se-
wers/Vacuum Sewers," EPA Technol-
ogy Transfer Seminar Publication.
"Alternatives for Small Wastewater
Treatment Systems - Cost/Effective-
ness Analysis," EPA Technology
Transfer Seminar Publication.
"Environmental Evaluation  of  Resi-
dual Waste Management Alternatives
on an Areawide Level of Analysis,
Draft Memorandum No.  5," 208  -
Phoenix, AZ.
"Environmental Evaluation  of  Inter-
ceptor Patterns. Draft Memorandum
No. 6.," 208 - Phoenix, AZ, May,
1978.
"Summary of Environmental  Evaluation
of Residual Waste Management  Alter-
natives, Draft Memorandum  No. 10,"
208 WQM - Phoenix, AZ, May, 1978.
"Revised Environmental Evaluation
of Westside Alternatives,  Memoran-
dum No. 4.," 208 WQM - Phoenix, AZ,
May, 1978.
"Preliminary Wastewater Treatment
and Reuse Alternatives. Summary Re-
port," 208 - Phoenix, April,  1977.

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3.17.49. "Large Array of Collection and
         Treatment Alternatives,"  208  -
         Phoenix, AZ, Feb., 1977.
3.17.50. "Inventory and Performance -  Exis-
         ting Wastewater Treatment Systems
         Areawide - Appendix  2," 208 - Phoe-
         nix, March, 1978.
3.17.51. "Conventional Vs. Conventional  Site
         Alternative Comparisons (Working
         Paper)," Phoenix Urban  Study,  March,
         1978.
3.17.52. "Land Vs. Land Site  Alternative Com-
         parisons (Working Paper)," Phoenix
         Urban Study, March,  1978.
3.17.53. "Areawide Infiltration/Inflow Anal-
         ysis-Appendix 3," 208  - Phoenix, AZ,
         March, 1978.
3.17.54. "Proposed Evaluation Methodology for
         Technical Alternatives (Working
         Paper)," Phoenix Urban Study. March,
         1978.
3.17.55. "Land Vs. Conventional Treatment
         Alternative Comparisons  (Working
         Paper)," Phoenix Urban Study, March,
         1978.
3.17.56. "Sludge Management  (Working Paper),"
         Phoenix Urban Study, March, 1978.
3.17.57. "Eastside Subregional  Alternatives,"
         Phoenix Urban Study, April, 1978.
3.17.58. "Eastside Wastewater Management Al-
         ternatives; Which Do You  Prefer?,"
         Maricopa Association of Governments
         208 Program, May, 1978.
3.17.59. "Potential Reuse Options  for  Waste-
         water Effluent and Residual Solids,"
         Phoenix Urban Study, June,  1977.
3.17.60. "Municipal Wastewater: Potential
         Reuse Options," Phoenix Urban Study,
         June, 1977.
3.17.61. "Preliminary Wastewater Treatment
         and Reuse Alternatives.  Summary Re-
         port," Phoenix Urban Study, April,
         1977.
3.17.62. "Potential Reuse Options  for  Munici-
         pal Wastewater Effluent  and Residual
         Solids  (Draft)," Phoenix  Urban Study,
         November, 1976.
3.7.63.  "Reclaimed Water Reuse Options
         (Working Paper)," Phoenix Urban
         Study,  November, 1977.
3.17.64.  "Wastewater Treatment Alternatives,
         Conventional Treatment  Progress Re-
         port,"  Phoenix Urban Study,  Feb.,
         1977.
3.17.65.  "Wastewater Treatment Alternatives
         and Projections Methodology," S.
         Alabama RPC, March,  1978.
3.17.66.  "Wastewater Treatment System Alter-
         natives & Projections," S.  Alabama
         RPC,  August, 1977.
3.17.67.  "Residual Waste Disposal Practices
         & Alternatives, Exec. Summary." S.
         Alabama RPC, July,  1977-
3.17.68.  "Projected Water Quality Effects
         of Alternative Urban Best  Management
         Practices for Nonpoint  Source Con-
         trols," S. Alabama  RPC,  December,
         1977.
3.17.69.  "Point  & Nonpoint Source Alterna-
         tives,  Executive Summary,"  S. Ala-
         bama RPC, July 1977.
3.17.70.  "Institutional & Management  Alter-
         natives, Abstract  for  Review With
         Local Governments,"  S.  Alabama RPC,
         November, 1977.
3.17.71.  "Identification of  Alternative Man-
         agement Plans (Point Sources)," S.
         Alabama RPC, October, 1977.
3.17.72.  "Identification of  Alternative Man-
         agement Plans," S.  Alabama  RPC,
         Sept.,  1977.
3.17.73.  "Environmental Evaluation of Alter-
         native  Strategies,"  S.  Alabama RPC,
         Feb., 1978.
3.17.74.  "Analysis of Alternative Management
         Plans for Publicly-Owned Treatment
         Works," S. Alabama RPC, December,
         1977.
3.17-75.  "Analysis of Alternative Management
         Plans (Areawide & Nonpoint Sour-
         ces)," S. Alabama RPC,  Nov., 1977.
3.17.76.  "Alternative Areawide & Nonpoint
         Source Plans Subsequent to Prelim-

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         inary Screening," S.  Alabama RPC,
         October, 1977.
3.17.77. "Alternatives for Intermunicipal       3.17.90.
         Agreements Regarding  Wastewater
         Treatment (Westboro and Shrews-
         bury)." Central  Mass. RPC, April,     3.17.91.
         1977.
3.17.78. "Moose Hill  Reservoir, Leicester,
         Mass.: The Total  Cost of a Proposed
         Surface Water Supply  -- Alternative   3.17.92.
         Sources of Water and  Water Demand
         Projections," Central Mass. RPC,
         Sept., 1977.                           3.17.93.
3.17.79. "Boylston Pilot  Project - Subsur-
         face Sewage Disposal  Problems &
         Abatement Alternatives," Central       3.17.94.
         Mass RPC, Jan.,  1977.
3.17.80. "E-3: Environmental Impact Assess-     3.17.95.
         ment of Alternative Wastewater Man-
         agement Plans,"  Indian Nations COG,
         March, 1978.                           3.17.96.
3.17.81. "M-3: Detailed Water  Quality Man-
         agement & Regulation  Alternatives,"
         Indian Nations  COG, March, 1978.       3.17.97.
3.17.82. "T-ll: Wastewater Management Alter-
         natives Costs &  Water Quality,"
         Indian Nations  COG, Feb., 1978.
3.17.83. "M-2: Alternative Water Quality       3.17.98.
         Management Arrangements," Indian
         Nations COG,  January. 1978.
3.17.84. "T-9 Alternative Approaches for the
         Protection of Water Quality in Bird   3.17.99.
         Creek and the Verdigris River,"
         Indian Nations  COG, February, 1978.
3.17.85. "E-l: Alternative Wastewater Manage-
         ment Evaluation  Criteria," Indian
         Nations COG,  January, 1978.
3.17.86. "Transcripts  of  1 March 1978 208       3.17.100
         Lobbying Forum," Indian Nations COG,
         March, 1978.
3'.17.87- "T-6: A Summary  of Preliminary        3.17.101
         Wastewater Management Alterna-
         tives," Indian Nations COG, Jan.,
         1978.                                 3.17.102
3.17.88. "Residuals Management in the Wash-
         ington Metropolitan Area," Washing-
         ton COG, March,  1978.                 3.17.103
3.17.89. "Presentation of Alternatives to
         Traditional  Septic Systems for the
 Washington Metropolitan Area," Wash-
 ington COG, November,  1977.
 "Alternative Control  Strategies,"
 Killeen-Temple 208 Program,  Central
 Texas  COG, May 1978,  496 pages.
 "Summary of Alternative Technical
 Solutions for Subareas," First
 Tennessee-Virginia Development
 District, December,  1977.
 "Interim Report No.  3  -- Surface
 H  0  Management,"  Clark County
 208,  Feb., 1978.
 "Interim Report No.  4  --
 Wastewater Treatment  & Reuse,"
 Clark  County 208,  Feb., 1978.
 "Las Vegas Wash-Interim Report 3,4,"
 Clark  County 208,  Jan  & Feb.,  1978.
 "Subsurface Water  Management  - In-
 terim  Report.  3,"  Clark County 208,
 February, 1978.
 "Preliminary Control Alternatives
 for  Phillippi  Creek,"  S.W. Florida
 RPC, October,  1977,  $6.90  per copy.
 "Preliminary Control Alternatives
 for  the  Caloosahatchee River  Study
 Area," S.W.  Florida  RPC, $5.50 per
 copy.
."Report  on Institutional Alterna-
 tives  for Sewage  Facilities Manage-
 ment Agencies," Montachusett-Nashua
 Areawide WQMP,  1977, 39 pages.
 "Report  on Institutional Alterna-
 tives  for Septic Tank  Operation  &
 Maintenance Programs & Septage Man-
 agement  in the  Montachusett Region,"
 Montachusett-Nashua Areawide  WQMP,
 1977,  51  pages.
, "Ranking of Management Alterna-
 tives," S.  Alabama RPC,  December,
 1977.
, "Alternative Growth Management
 Techniques,"  New  Castle County  208,
 May 1975.
, "Pollution Control Options,"  Ark-
 Texas Council  of  Governments,
 August  1977,  284  pages.
, "Alternative Systems  Configura-
 tion,"  Ark-Texas  Council  of  Gov-
 ernments,  August  1977, 18 pgs.

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3.17.104. "Alternative  Areawide  Plans,"
          Ark-Texas  - Council  of Governments,
          March,  1978,  40  pages.
3.17.105. "Proposed  Analysis for Great South
          Bay; Options  for Further  Analysis,"
          Nassua  Suffolk RPB.
3.17.106. "Initial Institutional Alternatives
          for Point  Source," Atlanta Regional
          Commission, September,  1977.
3.17.107. "Possibilities for Water  Conserva-
          tion in the Atlanta  Region," Atlan-
          ta Regional Commission, March.
          1976.
3.17.108. "Brush  Creek  Technical Report,"
          East-West  Gateway Coordinating
          Committee, December  1976.
3.17.109. "Element 29:  Report  -  Environmen-
          tal Assessment," East-West Gateway
          Coordinating  Committee, April 1978.
3.17.110. "Element 21 - Phase  III Final Al-
          ternative  Analysis Report:  Nonpoint
          Source  Report,"  East-West  Gateway
          Coordinating  Committee, October,
          1977.

XVIII.  CONSERVATION

3.18.1. "Opportunities  for Water Conserva-
        tion," Old Colony  Ping.  Council,
        1977.
3.18.2. "Compendium  of  Non-Structural Flow
        and Wasteload Reduction  Measures,"
        208 Phoenix, Dec.,  1976.
3.18.3. "A Biological Resources  Review for
        the Ten Town 208 Area,"  Androscoggin
        Valley RPC.
3.18.4. "Water Conservation and  Wastewater
        Reuse," Indian  Nations COG,  Jan.,
        1978.
3.18.5. "Site-Specific  Natural Resources,"
        New Castle County  208, September,
        1975.
3.18.6. "Ubiquitous  Resources-Position Paper
        #2," New Castle County 208,  Feb.,
        1976.

XIX.  CONSTRUCTION
        on Water Quality of Small Streams
        in the North River Area," Boston
        MAPC,  January 1977.
3.19.2.  "Construction, Agriculture and Sed-
        imentation," Boston MAPC, June 1977.
3.19.3.  "Five-year Construction Grant Pri-
        ority  List," Southeastern Regional
        Planning & Economic Development
        Commission, March, 1976, 8 pgs.
3.19.4.  "Intercommunity Trunkline Analysis,"
        Southern Kennebec Valley RPC, August,
        1976,  62 pages.
3.19.5.  "Facilities Design, Summary," Indiana
        Heartland Coordinating Commission,
        January, 1977, 223 pages.
3.19.6.  "Planning and Engineering Criteria,"
        Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana Regional Coun-
        cil of Governments, Dec., 1975.
3.19.7.  "Evaluation of Point Sources and the
        Construction Grants Priority System,"
        South  Eastern Council of Governments,
        May 1977, 70 pages $2.00 per copy.
3.19.8.  "Application of the Call - Three
        Model  to the Lower Fox River to
        Simulate Wasteload Allocations,"
        Fox Valley WQ Planning Agency, Feb.,
        1977,  300 pages.
3.19.9.  "Environmental Assessment," Greater
        Egypt  Regional Planning & Development
        Commission, April 1978.
3.19.10. "Joint Wastewater Treatment Feasi-
         bility Study," Southeast Idaho
         Council of Governments.
3.19.11. "Road Salt Report," Southern Rock-
         ingham Regional Planning District
         Commission, Dec., 1976, 30 pages.
3.19.12. "Construction and Water Quality,"
         Municipality of Metro Seattle, 1977,
         120 pages.
3.19.13. "Construction Site Runoff," North-
         east Michigan COG, February 1978.

XX.  HYDROLQGIC MODIFICATION

3.20.1. "Water Quality Assessment, Moni-
        toring & Hydrologic Regulation,"
3.19.1. "Effects of Residential Development

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XXI.  INDUSTRY

3.21.1. "Industrial Wastewater Survey of the
        OCPC 208 Area," Old Colony Planning
        Council, 1977.
3.21.2. "Brockton Industrial Cost Recovery
        F.S.T.," Old Colony Planning Council,
        1976.
3.21.3. "Toward Clean Water:  A Program for •
        Action," Old Colony Planning Council,
        1978.
3.21.A. "Interim Output //5: Recommendations
        on the Basis for Revision of Waste-
        load Allocations, NPDES Permits and
        Industrial Dischargers to Municipal
        Systems," Boston MAPC, April 1976.
3.21.5. "Industrial Discharges," Boston
        MAPC, March, 1977.
3.21.6. "Executive Summary of Interim Report
        to MAPC on 208 Areawide Discharge
        Project," Boston MAPC, March, 1977.
3.21.7. "A Review of Industrial Waste Treat-
        ment," Southeastern Regional Planning
        & Economic Development Commission,
        December 1975, 90 pages.
3.21.8. "Development of Alternative Programs
        for Industrial Wastes," Southeastern
        Regional Planning & Economic Develop-
        ment Commission, November, 1976, 84
        pages.
3.21.9. "Industrial Program Elements: Impact
        on Economic Growth, Anti-degradation
        Policy and Water Quality," South-
        eastern Regional Planning & Economic
        Development Commission, March, 1977,
        74 pages.
3.21.10. "Point Source Report," Lower Rio
         Grande Valley Development Council.
3.21.11. "Solid Waste Report: Industrial
         Residual Disposal," GLS Region 5
         Planning & Development Commission,
         July, 1977.
3.21.12. "Industrial Waste Overview," Southern
         Kennebec Valley RPC, January, 1976,
         15 pages.
3.21.13. "User Charge and Industrial Cost
         Recovery Information," East Central
         Florida Regional Planning Council.
3.21.14. "Brockton Industrial Wastewater
         Survey, F.S.T.," Old Colony Planning
         Council, 1976.
3.21.15. "Toward Clean Water: Alternatives
         for Action Volume 1, Draft En-
         vironmental Impact Assessment —
          Chapter 5: Industrial Wastewater
         Disposal," Old Colony Planning
         Council, 1977.
3.21.16. "The Quality & Potential Pro-
         blems of Groundwater in Coastal  •
         Sussex County, Delaware," Coas-
         tal Sussex Water Quality Program,
         March, 1977.
3.21.17. "Monitoring Nonpoint Source Pol-
         lution in Coastal Sussex County,"
         Coastal Sussex Water Quality Pro-
         gram, Nov., 1977.
3.21.18. "A Report on the Characteristics
         & Attitudes of New Residents in
         the Coastal Sussex Water Quality
         Program Study Area," Coastal Sus-
         sex Water Quality Program, Nov.,
         1977.
3.21.19. "Evaluation of Existing Physical
         Water Pollution Control Mechan-
         isms for Industrial Sources,"
         Central Mass RPC, Feb., 1977.
3.21.20. "Industrial Wastewater Survey
         Data," Central Mass RPC, July,
         1977.
3.21.21. "Potential  Industrial Discharge
         Problem Areas," Central Mass RPC,
         October, 1976.
3.21.22. "Industrial Sources," Berkshire
         County RPC, November, 1976.
3.21.23. "Industrial Point Wastewater
         Source Problems," Erie/Niagara
         Counties RPB, Dec., 1977, 42
         pgs.
3.21.24. "Industrial Survey," Montachu-
         sett-Nashua Areawide WQMP, 1977,
         83 pages.
3.21.25. "Dispersion of Proposed Theodore
         Industrial  Park Effluents in
         Mobile Bay, Hydraulic Model In-
         vestigation," S.  Alabama RPC,
         March, 1977.
3.21.26. "Wastewater Treatment & Reuse:
         Interim Report No. 1," Clark
         County 208, Dec., 1977.

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3.21.27. "Industrial Wastewater  Sources:  Al-
         ternative Pollution Areas,"  Central
         Mass. RFC, February,  1977.
3.21.28. "The Impact of Pretreatment  Stan-
         dards on Worcester Industries,"
         Central Mass  RPC, April 1977.
3.21.29. "Industrial Development:  Prospects
         and Policies, New Castle County,"
         New Castle County 208,  April,  1976.
3.21.30. "Industrial Policy Analysis,"  New
         Castle County 208, Sept., 1975.
3.21.31. "Preliminary  New Castle County In-
         dustrial Land Needs Projections
         & Allocations,"  New Castle County
         208, March 1975.
3.21.32. "Industrial Land needs  Study In-
         terim Report," New Castle County
         208, January  1975.
3.21.33. "208 Industrial  Waste Treatment
         System Needs," Nassau Suffolk RPB.
3.21.34. "Refuse Power Plant  Technology.
         State of  the  Art Review," Nassau-
         Suffolk Regional Ping.  Board,  Dec.,
         1977.
3.21.35. "Municipal. Lakeside  and Industrial
         Wastewater Treatment," Northeast
         Michigan  COG, Feb.,  1978.
3.21.36. "Public Law 92-500  and EWGCC Ac-
         tivities," East-West  Gateway Coordi-
         nating Committee, March, 1975.

XXII.   LANDFILLS

3.22.1.  "Technical Memorandum: Pembroke Land-
         fill," Old Colony Planning Council,
         1976.
3.22.2.  "Technical Memorandum: Rockland Land-
         fill," Old Colony Planning Council,
         1976.
3.22.3.  "Analysis  of Water Quality Impact of
         Landfills,"  Boston MAPC,  Jan., 1976.
 3.22.4.  "Landfill  Sampling Analysis," Boston
         MAPC,  June,  1977.
3.22.5.  "Orange  County Pollution  Control
         Department Landfill Leachate Pro-
         posal,"  East  Central Florida Re-
         gional Planning Council.
3.22.6. "Preliminary Evaluation of Land
        Treatment in the Washington Area,"
        Washington COG, January, 1978.
3.22.7. "Identification and Evaluation of
        Sanitary Landfill Problems," Mon-
        tachusett - Nashua Areawide WQMP,
        1977, 17 pages.

XXIII.  POINT SOURCES

3.23.1. "Control of Water Pollution From
        Point Sources," Lakes Region Ping.
        Commission, December, 1977.
3.23.2. "Characterize Potential Point
        Sources," Lakes Region Planning
        Commission, October,  1976.
3.23.3. "Characterize Existing and Planned
        Point Sources," Lakes Region Ping.
        Commission, October,  1976.
3.23.4. "Nonpoint Sources of  Pollution in
        GERPDC Planning Area," Greater
        Egypt Regional Ping.  & Development
        Commission, April, 1978, 36 pgs.
3.23.5. "Continuous & Intermittent Point
        Source Wasteload Projections
        Killeen-Temple 208 Program," Cen-
        tral Texas COG, Oct., 1977, 52  pgs.
3.23.6. "Facilities Report for Region V,"
        GLS Region V Ping. &  Development
        Commission, April, 1978.
3.23.7. "Point Sources Inventory Report,"
        GLS Region V Ping. &  Development
        Commission, June, 1977.
3.23.8. "Point Source Wasteload Projection
        Report," GLS Region V Ping. & De-
        velopment Commission, July, 1977.
3.23.9. "Point Source Inventory," West
        Michigan Shoreline Regional De-
        velopment Commission,  December,
        1977, 397 pages.
3.23.10. "Initial Industrial  Source Ping.,"
         Berkshire County RPC, July, 1976.
3.23.11. "Point Sources," Greater Egypt
         RP and Development Commission,
         March, 1978.
3.23.12. "State of the Art of Pollution
         Control for Southeastern Wiscon-
         sin," Southeast Wisconsin RP Coun-
         cil  July  1977,  145 pages.

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3.23.13. "Wasteload Allocation Recommenda-
         tions," Indiana Heartland Coordi-
         nating Commission, Dec., 1976, 194
         pages.
3.23.14. "Cost Effectiveness Evaluations of
         Point and Nonpoint Source Control
         Needs," East Central Florida Re-
         gional Planning Council.
3.23.15. "Review of Existing Point Source
         Waste Loadings," Coastal Sussex
         Water Quality Program, November,
         1976.
3.23.16. "Identify and Screen Alternative
         Point Source Controls," Lakes Re-
         gion Planning Commission, Sept.,
         1976.
3.23.17. "Point Source Report," Lower Rio
         Grande Valley Development Council.
3.23.18. "Evaluation of Point Sources and
         the Construction Grants Priority
         System," Southeastern COG, May,
         1977, 70 pages, $2.00.
3.23.19. "Alternative Techniques for Con-
         trolling Point Source Water Pollu-
         tion in the Lakes Region," Lakes
         Region Planning Commission, July,
         1977.
3.23.20. "Point Pollution Sources in Mobile
         & Baldwin Counties," S. Alabama
         RFC, March 1978.
3.23.21. "Narrative Discussion of Point
         Source Work Element, Municipal &
         Industrial Discharges," S. Alabama
         RPC, October 1977.
3.23.22. "Significant Industrial Point
         Source Inventory, Indian Nations
         COG, January 1978.
3.23.23. "Areawide & Subarea Treatment Al-
         ternatives," First Tennessee-Vir-
         ginia Development District, March
         1978, 37 pages.
3.23.24. "Point Source Inventory Report,
         Killeen-Temple 208 Program," Cen-
         tral Texas COG, October 1977, 97
         pages.
3.23.25. "Municipal Point Wastewater Source
         Problems/Analysis," Erie Niagara
         Counties RPB, Dec. 1977, 118 pages.
3.23.26. "Subsurface Water Management -
         Interim Report #2," Clark County
         208, Sept., 1977.
3.23.27. "Wastewater Flows and Sewage
         Facilities," Ocean County Ping.
         Board, Jan., 1978, 70 pages.
3.23.28. "Sludge Treatment Processes &
         Cost," First Tennessee-Virginia
         Development District, January,
         1978, 10 pages.
3.23.29. "Evaluation and Selection of
         Areawide and Subarea Plans,"
         First Tennessee-Virginia Develop-
         ment District, April, 1978, 24
         pages.
3.23.30. "Review of Non-Domestic Point
         Source Discharges," New Castle
         County 208, June, 1976.
3.23.31. "Point Source Sampling Program,"
         Ark-Texas Council of Governments,
         August, 1977, 18 pages.
3.23.32. "Inventory of Industrial and
         Municipal Point Source Dischar-
         ges," Ark-Texas Council of Gov-
         ernments, August 1977, 146 pages.
3.23.33. "Assessment of Industrial Point
         Pollution Sources & Controls,
         Report #3," W. Alabama Regional
         Planning & Development Council,
         July, 1977.
3.23.34. "Assessment of Industrial Point
         Pollution Sources & Controls,
         Report #2," W. Alabama Regional
         Planning & Development Council,
         Sept., 1976.
3.23.35. "Assessment of Industrial Point
         Pollution Sources and Controls,
         Report #1," W.  Alabama Regional
         Planning & Development Council,
         August, 1976.
3.23.36. "Interim Report for Point Source
         Wasteload Allocations; Oliver &
         Warrior Pools, Black Warrior
         River," W. Alabama PDC, November,
         1976.
3.23.37. "Vol. IV Point Source Control,"
         S.W. Illinois Planning Commission,
         April 1978.

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3.23.38. "Refined Institutional Alternatives
         for Point Source Control," Atlanta
         Regional Commission, December
         1977.
3.23.39. "Point Source  Inventory," Southern
         Tier RPDC, Sept., 1976,  206  pages.
3.23.40. "Final Point Source  Alternative,"
         East-West Gateway Coordinating
         Committee, December, 1977.
3.23.41. "Municipal and  Industrial Controls
         Measures," East-West Gateway Coor-
         dinating Committee, June, 1977.
3.23.42. "Municipal and  Industrial Non-
         structural Control Measures," East-
         West Gateway Coordinating Committee,
         June, 1977.

XXIV.  PUBLIC PARTICIPATION

3.24.1. "Public Participation Documentation,"
        Indian Nations  COG, April 1978.
3.24.2. "Guideline for  Public Participation
        in the 208 Planning Program," Berk-
        shire County RFC, May 1976.
3.24.3. "A Report on Citizen Participation
        in EDATA's 208  Planning Program,"
        Eastgate Development & Transporta-
        tion Agency, June 1977.
3.24.4. "Summary of Public Participation,"
        Erie and Niagara Counties RPB,
        Vols. I, II. &  III.
3.24.5. "Community Involvement in Solution
        of Water Quality Problems for Lake
        Fenwick, Forbes  Creek & the Duwa-
        mish," Municipality of Metro-Seattle,
        January 1978, 60 pages.
3.24.6. "King County Water Quality Study  -
        A Random Public  Opinion Survey,"
        Municipality of  Metro Seattle, Oct.,
        1976, 37 pages.
3.24.7. "Summary of Public Participation  in
        the 1976-77 208  Program," Municipal-
        ity of Metro Seattle, 1978, 400  pgs.
3.24.8. "The Metro Solution - A Study of  the
        Origin and Development of its Water
        Quality Enterprise," Municipality of
        Metro Seattle,  1978, 40 pages.
3.24.9.  "The Bellevue Experience: A Study
        of Social, Political & Environ-
        mental Action," Municipality of
        Metro Seattle,  1976, 80 pages.
3.24.10. "Citizen Involvement in Environ-
         mental Management Planning," New
         Castle County  208, March 1977-
3.24.11. "Cost of Public Participation  in
         the New Castle County Areawide
         Waste Treatment Management Pro-
         gram," New Castle County 208,
         November 1975.
3.24.12. "Public Participation in the New
         Castle County  Areawide Waste
         Treatment Management Program,"
         New Castle County 208, November,
         1975.
3.24.13. "Citizen Participation," Nassau-
         Suffolk Regional Planning Board.
3.24.14. "Citizen Participation," Lewis &
         Clark RCD.
3.24.15. "Public Hearings & Resolutions of
         Support," Northeast Michigan COG,
         May 1978.
3.24.16. "Clean Water Program Activities,"
         Northeast Michigan COG,  May 1978.
3.24.17. "Vol. II: Public Involvement,"
         S.W. Illinois  Planning Commission,
         May 1978.
3.24.18. "Handbook for  Public Involvement
         in 208 Planning," Atlanta Regional
         Commission,  June 1977.
3.24.19. "Public Participation Report,"
         Southern Tier  RPDC, January 1978,
         100 pages.
3.24.20. "Dirty Words," East-West Gateway
         Coordinating Committee.
3.24.21. "208 Water Quality Program Moves
         Ahead," East-West Gateway Coordi-
         nating Committee, October 1976.
3.24.22. "Slide Show and Script," East-
         West Gateway Coordinating
         Committee, April 1976.
3.24.23. "Organizational Policies for 208
         Areawide Citizens Committee and
         Organizational Policies for 208
         Areawide Policy Committee," East-
         West Gateway Coordinating Commit-
         tee, February  1976.

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3.24.24. "208 People Participation Ping.,"
         East-West Gateway Coordinating
         Committee, March 1976.
3.24.25. "Citizen Participation in Water
         Quality Planning," East-West Gate-
         way Coordinating Committee, Dec.,
         1975.
3.24.26. "208 Water Quality Glossary," East-
         West Gateway Coordinating Committee,
         January 1976.
3.24.27. "Staff Notes on the Coalition's
         Proposal for Citizen Participation
         in 208 Planning," East-West Gateway
         Coordinating Committee, July 1975.
3.24.28. "Workshop III Report/1 East-West
         Gateway Coordinating Committee,
         December 1977.

XXV.  SEPTIC SYSTEMS

3.25.1. "Septic Tank and Cesspool Operation
        and Maintenance," Old Colony Ping.
        Council, 1977.
3.25.2. "Septic Systems and Groundwater
        Quality: a Literature Survey," New
        Castle County,208,  June 1978.
3.25.3. "Analysis of the Impact of Septic
        Systems on the Surface of Groundwater
        in Acton, Mass.,"  Boston MAPC, June
        1977.
3.25.4. "Leachate Formation in Solid Waste
        Disposal Sites," Boston MAPC, June
        1977.
3.25.5. "Septic Systems: How They Work and
        How to Keep Them Working," South-
        eastern Regional Planning & Economic
        Development Commission, April 1977,
        13 pages.
3.25.6. "Sludge and Residuals," Southeastern
        Regional Planning & Economic Develop-
        ment Commission, March 1977, 51 pgs.
3.25.7. "Investigation of Septic Leachate
        Discharges into Winona Lake, Lake
        Winnipesaukee and Ossipee Lake,"
        Lakes Region Planning Commission,
        October 1977.
3.25.8. "Nonpoint Sources Water Quality
        Study," Southern Maine Regional
        Planning Commission, June, 1977.
3.25.9. "The Conversion of Seasonal  to
        Year-Round Homes," Southern  Rock-
        ingham Regional Planning District
        Commission, Sept., 1976, 145 pgs.
3.25.10. "Septic Tank Study," Fox Valley
         WQ Planning Agency," Feb.,  1978,
         50 pages.
3.25.11. "Coliform Bacteria Loadings and
         Dynamics," Coastal Sussex Water
         Quality Program,  November,  1977.
3.25.12. "Report on Nonpoint Source Pol-
         lution," Greater Portland Council
         of Governments,  January 1978.
3.25.13. "Technical Memorandum: Determin-
         ing the Magnitude and Extent of
         a Need for a Public Sewage Sys-
         tem," Old Colony Planning Council,
         1977-
3.25.14. "Regional Septage Disposal Alter-
         natives," Boston MAPC, Dec., 1977.
3.25.15. "Analysis & Estimation of Dis-
         charges From Waterfront Septic
         Tanks, Tidal Marshes, & Recrea-
         tional Boating,"  Coastal Sussex
         Water Quality Program, May 1977-
3.25.16. "Part VI - Appendix A: Sewerless
         Methods of Household Waste Dis-
         posal," W. Michigan Shoreline
         Regional Development Commission,
         Summer, 1977, 35  pages.
3.25.17. "Septic Tank Study," Blue Rib-
         bons of the Big  Sky Country.
3.25.18. "On-Site Wastewater Disposal,"
         Snohomish County  Planning Dept.,
         December 1977,  126 pages.
3.25.19. "Groundwater Conditions," Nassau-
         Suffolk Regional  Planning Board,
         December 1977,  59 pages.
3.25.20. "Septage Management in the Sou-
         thern Rockingham Region," South-
         ern Rockingham Regional Planning
         District Commission, Oct.-, 1976,
         40 pages.
3.25.21. "The Impact of Unsewered Develop-
         ment on Water Quality," GLS Re-
         gion V Planning  & Development
         Commission, April 1978.
                                            10

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3.25.22.
3.25.23.
3.25.24.



3.25.25.

3.25.26.



3.25.27.



3.25.28.


3.25.29.




3.25.30.


3.25.31.


3.25.32.

3.25.33.


      d\
"Septic Tank - Leach  Field  Systems,1
Southern Rockingham Regional  Ping.'
Commission, 1976.
"What Are The Options: A Handbook
of Alternatives  for Wastewater
Management," Southeastern Regional
Planning & Economic Development
Commission, June 1976, 24 pages.
"Review of Residual Waste Genera-
tion Sources & Disposal Programs,"
New Castle County  208, September
1976.
"Wastewater Treatment System  Needs,1
S. Alabama RPC,  June  1977.
"Sanitary Water  Quality Responses
to Fecal Coliform Loadings  Origina-
ting From Urban  Stormwater  Runoff,"
S. Alabama RPC,  January 1978.
"Local Options for Controlling Pol-
lution from Septic Tanks and  Storm-
water Runoff," Central Mass RPC,
March 1977.
"A Homeowner's Guide  to Septic
Tanks," S.W. Florida  RPC, August
1977, $1.00 per  copy.
"Septic Tank Practices a Guide to
the Conservation and  Re-use of
Household Wastewaters," Montachu-
sett-Nashua Areawide  WQMP,  1977,
76 pages.
"Septage Disposal  Within Berkshire
County 208 Area,"  Berkshire County
RPC, July 1976.
"On-Site Sewage  Disposal and  Sep-
tage Handling in Central Mass,"
Central Mass RPC,  November  1977.
"Septic Systems  -  a Case Study,"
New Castle County  208, August 1977.
"Early Action Study of Effect of
Septic Tanks on  Areawide Water
Quality," Comprehensive Planning
Organization of  San Diego Region,
November 1977, 28  pages.
XXVI.  STANDARDS

3.26.1. "Industrial Program Elements: Im-
        pact on Economic Growth, Anti-
        degradation Policy and Water
        Quality," Southeastern Regional
        Planning and Economic Development
        Commission, March, 1977, 74 pgs.
3.26.2. "Report to Indiana Stream Pol-
        lution Control Board Water Quality
        Task Force," Indiana Heartland
        Coordinating Commission, February,
        1978, 52 pages.
3.26.3. "State Standards and Regulation*,"
        Regional Planning Council.
3.26.4. "Development of  Criteria for Eval-
        uation of Solutions," Chariton
        Valley Regional  Services Agency.
3.26.5. "Water Quality Standards of Illi-
        nois, Indiana and Wisconsin," or
        Northeastern Illinois Planning
        Commission, April, 1977.
3.26.6. "The Water Quality Standards Is-
        sue," Indiana Heartland Coordi-
        nating Commission, December 1977,
        71 pages.
3.26.7. "Existing State  Water Quality Stan-
        dards," East Central Florida Re-
        gional Planning  Council.
3.26.8. "Proposed Changes to State Wat«r
        Quality Standards," East Central
        Florida Regional Planning Council.
3.26.9. "A Guide to Minnesota's Proposed
        Revision of Water Quality Stan-
        dards Regulations," Minnesota
        Pollution Control Agency, July
        1977, 25 pages.
3.26.10. "Executive Summary of the Final
         Water Quality Report for the Big
         Cypress Study Area," S.W. Florida
         RPC, $11.30 per copy.
3.26.11. "Executive Summary, 208 Program
         WQ  Study of the Lemon Bay Couplax
         Study Areas," S.W. Florida RPC,
         $1.00 per  copy.
3.26.12. "Analysis  of Urban Stormwater
         Runoff  and Combined Sewer Over-
         flows in  the Boston Metro Area,"
         Boston  MAPC, March 1978.
                                               11

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3.26.13.  "Basic Stormwater Management & Pol-    3.26.26.
         lution Abatement Ordinance," East
         Central Florida Regional Planning
         Council.
3.26.14.  "Bozeman Creek Urban Pollution         3.26.27.
         Study," Blue Ribbons of the Big Sky
         Country.
3.26.15.  "calibration of Stormwater Load Gen-   3.26.28.
         eration Model (STORM)"." S. Alabama
         RFC, April 1977.
3.26.16.  "Characteristics of Non-point Source   3.26.29.
         Pollution and Urban Runoff," S.E.
         Regional Planning & Economic Devel-
         opment Commission, Dec., 1975,  72
         pages.                                 3.26.30.
3.26.17.  "Consequences of a No-Action Alter-
         native on Urban Nonpoint Pollution
         in Southeast Michigan," Southeast
         Michigan Council of Governments,        3.26.31.
         February 1978, 49 pages.
3.26.18.  "Ellis Brett Pond Section 314 Appli-
         cation," Old Colony Planning Council,
         1976.
3.26.19.  "Inventory of Non-Domestic Dischar-    3.26.32.
         gers to the Wastewater Collection
         System in New Castle County., New      3.26.33.
         Castle Ccunty 208, December 1975.
3.26.20.  "Local Options for Controlling Pol-
         lution From Septic Tanks and Storm-
         water Runoff," Central Mass RFC,
         March 1977.
3.26.21.  "Modeling in Coastal Sussex County     3.26.34.
         for Nonpoint Source Pollution,"
         Coastal Sussex Water Quality Pro-
         gram, November 1977.                    3.26.35.
3.26.22.  "Methodological Procedures for Area-
         wide Non-Point Loading Estimation,
         E.E.A.," Old Colony Planning           3.26.36.
         Council,  1977.
3.26.23.  "Monitoring Nonpoint Source Pol-
         lution in Coastal Sussex County,"      3.26.37.
         Coastal Sussex Water Quality Pro-
         gram, November 1977.
3.26.24.  "Non-Point Estimates Analysis for      3.26.38.
         the City of Brockton, E.E.A.,"
         Old Colony Planning Council, 1976.
3.26.25.  "Nonpoint Source Pollution Control
         Needs, Little Rock Metro Area Urban
         Study, Pulaski & Saline Counties,
         Arkansas," Metroplan - Arkansas,
"Nonpoint Sources Pollution Po-
tential and List of Feasible
Control Measures," Phoenix Urban
Study. May 1977.
"Nonpoint Sources Report," Lower
Rio Grande Valley Regional Devel-
opment Commission.
"Possible Methods to Control Ur-
ban Runoff Pollution," Municipal-
ity of Anchorage, May 1978.
"Prev^ntative and Corrective Mea-
sures for Stormwater Pollution,"
Northeastern Illinois Planning
Commission, December, 1977.
"Quantitative Estimation of Urban
Stromwater Runoff Loadings to
Mobile Bay, Alabama," S. Alabama
RPC, October, 1977.
"Projections of Nonpoint Sources
and Urban Runoff," Southeastern
Regional Planning & Economic
Development Commission, Sept.,
1976, 71 pages.
"Rainfall Analysis of the OCPC
Area E.E.A.," Old Colony, 1976.
"Report on Facilities Planning
Update, Urban Runoff and Storm
Drainage, Sedimentation & Erosion,
and Sludge Disposal," Southern
Kennebec Valley RPC, September,
1976, 22 pages.
"Report on Nonpoint Source Pol-
lution," Greater Portland Council
of Governments, January, 1978.
"A Report on Perspective on
Stormwater Management," New Castle
County 208, August 1976.
"A Report & Perspective on Storm-,
water Management - Two Vclumes,"
New Castle County 208, Nov. 1976.
"Review of Management Options for
Control of Stormwater Runoff,"
Central Mass RPC, March 1977.
"Analysis of Stormwater Pollution
Control Management Options,"
Montachusett-Nashua Areawide WQMP,
1976, 50 pages.
                                              12

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3.26.39.  "Review of Management Options for      3.26.52.
         Control of Storawater Runoff,"
         Montachusett-Nashua Areawide WQMP
         1977, 66 pages.
3.26.40.  "Section 208 Stormwater Measurement
         Program Results, E.E.A.," Old Colony   3.26.53.
         Planning Council, 1977.
3.26.41.  "State of the Art of Water Pollution
         Control for Southeastern Wisconsin,
         Vol.  3 - Urban Stormwater Runoff,"     3.26.54.
         Southeast Wisconsin Regional Ping.
         Council, July 1977, 61 pages.
3.26.42.  "Stormwater Management," Ocean Coun-   3.26.55.
         ty Planning Board, March 1978, 157
         pages.
3.26.43.  "Stormwater Management Practices       3.26.56.
         Manual," East Central Florida Re-
         gional Planning Council.
3.26.44.  "Stormwater Management Procedures
         and Methods," Snohomish County Ping.   3.26.57.
         Department, September 1977, 273 pgs.
3.26.45.  "Stormwater Pollutant Generation       3.26.58.
         Functions," East Central Florida
         Regional Planning Council.             3.26.59.
3.26.46.  "Stormwater Quality Summary."
         New Castle County 208, September,      3.26.60.
         1975.
3.26.47.  "Structural and Non-Structural Tech-
         niques Summary for Management & Con-   3.26.61.
         trol of Stormwater Pollution," New
         Castle County 208, November 1975.
3.26.48.  "Summary of Responses to Stormwater    3.26.62.
         Management Questionnaire," Central
         Mass RFC, February 1977.
3.26.49.  "Surface Water Management: Interim     3.26.63.
         Report No.  1," Clark County 208,
         June 1977.
3.26.50.  "Toward Clean Water: A Program for
         Action," Old Colony Planning Council,
         1978.
3.26.51.  "Toward Clean Water: Alternatives
         for Action, Vol. 1, Draft Environ-
         mental Impact Assessment, Chapter
         6:  Urban Runoff/Construction & De-
         velopment," Old Colony Ping Council,
         1977.
"208 Report Vol. Ill Preventitive
Measures to Abate the Pollution of
Stormwater Runoff as Part of an
Areawide WQM Plan," Eastgate De-
velopment & Transportation Agency.
"Upstream Phosphours: Loadings
Attributable to Stormwater Runoff
(Blackstone River above UBWPAD)."
Central Mass RPC, March 1977.
"Urban Land Use Category: Pollutant
Loadings," East Central Florida Re-
gional Planning Council.
"Urban Nonpoint Methodology Report,'
Indiana Heartland Coordinating
Commission, August 1977, 178 pages.
"Urban Nonpoint Source Pollution
in GLS Region 5," GLS Region 5
Planning & Development Commission,
April 1978.
"Urban Runoff," Berkshire County
RFC, March 1976.
"Urban Runoff," Berkshire County
RPC, November 1976.
"Urban Runoff," Minnesota Pollution
Control Agency, May  1978.
"Urban Storm Runoff  Problems/An-
alysis," Erie & Niagara Counties
RPB, December 1977,  174 pages.
"Urban Stormwater Data on Residual
& Commercial Sampling Sites," S.
Alabama RPC, April 1977.
"208 Urban & Industrial Stormwater
Needs," Nassau Suffolk Regional
Ping. Board.
"Management Analysis and Alterna-
tives for Metropolitan Stormwater
Runoff," Northeast Michigan COG,
November 1977.
                                             13

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