Region  V Public Report
             September
          I




         Minnesota: The Outdoor Classroom

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news   briefs
news   briefs
news   briefs
                   Ira L  Whitman
   The Illinois  Environmental Protection  Agency  is
 sponsoring a  series of  seminars  to  explain recently
 adopted  air pollution control regulations and related
 construction  and  operating permit  procedures.  The
 seminars are largely of a general nature, with a portion
 devoted  to the specific industry for which the sessions
 are scheduled.

   All industry personnel interests in air pollution permits
 are invited to attend the  remaining seminars.  The
 schedule is as follows:

          PAPER AND ALLIED PRODUCTS
   October 6, 9:30 a.m., Centennial Building, Springfield
   October 13, 1 p.m., Field Museum of Natural History* ,
 Chicago


       STONE, CLAY AND GLASS PRODUCTS
  October 7, 9:30 a.m., Cetennial Building, Springfield
  October 14,9a.m., Field Museum of Natural History* ,
Chicago


                  INCINERATORS
   November  2,  9:30  a.m.,  Centennial  Building,
 Springfield
  November 6,  1  p.m., Field Museum of Natural
History*  , Chicago
                                                         ELECTRIC. GAS AND SANITARY SERVICES
                                                       November 3, 9:30 a.m., Centenial Building, Springfield

                                                       November  7,  1  p.m.,  Field  Museum  of  Natural
                                                     History* , Chicago
                      GAS AND OIL FIRED BOILERS
                            AND ALLOTHERS

              December  9,  9:30  a.m.,  Centennial  Building,
            Springfield

              December 16,  9 a.m.,  Field  Museum of Natural
            History*  , Chicago

              For information contact: Permit Section, Division of
            Air Pollution Control, Illinois Environmental Protection
            Agency, 2200 Churchill Road, Springfield, Illinois 62706 or
            217-525-2113.

              Governor John  Gilligan of  Ohio has appointed Ira L.
            Whitman  to head the new  Ohio Environmental Protec-
            tion Agency. Legislation creating the OEPA combines
            under a single authoritative and responsible unit the
            functions  and  programs which have  been  scattered
            through a number of state  departments, boards  and
            agencies.  The cabinet level department is expected to
            provide the state with a stronger tool with which to clean
            up, control and manage the  environment.

              Prior to his appointment as Director of OEPA, Whit-
            man served as  Deputy  Director  for Environmental
            Programs in  the  Ohio  Department  of Health.  Dr.
            Whitman  has also managed  and  directed research on
            environmental problems at Battelle Memorial Institute
            in Columbus and has served as a research associate and
            a  flood plain  management engineer with the Corps of
            Engineers.  After graduating from  Cooper  Union  and
            Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, Whitman went to earn
            a Ph. D. in Environmental Engineering from the Johns
            Hopkins University in 1968.

              With Whitman at its head,  OEPA  will have authority
            over air and water pollution, solid waste  disposal stan-
            dards, water planning and development, supervision of
            sewage treatment and public  water supply facilities, and
            approval  of plans for commercial airports.  All the
            powers previously held by the air and water pollution
            control boards have been transferred to the director of
            OEPA. In  addition, the director  will  receive  all
            regulatory  powers  over  solid  waste  management
            previously administered by the Public Health Council.

               In general  the director  will cooperate with govern-
            mental and private agencies, accept  grants,  obtain
            technical and  laboratory  services, establish advisory
            boards,  investigate and  research  environmental
            programs  and  disseminate  information  on  en-
            vironmental problems. More importantly, he may also
            issue modify or revoke any air or water pollution permit,
            certificate, or variance after  holding a public hearing on
            each specific  application.

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        news
briefs
news
briefs
news
  Judge George J. McMonagle, Common  Pleas Court
judge in Cleveland, was cited by the Cleveland Kiwanis
Club on August 3 for outstanding achievement toward
control of water pollution. He was honored for his land-
mark decision establishing  the  Cleveland  Regional
Sewer  Authority  and   "setting  a  precedent   for
establishing  means  through  court  proceedings  for
controlling pollution."
  On July 1 a state-wide burning ban became effective in
Minnesota. Opening burning of brush, trees, grass and
household refuse is allowed without a permit only in
                             townships  with a population of less than 2500. Open
                             burning is restricted when the population density is more
                             than 100 occupied dwelling units per square mile.
                               University of Minnesota  Soil Scientist  Charles  A.
                             Simkins  has  found that  a  well-nournished  rapidly
                             growing lawn can help reduce soil and water runoff and
                             reduce the pollution of rivers and lakes. Land areas with
                             good grass cover  reduce pollution from erosion and
                             runoff. In addition, the phosphorous used  in fertilizer
                             materials for lawns is held firmly in the soil and is not
                             lost unless the  soil itself is washed awav.
                                                   Recently,  EPA Administrator  William Ruckelshaus,
                                                   took a fact-finding tour of the Cuyahoga River. At /eft,
                                                   he is seen being interviewed by the press  offer fhe
                                                   river trip.  Later in  the  day,  he was taped for  a
                                                   Cleveland television program.

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  Reducing

 Region  V  Noise
                   by Brett Vallquet
  Through the actions of a summer noise intern program
sponsored by EPA's National Office of Noise Abatement
and Control, Region V is on its way to becoming less
noisy. Noise abatement projects undetaken include a
survey of the noise around O'Hare Airport, assistance to
state  governments  in  developing  effective  noise
programs, a youth environmental action program, and
responses to citizen noise complaints.

  On August 24 and 28, noise measurements were con-
 ducted  at  15  locations around  O'Hare Airport. The
 measurements   were  made  at  the  request  of
 Congressman Abner Mikva of Chicago who is currently
 sponsoring airport noise legislation. Prior to the survey,
 the  Environmental Protection Agency discussed the
 O'Hare noise problem with the Great Lakes Federal
 Aviation Authority Noise Abatement Officer,  Mr. Les
 Case. "The most promising action  for the immediate
 future", stated Mr. Case, "is for the airlines and airline
 pilots to institute a noise abatement landing procedure
 that would permit a higher approach elevation. Such a
 procedure has already been approved by the FAA." In
 anticipation of airline approval  for  a noise landing
 procedure, survey locations were chosen under landing
 patterns at varying distances from the airport. Noise
 data measured at these locations may be used at a future
 date to judge the effectiveness of new flight procedures.
 Copies of the survey data will be presented to the Federal
 Aviation Authority, Congressman Mikva's office, and
 other interested citizen groups.

  Illinois and Minnesota are both well on the way toward
 enacting noise limit for a broad category of noise sources
 and land uses.  Indiana, Wisconsin, Ohio, and Michigan,
 who are now only beginning to establish noise programs
 were each  sent  a  large  packet of noise  information
 designed to aid in establishing a framework for enabling
 legislation and future noise standards.

  In response to a request by the Model Cities Program,
 the Region V Public Affairs Office  participated in the
 formation of an environmental action group of the West
 Garfield Park  Urban Progress Center in Chicago. This
 group of high school students, known as the Youth for
 Environmental Action (YEA), expressed an interest in
 noise pollution problems existing within  their  neigh-
 borhoods. A training session was given in  which noise
 Brett Valiquet, summer noise intern, making aircraft
 noise measurements.
pollution problems and solutions were discussed, noise
measurement equipment was  demonstrated, and an
action  program  designed  for  their immediate  par-
ticipation was outlined. This action program requires the
youths to locate and describe specific noise problems in
their neighborhoods. The noise sources are subjectively
described and the loudness of the noise measured by a
speech interference noise test. The data is then screened
by West Garfield Personnel and a determination made as
to whether the noise problem falls within the jurisdiction
of the Chicago  Noise Ordinance. If so, an official noise
complaint is filed with Chicago Environmental Control.
A highlight of this youth program was the filming of the
noise  presentation and  neighborhood noise tests by a
crew producing a movie outlining environmental ac-
tivities in Region V. Each YEA member is now eagerly
awaiting his or her debut as an environmental movie
star.

  Other summer noise activities included a review of the
proposed Cook  County,  Illinois  noise  ordinances;
responding  to various citizen noise complaints; an in-
vestigation  of  noisy   nighttime  refrigerator  truck
deliveries to large food stores; and development of a
Region V capability to respond to future noise problems
by compilation of a  comprehensive noise information
file.

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Power    For   The    People
             (by Frank M.. Corrado)
  Shortly after 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday morning September
19,1972 a gavel began pounding on a wooden table in a
Chicago hotel room thus signalling the reopening of a two
year old debate among State and Federal officials. The
issue: how to control the millions of gallons of hot water
to be dumped into the near shore areas of Lake Michigan
by the late 1970's.
  The Lake Michigan enforcement conference's concern
touches on  one  important part  of the single most
significant issue ahead in the environmental movement -
- the energy crisis.
  The issue is simple: demand for power is rising, fuel to
generate power is decreasing. But the questions raised
and the side issues involved, like thermal pollution, make
this an exceeding complex problem.

  For example, Federal clean  air standards for 1975
require that sulfur oxides be removed. In many Midwest
states, there is not enough low-sulfur fuel available to
make the standards  achievable by this date and still
meet secondary standards.

  And conservationists and State officials -  in Min-
nesota, for example, have challenged safety factors in
construction of nuclear generating plants.

  But then you return back to  the main problem: the
increasing demand, especially  in summer and winter
peak periods.

  The issue also involves oil import quotas, problems in
developing natural gas fields, and how much increased
emphasis should we put in alternate generating sources:
like magnetohydrohynamics,  fusion and breeder
reactors.

  The Conservation Foundation, in a recent newsletter,
touched on some ideas for cutting down on consumption,
to hold down the rising demand. Some  of the ideas in-
cluded: recycling materials that consume lots of energy,
like aluminum; generating heat from municipal refuse;
increasing rapid  transit and more efficient home con-
sumption through better window insulation, for example.

  It does appear though, that one of the side issues in this
energy crisis is headed for solution. At  least at  Detroit
Edison, a commendable start has been made towards
locating power plants where they will have the least
harmful effects on the aquatic environment around them.
  This was the whole problem behind the Federal - State
concern on Lake  Michigan. Here was a large source of
available cooling water for plants that use millions of
gallons per hour for cooling. And the power companies
took advantage of it.  Had their plans  included public
disclosure back in the drawing board stage, much of the
debate still going on would have been erased, some of the
plants might have located inland.
  And yet Detroit Edison, like so many other companies,
is a bad guy today and a good guy tomorrow and then
maybe a bad guy the day after that. During a recent
"good-guy"  phase they announced a billion dollar ex-
pansion program near Monroe, Michigan and in north-
central St. Clair County that will add three million kws.
of power. The unusual point was that the company said it
was not locked into an unalterable course and that the
plans are being announced early to give the  public a
chance to have their say early. The projects will have on-
site closed-cycle cooling systems. The plants  are, ac-
cording to the company, going to be part of a  total en-
vironmental site plan for these areas.

  Said William Meese, President of Detroit Edison, "it's
just good business and it's company policy now. For our
new Fermi plant site we went all out to find a site that we
could improve.  We ended up  with some marginal land
that farmers were happy to sell. When we're  done the
company will be willing to give the land surrounding the
plant for a park. I'm proud of what we've done there. It's
the only way to go. This environmental movement will
not go away. The course of action we have laid out is not
cynical. Our motto is that if we act now, we can cope."

  Another issue that has bothered conservationists has
been advertising by the power industry, which  they say
complains on one hand of imminent brown  outs and
possible peak black outs and  on the other hand berates
conservationists for fighting against needed new power
plants.
  In April of '72 the Michigan public utilities commission
ordered  Detroit Edison  Co. to make stockholders, not
consumers, pay for ads, explaining the firm's request for
                         Please turn to last page
  William Meese, president of Detroit Edison,
  act now, we can cope."
.. If we

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   GOOD    NEWS
  The Norfolk and Western Railway Company has reported that
on June 1 27,000 employees, with cooperation of labor leaders,
worked shoulder-to-shoulder to remove tons of debris from the
company's rights-of-way and facilities, and otherwise spruce up
their  8,000-mile railroad. Company President J.P. Fishwick
labeled the project as one answer to the pollution problem and
expressed hope that the massive one-day effort would develop
habits to keep the railroad clean. Norfolk and Western said it is
spending $4.5 million for pollution control projects now under
way or budgeted for this year.
  Significant advances occurred in the fight against pollution of
Illinois waters in 1971, according to the Illinois EPA 1971 Water
Quality Network Summary of Data. A comprehensive collection
of water quality tests results from EPA's statewide network, the
two-volume report summarizes  laboratory  results on water
taken from 464 sampling stations  in 1971.  The Illinois EPA
Division of Water Pollution control increased the number of 1971
sampling locations by 101 from the 1970 total of 363. Further
expansion of the sampling network has brought the total of 658
stations for 1972.
  North Central Airlines has been cited for its "initiative and
leadership in the field of  aircraft noise abatement"  by the
National Organization to Insure a Sound-controlled environment
(NOISE).  In  awarding the airline its distinguished  service
citation, NOISE noted that new take - off procedures developed
by North Central resulted in a substantial noise reduction from
jets.
  The topic of ecology is the cover theme for this year's Illinois
Bell telephone directories that are being distributed to homes
and businesses in the Bensenville area. G.D. Fitzpatrick, Illinois
Bell manager in Elmhurst, said the directory cover, featuring a
scene of a grove of trees and a quote from the late Adlai E.
Stevenson, "should serve as a year-long reminder of  the en-
vironmental protection efforts all of us should be making." He
pointed out that one of Illinois Bell's ecology contributions is
collecting and returning old directories to a recycling  mill in
Wisconsin  where they are reprocessed into a variety  of soft
paper products.
  Madison, Wis.,  has developed a successful  program  for
recycling its old newspapers, at a level of over 2,800 tons per
year, and the state's capital city is ready to serve as an example
to other cities interested in similar projects, according to  the
Appleton, Wis., Post-Crescent. The program was started four
years ago, and today the city is collecting about 40 percent of the
newspapers in the city, considerably above the national average
of 23 per cent. Madison Public Works Director Robert Duszynski
considers having  a  ready market  for  the  paper  "a triple
priority. You've got to have industry involved in this; if you
haven't, forget it."
  The Kirsh Foundry of Madison, Wis., has installed a  "smoke
scrubber" which will  wash smoke from its  main stack three
times, changing the smoke from a dark brown to a white plum
containing clean air plus  condensed water vapor, according to
the Beaver Dam,  Wis., Citizen. Company vice  president Jim
Kirsh explained that the  installation was necessary to comply
with the new state pollution abatement laws.


  Illinois is ahead of the  Federal government in the control of
DDT, according to The Farmers' Weekly Review. The Review
quotes University of Illinois and Natural History Survey en-
tomologists as saying the EPA ban on the use of DDT, except for
certain specified uses, will have no effect on Illinois agriculture.

As early as 1949, University of Illinois entomologists discon-
tinued recommending DDT for use on dairy cattle and in dairy
barns. During  the  1950's,  other  less  persistent  materials
replaced DDT.  The  last commercial use of DDT in Illinois,
according to the Review, was in 1964 for control of European
corn borer and corn ear worm on sweetcorn. On Jan. 1,1970, the
    EPA employees In  the Chicago  area will have an
 opportunity to ride new oir conditioned buses  which,
 according to  the Chicago Transit  Authority, are  en-
 vironmentally,  aesthetically, and mechanically  the
 latest in  the  United States.

Interagency Committee on Pesticides, composed of directors of
the departments of agriculture, conservation,  public health,
transportation, EPA, Illinois Natural History Survey and  the
University  of Illinois College of Agriculture, took  the  same
action  taken recently by the Federal EPA.


  Consolidated Papers,  Inc., recently dedicated  a $630,000
pollution control plant at Stevens Point, Wis. At the ceremonies,
the corporation's chairman,  George  W. Mead  II,  noted that
another $5 million pollution control plant was already on  the
drawing boards. The dedication was attended by Gov. Patrick
Lucey.


  The Wisconsin Power and Light Co. has installed two elec-
trostatic precipitators at its Rock River Generating Station at a
cost of $2.6 million for the purpose of curbing a volumnious flow
of ash that used to darken the clouds billowing from the plant's
twin stacks. Plant  Manager Jim Dudley, was quoted by  the
Beloit, Wis.,  Daily News as saying:  "The government will
require all generating stations to have precipitators by 1973, but
we're the first in the state to have them, and we started our
plans before there were any standards."


 The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency has  reported
an imporvement in  the quality of Illinois air statewide in 1971
over 1970.  Specific gains were measured in reduction of  air
pollution in the Chicago, Peoria, and East St. Louis metropolitan
areas, according to Dr. John J.  Roberts, manager of Illinois
EPA's division of Air Pollution Control. The conclusions are

                                    More on last page

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Minnesota Story
      Getting   Inside   The   Outside
  When his eyes wander outside the classroom window
 one morning this fall at Zachary Lane School outside
 Minneapolis, Johnny probably won't get bawled out.
  Matter  of fact, a teacher may have directed his at-
 tention out there to an atrium which has been turned into
 an outdoor learning center by students, teachers and
 parents.
  The architect who designed Zachary Lane never  en-
visioned that this 30* x 30' area would be turned into
natural habitat, complete with pond, shrubbery, trees
and  a selection of miscellaneous  ducks, pheasants,
salamanders and snakes.
  "When a student brings an animal to the center," says
social studies teacher Myrna Marofsky, "he has to fill
out a form and log in how he cares for the animal and he
must  know   about  feeding  and  other  habitat
requirements."

  Ms.  Myrofsky and fellow teacher Jim Arnold are but
two of thousands of teachers in the midwest who are
continuing this fall to experiment with new techniques in
transmitting  new environmental  attitudes  to school
children.

  "I think it's more important to get the kids personally
involved in changing attitudes,"  says Ms. Myrofsky.
"You  just can't get them cleaning up shopping centers
and things like that."

  Says Arnold:  "Some of these kids can give you won-
derful oratory  on the environment and  the evils of
pollution - and they are the same ones who walk down
the school corridors throwing  junk on the floor. They
don't do it on purpose, they're just not aware. They think
of pollution only as 'big  businesses' or 'power com-
panies'. But they have to look at themselves first,  and
their own yard, their parents,  their neighborhood."

  Perhaps more significant for Zachary Lane and other
Midwestern  schools  is  the   development  of   new
curriculum materials to go along with a trend towards
getting outside  the classroom. At Zachary Lane much
time has gone into the development of a fourth grade
social studies curriculum  on  the environment. Four
Robbinsdale  area school district teachers,  including
Zachary Lane's Myrofsky, planned a variety of activities
for fourth  grade level students, prepared a work book
and teachers  guide all of which are being  used  in-
creasingly by  local teachers.
  Among the projects:
    * An electrical appliance survey for each student
  to make at home. It includes a listing of kinds and
  amounts and use each gadget gets and what hours
  it's used. Point here: can use be staggered?

    * A survey of television advertising.

    * Traffic counting on certain  roads at various
  times of the day.

    * Analysis of  neighborhood  environmental
  problems: like noise, congestion, land use.

    * A scavenger hunt where points are awarded for
  collecting returnable bottles  and  deducted  for
  collecting throwaways, etc.

  Finally, says Ms. Marofsky, there is  the last chapter
where students have to design a utopia, if that's possible.
The  teaching  of  environmental  problems  to  young
children presents a special problem, says Ms. Myrofsky.

 "As we continued to study news clippings and discuss
 problems and solutions," she said, "the children became
 aware  that there are more problems remaining than
 have been solved,  and the children  reported  having
 nightmares and  became somewhat depressed." The
 doomsday aspect, she said, was removed. "It was just
 too traumatic - both for the kids and me."

  The teachers at Zachary Lane spent quite a bit of time
 this summer  thinking  out   and planning  new  en-
 vironmental projects for the fall. This seemed to be  a
 trend throughout EPA's Region V during vacation-time.
                            Please turn to page  J'

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                    EPA   PROGRAM   NOTES
              Message From Mayo

  I was pleased to be in Lansing, Mich., Sept. 11 to represent
EPA in signing a landmark inter-governmental pilot industrial
waste  water pollution control agreement with the Michigan
Water  Resources Commission. The agreement is designed to
strengthen  Federal-State  efforts to control industrial waste
discharged into the waters of Michigan.

   Michigan has been one  of  the  nation's  leaders  in  en-
 vironmental protection efforts, and with this agreement, the
 State demonstrates that it plans to remain in the environmental
 protection  vanguard.


  As many of you already know, the Federal Government was
enjoined last December from issuing permits to companies for
the discharge of industrial wastes into navigable waters or their
tributaries.
  The U.S. Senate and House of Representatives have both
passed amendments to the Federal Water Pollution Control Act
which would provide for  a  national permit  system for con-
trolling  direct  industrial waste discharges. The amendments
are currently before a joint conference committee to resolve
differences.

  The Federal EPA  has continued to  process  permit  ap-
plications from industrial dischargers in the event that the in-
junction is lifted and, in keeping with its mandate to abate water
 John  C.  Woodford,  chairman  of the Michigan Water
 Resources Commission, looks on as Francis T. Mayo,
 left, and Ralph  Purdy, executive secretary of the
 Water Resources Commission, sign the agreement.
pollution throughout the nation, is currently seeking voluntary
abatement commitments from industries.
  The  agreement furthers the aim  of  obtaining voluntary
abatement commitments from  industrial dischargers because,
under it, EPA and the MWRC will work jointly to secure such
commitments. One of the major thrusts of the agreement is to
maximize State participation in obtaining voluntary abatement
commitments.

  The agreement, which'affects 129 dischargers, calls for:

  *As a minimum  level of control, the application of the best
practicable control  technology currently available.
  * A greater degree of control where such higher level  of
 control is necessary to meet water quality standards.

   * That a discharger not applying the level of control required
 shall enter upon a program to attain such level of control.

   *Thal such a program  shall provide a definite schedule,
 including interim dates, for achieving the requisite level  of
 control in the shortest reasonable time and in no case later than
 January  1, 1976.

  EPA has been developing guidance material for a number  of
 industrial categories,  reflecting  effluent levels  attainable
 through  the application of  the  best practicable  control
 technology. The five industrial categories already completed
 are pulp and paper, steel, beet sugar, canning and frozen fruits
 and  vegetables, and meat packing.
 New Planning Chief

  Harlan D. Hirt has been appointed Chief of the Planning
Branch of the Air and Water Programs Division of Region V,
according to R J. Schneider, Director of the AWP Division. Hirt
succeeds C.R. Ownbey  who has been appointed  Ohio River
Basin Coordinator for Region V. "Mr. Hirt brings to his new
position a broad background of experience in  water quality
management  planning and water  resource planning," said
Schneider. Hirt has been associated with Region V's planning
activities for the past five years, most recently as Deputy Chief
of the Branch.


 Environmental Education  Workshop

  More than 100 students and educators from northern Illinois
and southern  Wisconsin secondary schools are scheduled to
meet at George Williams College Camp in Lake Geneva, Wis.,
for three days, Oct. 6-8, to develop environmental concern into
constructive action.

  The goal of the program is to provide training in the principles
and techniques of environmental problem solving. Using a local
problem as an example, the workshop will give  participants
experience  in monitoring pollution sources, understanding the
structure and function of  the  EPA and other  agencies with
jurisdiction, learning about legislative processes, surveying and
mobilizing school-community involvement, and contacting local
organizations  and governments.


 Hearing Held

  An informal hearing on a 180-day notice issued  by Region V
 against the Gary, Inc., Sanitary District for violation of Federal
 - State water quality standards was held OB Sept. 7 at Gary.

  The Gary Sanitary  District has been  charged with five
violations of water quality standards : (1) Failure  to construct
advanced waste treatment facilities:  (2) Failure to control
pollution of storm and combined sewer overflow; (3) Failure to
provide disinfection of storm and combined sewer overflow; (4)
Failure to provide continuous disinfection of waste treatment
plant effluents throughout the year; (5) Failure to construct and
operate phosphorus reduction facilities in order to achieve 80
percent reduction in total phosphorus discharges.

  The purpose of the hearing was  to  outline the  pollution
problems which led to the issuance of the 180-day notices and to
determine what necessary remedial action can voluntarily be
taken by each  of  the accused to satisfactorily  resolve the
situation.

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 LOCAL   AND   NATIONAL
Violation Notices  Issued

  Region V has issued 180-day notices against Wayne County,
Mich., and  the City of Riverview, Mich., for  violation of
federally approved water quality standards and announced the
scheduling of joint hearings with the Michigan Water Resources
Commission for the two communities. The Federal-State action
will seek effective and timely abatement schedules to  bring the
two communities'  discharges into compliance with the water
standards.

  In the case of Wayne County, EPA and the Michigan Water
Resources Commission  have  charged  that its Wayndotte
Municipal Sewage Treatment Plant has failed to meet the im-
plementation  schedule  and effluent loading  requirements
contained in the state adopted and federally approved Interstate
Water Quality  Standards which called for completion of con-
struction of secondary treatment facilities by Nov. 1, 1970.

  The City of Riverview is charged with dumping 2.9 million
gallons per day of inadequately treated effluent from its sewage
treatment plant into the Trenton Channel of the Detroit River in
violation of state adopted and federally approved water quality
standards.

  An informal, joint Federal-State public hearing for the pur-
pose of outlining the pollution problem and ascertaining what
necessary remedial action may be taken on a voluntary basis
has been scheduled at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 17, for Wayne
County and 1:30 p.m. for Riverview at the Holiday Inn-Taylor,
located at the junction of Eureka Road and Interstate  Highway
75.

Referral To Justice

  EPA Region  V Administrator Francis T. Mayo has referred to
the y.S. Department of Justice a request for prosecution of the
City of Whiting, Inc., for violation of State and Federal water
quality standards. In his request to the Department of Justice,
Mayo alleged  that the  City of  Whiting has failed  to abate
pollution  resulting from the discharge of  solid and liquid
municpal wastes from the city's combined  storm water and
sewage outlets into the  waters  of Lake Michigan.

  "This discharge," said Mayo, "reduces the quality of the
waters of  Lake Michigan below the Federally approved water
quality standards promulgated by the State of Indiana  pursuant
to the Federal Water Pollution Control Act." In October of 1971,
Whiting was served a 180-day notice by EPA for violation of
State and Federal water quality standards. Whiting is the first
municipality in EPA's Region V to be referred to the Justice
Department for suit following expiration of a 180-day notice.
Lake Michigan Enforcement Conference

  The fourth session of the Lake Michigan Enforcement Con-
ference designed to examine the subject of pollution of Lake
Michigan and its tributary basin in the states of Michigan,
Indiana, Illinois, and Wisconsin, was held Sept. 19-21 at  the
Sherman House in Chicago, 111.

  The purpose of the session was to review established remedial
programs and implementation schedules for the abatement of
the pollution of Lake Michigan and  to recommend  additional
action or improved programs as may be necessary. The parties
to the conference were the Illinois Environmental Protection
Agency,  the Michigan Water  Resources Commission,  the
Wisconsin  Department  of Natural  Resources,  the  Indaian
Stream Pollution Control Board, and the EPA.

  Items on the agenda included: review of status of compliance
of Federal, State, municipal and industrial waste dischargers
into the lake; report of the Phosphorus Technical Committee;
report of the Pesticides Committee; a chlorides report; and the
problem of thermal pollution with reports from each state in-
volved.


 Environmental Information  Symposium

  EPA  sponsored  a  National  Environmental  Information
Symposium enetitled "Agenda  for Progress" in Cincinnati,
Ohio, Sept. 24-27. Midwest Regional Administrator Francis T.
Mayo said,  "The symposium was primarily designed for the
user of environmental information, including citizens, govern-
ment  officials and businessmen. It should provide a  better
understanding of what information is  available, where it is
located and how it can be obtained."
  For purposes of the symposium, environmental information
was divided into four groups: scientific and technical; legal,
legislative and  regulatory; management and planning; and
socio-economic.  Information services covered in each  of the
groups were information and data centers, publications, and
document services and referral activities.
  Cincinnati  is the site of an EPA National Environmental
Research Center, which hs been designated as the Central
Scientific and Technical facility with  the Agency's  library
system.

  EPA Releases Funds
  EPA has released $330,000 for the remaining five months of
the 1972 calendar year to the City of Chicago for its air pollution
control program as a result of a July 28 amendment to the
Illinois air  implementation plan, it has been announced  by
Region V Administrator Francis T. Mayo. The amendment to
the Illinois plan reflects an agreement between the Illinois EPA
and the City of Chicago on  a mutually supportive program on
construction and operating permits for air emission sources in
the city.
  Mayo noted that although the city had originally  requested
$485,457 for the remaining five months of the 1972 calendar year,
the entire request could not be honored because of limited
Federal funds available. "However," he added, "the total 1972
calendar grant  of $826,202 is  substantially larger than the
previous year's  grant which totaled $712,000."

  Division Director Named

  A specialist in the physical aspects of thermal pollution, Dr.
 Robert W. Zeller, has been named Director of the Region V
 Surveillance and Analysis Division.

  The appointment was announced by Region V Administrator
 Francis T.  Mayo who  said, "Bob Zeller  brings  to EPA's
 technical support programs an excellent background in both the
 technical and administrative areas of environmental control.
 He will be very  valuable to our  Midwest operation with our in-
 creasing need for strong  technical backup  for enforcement
 activities."

  Zeller, who  most  recently  served as Chief of the Water
 Programs  Branch for EPA's  Northwest Region in Seattle,
 Wash., will be in charge of Region V's five district offices in
 Chicago, Minneapolis, Cleveland, Detroit and Evansville, Ind.
 He also will provide overall guidance for Environmental Impact
 Statement activities, oil spills  and other field activities.

                    More program notes on last page

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    YOURS   FOR   THE   ASKING
                        Non-Technical Publications Available From EPA
 Teachers
 Needed: Clean Water
 Needed: Clean Air
 Noise and You
 Man and His Endangered World
General
Toward a New Environmental Ethic
Environmental Protection   1971 (EPA Anniversary
     report)
The Mess We're In - Ranger Rick's Nature Magazine
Bibliography  Books on the Environment
71 Things You Can Do to Stop Pollution
Can The U.S. Win The War Against Pollution?
Special Interest
Mission  5000  A Citizens'  Solid Waste  Management
     Project
Grant Assistance Programs of the EPA
Information on Rapid Tax Amortization
Noise
Noise and Transportation
Noise in the Environment
Unwanted By-Product of Modern Life
The Ultimate Insult
EPA's Noise Abatement Program
Radiation
Nuclear Power Plants Q. & A.
Never Do Harm
Solid Waste
Solid Waste - It Won't Go Away
Safe and Sanitary Home Refuse Storage
Sanitary Landfill.  .  .  An Answer  to a  Community
     Problem; a Route to a Community Asset
Sanitary Landfill Facts
The Solid Waste Disposal Act
The Solid Waste Glossary
EPA's Office of Solid Waste Management Program
The Role of Packaging In Solid Waste Management 1966
     to 1976
Air Pollution  The Facts
Air Quality Criteria for Carbon Monoxide, Summary and
      Conclusions
Air Quality  Criteria  for  Photochemical  Oxidants,
      Summary and Conclusions
The Clean Air Act, December 1970

Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans
      Federal Register
      July 27, 1972 Volume 37 Number 145

Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plants
      Federal Register
      May  31, 1972 Volume 37 Number 105
State Plans for Implementation of National Ambient Air
      Quality Standards
  Federal Register June 14, 1972 Volume 37 Number 115
 Water Pollution
 What You Can Do About Water Pollution
 Clean Water for the 1970's
 Federal Guidelines, Design Operation and Maintenance
      of Waste Water
 Treatment Facilities, September 1970
 Water Quality Standards: Better Water for America
 A Primer on Waste Water Treatment
 Our Troubled Waters: The Fight Against Water Pollution
 Heat Can Hurt - Better Water for America
 A Critical Study of the Great Lakes
 Who Owns the Water?
 A Small Oil Spill
 Standards Must be Enforced
 Clean Water: It's Up To You
 The Water Pollution Control Act
 Fish Kills Caused by Pollution in 1970

 Bumper Stickers and.Decals
 Protect Our Environment
 I Can Save The Earth
 Jacket No. 456-920 April 1972
 Jacket No. 456-922 April 1972
 Jacket No. 456-921 April 1972
Air Pollution
Citizen Role in Implementation of Clean Air Standards
Air Pollution Episodes - A Citizen Handbook
Take Three Steps to Clean Air (PHS)
A citizen's Guide to Clean Air
  A new film brochure is now available describing free
loan environmental films available from Region V EPA.
The brochure may be obtained by contacting the Office of
Public Affairs, EPA, One North Wacker Drive, Chicago,
Illinois 60606 or calling 312-353-5800.

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           Achieving the goal of a clean and healthy environment
           must ^ done by us a'l • by every American.
           We ^an reac^ th?1 goal in *'s decatle
           And in reaching it we can trigger a chain reaction of
           confidence and hope that will help us to achieve
           all of our great goals for the seventies.
    MHtl iT»TtS EKVWOKMtimu PHOTf CTWK AGOICV
                                                     Left; one of a series of posters available from E.P.A.
                                                     Above: Deco/s. Be/ow: Bumper stickers. A// of these
                                                     materials may be obtoined from the Office of Public
                                                     Affo/'rs,  One  North  Wocker  Drive, Chicago,  Illinois
                                                     60606. Reasonable requests, pi ease I
                                                            protect  our
                                                            environment
Getting Inside the Outside  Con't.
Here is just a small sample  of some activities that went
on this summer in the region:
    * In Bemidji, Minnesota, an Upward Bound class
  this summer studied the different ways  recycled
  materials can be used.

    * In Ripon, Wisconsin a summer school course
  offered to eighth and ninth grade students included a
  series of nine field trips to points of natural  interest.

    *At the  University of  Wisconsin's Green  Bay
  campus  senior Girl Scouts, high school youths and
  adult leaders met for two weeks this summer  to
  study environmental deterioration. On the schedule
  were an environmental play, games and roleplaying,
  films, multi-media and light  shows, field  trips and
  outdoor  recreatonal activities.

    * In late July a tentative environmental education
  plan for Michigan was discussed at a special state-
  wide conference in Lansing.  The points of view of
  many segments of the state community were sought.

    * In August, 32 students in the Watertown Unified
  School Distirct in Watertown, Wisconsin attended a
  week-long  environmental study  at  a camp  near
  Ashland. The purpose of the camp visit was to study
  environmental  conditions  of  Northern Wisconsin
  regarding   plant,  animal  and  water  conditions.
  Projects included succession study, spring study,
  fish population and migration, water analysis, insect
  population and larvae study and  similar projects.

     * During August, 20 junior college teachers, who
  plan to set up environmental education programs for
  65 thousand students  at six southeastern  Michigan
  community colleges,  began a five week  intensive
 training program  at  Wayne State University  in
 Detroit.

    *In Lafayette, Indiana area, 20 South Newton high
 school students participated in a three-week course
 in Environmental Biology. Among the topics of these
 special program were soils, exposed coal slams, a
 cave, wildlife management, conservation practices,
 public  relations, electricity  production,  sewage
 disposal, natural history and  legislative  procedure.

    *In  late July  192  teachers  attended four en-
 vironmental seminars at the Trees for  Tomorrow
 Center near  Wausau, Wisconsin. The one-week
 session focused on social studies in relation to the
 environment.  In  addition there  was a profile of a
 northern  Wisconsin  community's approach  to
 solving solid waste problems.
This sign wos erected by students  to protect newly
planted trees from snowmobi/es.

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             1. In this first exercise, students should map their travels on
             this sheet for two days. Then they should ask how many
             trips were taken by car? by bike? by foot? Why the dif-
             ference?  Where might the busy streets in the community
             be? Guess where' the cars might be going?
                          MAPPING TRIPS RECORD SHEET
                                                                         N

                                                                         S
       LEGEND •

Transportation Line
     on foot
        bike
        car
        bus
        train, plane.
            DIRECTIONS

Decide on the approximate distance
of each trip, and put an X at your
destination.  Connect the X to your
home with a 'colored line indicating
the type of transportation you used.

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               INNER CITY NOISE, SOLID WASTE


                AND AIR POLLUTION SURVEYS


                   2. Here are the forms used by Youth For Environmental
                   Action (Y.E.A.) West Garfield in Chicago for surveying
                   inner-city/ neighborhoods.  The forms,  put together by
                   Region V Office of Public Affairs and the Chicago Dept of
                   Streets and Sanitation, are filled out by inner-city students
                   and turned over to municipal authorities for action.


                                    Y.E.A.

             West Garfield Youth Development, 3952 W. Jackson, Chicago
 Date:	Name:


   Address:	
      Business:     •	Apt:	House:
PROBLEMS:

  ABANDONED AUTOS

                                           (on street	)
         Address:	/ u  .                             .
                 	                      (off street	)


         Make:	Color:	Year:	
  VACANT LOTS


         Address:,
         Kind of Bulk Trash:.




 LITTER AND GARBAGE

         Streets	

         Alleys	

         Yards	
         Parkway.


         Other	

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LITTER BASKETS
  Filled
  Need at:

      Address:
Broken Down.
Turned Over.
STREETS
       Clean
                     Dirty
ABANDONED BUILDING
      Address:
AIR  (Use Ringleman Chart)
    Percent:
   Any burning
      Address: _
       V
   Smokestack
      Address: _
                  Time:
 NOISE:
               dB Level

                 100
                  90
                  80
                  70
                  60
                  50
                          Test (at noisiest part)

                         Shout in ear
                         Shout at 2 feet
                         Talk very loud at 2 feet
                         Talk loud at 2 feet
                         Talk loud at 4 feet
                         Talk normal at  12  feet

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OTHER  DANGERS:
MY REMARKS:
                                                                                        \
 OFFICE  USE
               Date Referred:

               Unit Number:  .
               Supervisor:	
                                                               SMOKE  CHART
             INSTRUCTIONS
    Hold the chart at arm's length. Look through the
  hole at the smoke rising from the stack.
    Avoid looking toward the sun. The background
  immediately  beyond  the smoke plume should be
  clear  of buildings or dark objects.  Your line  of
  sight should  be at right angles to  the direction of
  smoke travel, and your position not  less  than 100
  feet or more than ]A mile from the stack.
    Compare the smoke with the chart to determine
  the sector  [marked from "No. 1-20% dense" to "No.
  5-100% dense") which most nearly corresponds to
  the shade or  density of the smoke.
                                                       Percentage figure refers to amount light is reduced
                                                       by  smoke density — Based on  the Ringelmann
                                                       Smoke Chart, U.S. Bureau of Mines Information
                                                       Circular 8333  dated May 1967,  giving graduated
                                                       shades of gray.

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 Power for The People Con't.
 a rate hike and ordered the company to give a higher
 percentage increase to larger customers who pay less
 per kilowatt hour than small customers.

   The big issue with conservationists at this point now is
 energy conservation. Some industry spokesmen say that
 advertising stimulates interest in appliances which are
 used in off-peak or normal low use  hours.

  But the biggest problem facing the power industry is
not  so  much  pressure from  conservationists at the
moment,  but the exceedingly complex process that has
been seemingly thrown-up in their path by State and
Federal licensing agencies.

   And, here's a closing thought; a recent report on the
 North Central Power Study Phase I Report indicates that
 "further development of the vast coal field of the North
 Central Region of the U.S. is almost a certainty." The
 report concluded  that massive coal-fueled plants in the
 North Central states would be able to provide 35 years of
 plant operation. This would overshadow any develop-
 ment in the Southwest Four Corners Area.
Good News Con'f. From  Pope 6

drawn from a summary of the 1971 Annual Report on Air Quality
in Illinois.

 The Otter Tail Power Company has  installed  electrostatic
precipitators which remove over 99 per cent of the particulate
matter from stack gases at its Hoot Lake Generating Station at
Fergus Falls, Minn. The precipitators  exceed all applicalbe
State and  Federal  standards and replace mechanical  dust
collectors installed when the plant was  built.
  Visitors gathered recently in Fulton County, Illinois
for the Dedication of the Metropolitan Sanitary District
of Greater Chicago's new sludge land disposal site.
The plan, first conceived by the district nearly six
years ago co//s  for  disposing  of sludge, the  solid
materials from treated sewage, as a liquid fertilizer,
in an area that has  been heavily strip-mined.
REGION V PUBLIC REPORT is published monthly by the
Office of Public Affairs, Region V Environmental Protection
Agency at  One  North Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60606
for distribution  in the states of the Region (Illinois, Indiana,
Ohio, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan.)

Regional Administrator	Francis T. Mayo
Director of Public Affairs	Frank M. Corrado
Editor	Helen P. Stan-
Art Director	Ann N. Hooe
   FROM:
   Office of Public Affairs
   United States Environmental Protection Agency
   One North Wacker Drive
   Chicago, Illinois 60606
      POSTAGE AND FEES PAID

 ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
                                                                        EPA-335
                                TO:
                                                                           U.S Environmental Protection Agency
                                                                                   Region 5 Library
                                                                            77 W. Jackson Blvd. (PL-16J)
                                                                              Chicago, IL 60604-3507

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