Public Report
       > P
    The Mississippi K: er gets a
    Dt .it jH-'ntio-1 'h^ si !
        Pages 7 through 9
                       •••'
        Mike LaVelle s/ngs
       fhe 6/ue Collar Blues
              Page 4

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                       Mobilizing
                              in
                          Duluth
  DULUTH - June 26—As the Region V Public Report
went  to press, over 2 dozen regional staff specialists
were  continuing field operations efforts here following
the discovery of  asbestos-like fibers  in  the  Duluth
water supply.
  This followed  discovery by  EPA staffers from  the
National  Water Quality Lab in Duluth of high con-
centrations of the fibers in the drinking water supply of
Duluth and several  communities  on  the  Minnesota
shore of  Lake Superior.
  The source  of  the  fibers  was believed  to  be  the
discharge of (aconite tailings by Reserve Mining Com-
pany  of Silver Bay. Minnesota.
  EPA.  in  announcing the  findings, said  it felt  that
prudence dictated that an alternative water source of
drinking  water be  found for  very young children.
though no conclusive evidence had been found to show
that  the  drinking water was unfit for human  con-
sumption.
  To get  further information on the problem, EPA con-
tracted with Dr. Irving Selikoff of the Mt Sinai Hospital
in New York City to determine within 60 days the ac-
cumulation  of  fibers in the tissue  of area  residents.
  Selikoff was looking into the effects of the drinking
water over  the last  17 years on human tissue, since
there  is little  past data on  the effects of water-borne
asbestos on  human health. Most previous data has dealt
with air emissions of asbestos. Dr. Selikoffs report is
expected in Jnly.
  I was asked by Russell Train, Chairman of the Coun-
cil on Environmental Quality to direct the Federal ef-
forts in Duluth. Mr. Train was appointed by  the White
House to oversee the Duluth problem.
  Since June  15 Region V has  been running  a  field
operations center in Duluth to coordinate air and water
sampling in the area and working with state and  local
officials to determine possible alternate water supplies.
  The  discovery of the asbestos-like  fibers  in  the
Duluth drinking water was made by Drs. Philip Cook
and  Gary Glass who were  working with National
Water  Quality Lab Director Donald Mount on a  pen-
ding EPA suit  against Reserve Mining Company  filed
last year and  scheduled for trial Aug.  1.
—Francis T. Mayo
Region V Administrator
Ecology    Winners!
  Forty-one high school ecology clubs from as  many
states  have been  named national  winners in  the
Ecology Council of America's (ECO America) search
for  top youth environmental programs in the country.
  The  competition  is  sponsored  by Keep America
Beautiful,  Inc.,  and  the Pepsi-Cola Co.
  School representatives from the  41 schools  were to
meet in New York at the end of |une, where the three
grand prizes were to be awarded from among the 41
finalists.
  Here are the Region V winners:
  Oak  Park and River Forest  High  School Pollution
Control  Center, Oak  Park, 111. Fort Wayne. Indiana's
Elmhurst Senior High School  Ecology Class. The LIFE
Ecology Club. Lawton  Community Schools, Lawton.
Mich. Greenway High School  Ecology Club, Coleraine.
Minn. Montgomery County Joint Vocational School En-
vironmental Science  Club, Clayton,  Ohio,  and  the
Chetek High School Ecology  Club, Chetek, Wis.
  Not  all  kids get  out  of school  for  the  summer.
Chicago's  Shedd  Aquarium  and  Field  Museum of
Natural History are conducting two, four-week ecology
courses for high school students.  One began in June.
and the second will begin July 30 and end August 24.
  The  classes will  meet at  the aquarium among the
fishes,  a good environment to learn about "Living with
Lake Michigan" which is what the course is about. The
students  will learn  the concepts of ecology as they
relate  to  Lake Michigan and methods of testing and
sampling the biological and physical parameters of the
lake.
  Further  information  on   the  course,  and  other
educational programs the two institutions offer, may be
obtained  from James Bland.  Field Museum Education
Department, Chicago, 111. 60605;  or from Linda Wilson,
Shedd  Aquarium Education  Department, Chicago,  111.
60605.
The Public Report is published periodically by the
Public Affairs Office, Region V EPA, 1 N. Wacker Dr.,
Chicago, III. 60606.
Francis  T. Mayo	Region V Administrator
Valdas Adamkus	Deputy Administrator
Frank Corrado	Public Affairs Director
Sally W. Jones	Public Report Editor
Ann Hooe	Graphics Editor
Letters  and comments on the report or other en-
vironmental issues may be  sent  to the address
above.

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                                                          Ken Malmberg. surveil-
                                                          lance and analysis sec-
                                                          tion, pauses for the
                                                          drink that refreshes  •
                                                          but not from the Duluth
                                                          tap.
Keeping  an  eye  on  Duluth
 EPA's Gene Moran checks air surveillance equipment.
The press center was manned throughout the crisis
          Reserve's mining fields.
                                                                          3

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                                      LaVelle
      Blue-collar
   bumps    heads
                 with
          pollution
  A feisty pipebender-turned-blue-
collar-philosopher will be the host
for  a new pilot  series  on  the
working man and his environment.
  Outspoken in his opinions that
the  working man usually gets the
raw end of deals is Mike LaVelle.
He has spent most  of his working
years  living  in  Cicero,  111. and
laboring  as a  pipebender and is
ready to take his blue collar bias to
public television.
  The pilot series,  which  will  be
broadcast  sometime this summer
over WTTW, Chicago, is a half-hour
panel discussion aimed at making
environmental issues relevant to the
men  who  make  their  money by
hard, physical labor.
  LaVelle isn't new  to the business
of communicating  his  views. He
was one of the regulars in "Talkin'
with  Terkel,"  a  segment of the
popular American Dream Machine
Series sponsored nationwide by the
Public Television System. That for-
mat was set in a  friendly neigh-
borhood, blue-collar bar, and the
patrons discussed  the  gamut  of
what was happening in  society.
  Currently, LaVelle  writes two
columns  weekly  for the Chicago
Tribune,  entitled  "Blue Collar
Views."
  LaVelle has made it clear in his
columns that he thinks environment
is for upper-middle and upper class
liberals who have nothing better to
do with their time than  to  save
trees.
  And so the television pilot, "Blue
Collar  Blues,"  is  an  attempt to
bring the environmental issue home
to  the bungalows  and apartments
where staying healthy  is more im-
portant than saving birds.
  Says  LaVelle.  "I've been critical
of  the ho'ier-than-thou  en-
vironmentalists.  I'm  doing  this
show because environment for the
working man is the place where he
makes his money, the neighborhood
where he lives, the places where he
and his kids play, not some remote
wilderness  or extinct  birds."
  "Our first emphasis is going to be
on health—labor and management
have let it go too long,"  LaVelle
said.
  What the first pilot will do—the
second  will  be  broadcast  in
August—is  show  that pollution
from  large  industrial  sources
seriously affects the health  of the
men working in the  plants. And
that very often, these men and their
families  live  near  the  large
polluters.
  That means  they're probably
paying more than most people for
medical  care,  dry  cleaning  and
washing, and home maintenance.
  And, as some  medical studies
have shown, they may not live as
long.
  William  McCarter,  WTTW
general manager, says the show  is
being aired as part of new efforts
by the station to reflect all the com-
munity's  interests  and concerns,
not just those of the "egg-heads" as
LaVelle calls them.
  If for no other reason, the pilots
are attractive for their cost. Robert
Osborn,  producer  of the   two
programs, said  the  cost  of  each
show is less than $1,000. for most of
the efforts put into it are voluntary.
  The sponsoring groups are the
Chicago Lung Association, Chicago
Clean Air Coordinating  Committee,
the U. S. EPA, and the Calumet En-
vironmental  and  Occupational
Health Committee. Inc.
  The show will be presented  in a
news  magazine format. The  first
segment is called "Danger Spots."
and  is a  description  of health
hazards in specific neighborhoods.
  The second segment will be short
lessons in health effects  and will be
           Continued on page 5

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presented by Dr. Bertram Carnow,
medical  director  of the  Lung
Association.
  For the third segment, coke oven
workers will discuss health dangers
at a union meeting in East Chicago,
Ind. In the fourth segment LaVelle
will go back  to the  studio and
discuss with Mike Olzansky efforts
to  improve health  conditions in
Northwest  Indiana.
  LaVelle will wrap it all up in the
fifth segment, which will be a short
newscast  on what  governmental
agencies  are  doing  to  protect
workers' health, a box  score of in-
dustry's track  record in  pollution
control,  and a  special report on
what a Chicago area utility is doing
to protect its workers' environment.
  At the end of the telecast, LaVelle
will ask viewers to telephone or
write in their comments  and con-
cerns.
A   Study   on    Ecologists:
Wherein   it   is   shown
that   people   bore   easily
  A 614-page research report has
confirmed the suspicion of  some
that ecology is pretty much a white-
collar, elitist issue.
  The report was written by the
National  Center for Voluntary Ac-
tion, which interviewed 3,000 en-
vironmental groups in 11 states. In-
terviewed in depth were more than
200 leaders of the groups.
  The study was  funded  by a
$75,000 grant from the EPA.
  According to  a summary of the
report in  the  Rocky  Mountain
News, the  typical  environmental
volunteer-activist is also more than
30 years old, married, and  angry
over what he feels is governmental
inaction  toward  environmental
goals.
  The activist also has  probably
had a college education and makes
more than $10,000 a year.
  And he's fickle. The report shows
that  drop-out rates  in   en-
vironmental groups are high once a
crisis  passes.  Members'  interest
lags, and the  group then  must
recruit additional members.
  The center's report also criticizes
governmental  agencies,  including
the EPA, for failure to encourage
public participation. Most of the in-
terviews, however, seem to  have
been conducted before regulations
requiring public participation
began coming into effect.
  But what the report suggests is
that more must be done to  com-
municate the relevancy of the en-
vironmental  movement  to those
who are  the mainstay, blue-collar
work force, to the inner-city poor,
and to the rural dweller.

          Cartoon drawn for EPA
             by William O'Brien
                                        ENVIRONMENTAL
                                         PROTECTION
                                          LEAGUE

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Sfate  actions
Ohio,    Michigan    tops    in    ecology
   Ohio continues  to  have one  of the strongest  en-
 vironmental control programs in the  nation,  but  the
 legislature in  June  began  to  put  pressure  on  the
 program  by  moving  to cut the Ohio Environmental
 Protection Agency's budget from $24 to $15 million for
 two years.
   Meanwhile,  the  state  EPA  continued  with  its
 projects. It joined with the Ohio Jaycees for a  massive
 information drive  on recycling,  which it planned to
 continue  at the Ohio  State Fair. (See box.)
   Its new regulation prohibiting the dumping of wastes
 from boats came  into  effect,  it continued  to hold
 hearings of variance applications from industries, and
 it presented  two Governor's Awards  for Community
 Action.
   One award went to the Akron League of  Women
 Voters, and the other to the Ohio Valley Health Ser-
 vices Foundation, Inc.
   The Illinois  Environmental Protection  Agency  re-
 ported in its newsletter that three rural counties may
 have the solution to preventing indiscriminate dumping
 on quiet back roads. Peoria, Tazewell, and Woodford
 (Counties) planner Mike Edwards  decided  to  put
 truck-size metal receptacles along the roads  for  the
 trash. It was so successful in Peoria County  that  the
 trucks were filled  to  overflowing.
   The state EPA also filed  24 enforcement cases in a 6-
 week period in February  and March.
   Members of  Michigan's  Water  Resources  Com-
 mission visited  the Escanaba River recently and saw a
 dramatic  improvement in  the stream, which  used to
 run  white with paper mill wastes.
   Part of the reason  the stream's cleaner is  that  the
 Mead Paper Co., Escanaba, has installed pollution con-
 trol equipment at its plant. Mead officials met with  the
 commission to report the company's clean-up progress
 since 1964.
   The commission staff also reported that 97.5 per cent
 of 2,015 industries paid $1,002,566 the state billed them
 for wastewater surveillance  fees.
   The  Indiana  Stream Pollution Control Board also
 was active in June. Oral Hert, technical secretary of the
 board, asked the state attorney general to seek fines
 against three companies that allegedly polluted  Indiana
streams in early June.
                                                          Th« On-o S'arr f*.i na
                                                          b>Mdmg Qiound 'w uti* bug\
                                                           rn • loop*t*e loop
                                                          armo*pn*r« o> non* laugniat
                                                          lun and linrot.Iy the only thing
                                                          down-to-earth n debt*
                                                          inowghiiMiiv di*c*rd0d cups
                                                          lood unaopwv and other ittuw
                                                           At Ihi* yt>ii l Ito you il
                                                          l'f*<]u»miy
                                                           n ut> yom act
                                                           Ail atoufXl tf» o/oundt
                   environ-Totally minded     HI form* O> aw ««e< and told
                   roung*l*r* we *nl«l*d from   *Mlv pollution But we ligu'o
                   *H over OMO not only to ttetp   Ihe Lrttet Raiden */• a good
                   keep the '•«erouoh cfein bui  xay to rommd you ineia i a
                   to d'lTuiitc tn* need leu     too lo M done
                   pollulion clMn-up W* can     B« hire lo catch thotr act
                   them (.itro Radcri
                    Ou< iDbllnd yovDiillol
The Ohio EPA is using a poster similar to this, in full
color, for its anti-litter campaign this summer.

  Hert sought action against the Penn Central Railroad,
near Greencastle; the Owens-Illinois Co., Gas City; and
the Thayer Chicken Farm,  near Versailles.
  Hert also announced the state's  participation with
EPA in a lake study in Indiana.
  The  board and Indiana  Board  of Health will train
national guardsmen to take samples from 97 testing
points in 26 lakes statewide. The  data will be used as
part of EPA's National Eutrophication Study and part
of Indiana's five-year  study of 600 lakes statewide.
  The  Michigan Natural  Resources Commission  has
also designated  950  miles of  public  and  private
property as "shoreland environmental areas" under
the  state's  1970  Shorelands   Protection  Act.  Local
governmental units within the area have until April,
1974 to adopt acceptable zoning ordinances to protect
the shoreland areas. A similar bill designed to protect
Illinois' scenic rivers has failed twice since last year in
Illinois'  legislature.

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Stepha Jonsson,  exchange  student from  Sweden,
contemplates  the Mississippi,  as  millions  of
Americans have done  before him.
Lazy   Ole  Miss  once   again  feels  Mark  Twains,
Louis  Jolliets   on   her   waters.
  The Midwest's life bloodstream pulsates, pumps.
from Minnesota on  the north to New Orleans on the
south.
  The barges,  laden  with  iron ore,  coal and other
nutrients  to an industrial society, push  on  steadily:
bound for the  thirsting ports to the  south.
  But the Mississippi River's water today  is brown
with silt, dirty from  sewage, and green with algae pat-
terns seen from the DC-3 aircraft above.
  Decades ago, the Peregrine  Falcon.  Great Horned
Owl, Eagle, and Hawk looked at a much cleaner river
as they flew overhead.
  Today,  Great Blue Herons and Snowy Egrets are the
masters of the  air currents  above the Mississippi. Do
they see the six-foot catfish Mark Twain saw  when he
wrote "Life on the  Mississippi" in 1896?
  Do they fear  the rush and bump of fish Louis Jolliet
and  James  Marquette  felt  as  they  entered  the
Mississippi from the Wisconsin  River on June 17, 1673
in their birch  canoes?

                    * * *

  The Corps  of  Engineers Upper Mississippi River
navigation map gleams blue for the  brown  river: the
islands refresh  with green; yellow  wing dams dot the
channel—and   up  in  Brownsville, Minn.,  the  state
Department of  Natural Resources has said to the corps
"no more  dredging,  for the stirred-up silt is  killing
myriad organisms on the bottom."
  Lazy Ole Miss suddenly is getting the love, affection,
medical diagnosis,  attention she deserves.

                    * * *

  Two expeditions. Two alarms to  the Valley.
  One starts May 17 from St. Ignace, Mich. — modern-
day voyageurs canoeing to and down the Mississippi as
Jolliet and Marquette did  three centuries ago when
they discovered  the big river's course.
  The other  starts in June from Dubuque, Iowa.
  The first, a crew of canoe-bound adults — educators
and naturalists striving to communicate that man must
change his exploitive rape of nature.
  The second, four houseboats laden with high school
students — the young striving to  learn  the values, the
tools,  to carry on  the fight  the early explorers and
modern-day voyageurs live.
  The first crew is led by Reid Lewis, a high school
French teacher from Chicago,  enacting  Jolliet's role.
With  him.  Ken Lewis, playwright; Father Charles
McEnery,  Jesuit   priest;  Dean  Campbell,  con-
servationist; Lee Broske,  high  steel worker  and off-

                            Continued on page 9

                                              7

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The  two   groups  learn,
teach  the   meaning  of
environment.
 season adventurer; Jim Phillips, biology teacher;  Bill
 Dwyer, engineer; and Jeff LeClerc, a Boy Scout playing
 the Indian boy the crew was given near the Iowa River
 mouth.
  And the towns welcome them all warmly, throw
 their  arms open to the outsiders.
  On  June  17, Lewis and his crew pull  into  the
 Mississippi  from  the Wisconsin River across from
 Iowa's Pikes Peak State Park. From the  high bluffs
 above, you feel a spinal tingle as the canoes feel  the
 lazy,  yet  pulsing  Mississippi  below.  Their coming
 marks a holiday in Prairie du Chien and  McGregor,
 with the children, and young-at-heart adults wanting to
 spend moments with tired, tanned,  ragged voyageurs.
 Young men determined to complete the voyage down
 along Iowa, Wisconsin,  Illinois, Missouri, Kentucky,
 Tennessee, Arkansas, and Mississippi and back north.
 Dramatizing the heritage left by the early explorers.
  North 240 miles to Minnesota from Iowa and back
come the young. What they're doing is called the Up-
per  Mississippi  Valley Interdisciplinary  Educational
and  Cultural Field Experience,  conceived two years
ago by Kirk Daddow and Dwight Zimmerman, teachers
at Maquoketa  High  School, la.
  The final plan evolved "after many beers and many
hours of discussing  and cussing," says Robert Ham-
mon, Maquoketa High's principal.
  Up along  Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota
and  back.
  A social studies boat studying the effects of  the
river's changes on the communities around  it.
Facing page, center: Bill Dwyer leaps from his canoe, as the
Tricentennial Jolliet-Marquette voyagers land in McGregor,
la. with  a modern-day  escourt  behind.  Upper  left: Jan
Christensen tests the Mississippi's water on the science
boat. Upper right: Bob Majerus and Robert Mammon pilot the
in houseboat down the Mississippi. Bottom: the Iowa
science  boats beach for the night, and students get a
chance to stretch their river legs.
  A science boat, testing the health of the ancient river.
  And a communications boat to question the veracity
of town  officials  and industries,  pulling the  whole
study together.
  Two groups of 25 students; two weeks of living the
throb of the river.
  They learn a power plant's thermal plume extends a
mile  downstream—not 400 feet as the plant spokesman
says. They see 75  different  kinds of birds, and classify
them with Sherm  Burns' help—a teacher who's one of
the chaperones.
  Three towns  pump the  sanitary wastes from  the
students' boats; then pump the pumped-out sewage
back to the river. The drinking water taken on board is
found to contain fecal bacteria. Frank  Strathman's
students do their job of testing the water well; and the
students beware of  the contaminated water.
  They are all aware of their "fellow-explorers" far-
ther down the river. "We missed the voyageur crew by
two days—we  really wanted to  talk to them."
  The Mississippi smiles—the voyageurs will rewrite
Marquette's journal  with modern-day  differences;  the
Iowa students will rewrite  Twain's immortal "Life on
the Mississippi."
  Both voyageurs and students learn environment is
society, communications,  physical  characteristics
around them.
  Tricentennial-voyageurs allow  the towns to fit into
harried paddling schedules—Jolliet's  schedule.
  Students go out to meet the towns—five hours asking
questions in LaCrosse for  the communications crew;
five hours testing the Mississippi's water quality for the
science crew.
  The  students  from  Maquoketa,  Andrew,  Miles,
Sabula,  Preston,  Bellevue,  and  Marquette  High
Schools—a  mixture  of socio-economic status and IQ
levels—are  vibrant participating  in this one-of-a-kind
project,  funded  by a $29,000  grant from  the federal
government.
  The next year, the grant gets cut by a third, and a
third again the year after. So already the schools make
plans to  continue the  project—maybe on a  tuition
basis.
  Daddow, Zimmerman, Hammon, Strathman, Burns
join feelings with Bob Majerus, Francis Johnston, Carol
Hammill, and Chuck Lindgren. They're tired; they've
been away  from their families for a month; the trip is
wearing on them. But they smile with satisfaction as
they  look at the students.
  Next year, we'll	
  Further  south,  the  voyageurs also  complain. The
town people and legislators won't let them get enough
sleep; want them  to visit or stay  longer. But they, too,
smile.
  "When this is over, I'm going to start over again
. . . .  "  says Broske.
  And the barges move through the  night, bound for
their  eight-day  journey from Minneapolis  to New
Orleans.
                                  —Sally /ones

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                    U.    S.    Steel:    last   act
                   The  United States  Steel Corp.,
                 Gary, case is closed—hopefully for
                 the last time.
                   On June 22, 1973, Region V Ad-
                 ministrator Francis T.  Mayo issued
                 an  order against  the giant  cor-
                 poration, saying it must clean up its
                 particulate  (dust)  emissions from
                 all sources at its Gary, Ind., plant
                 by the end of 1975.
                   The order represented the largest
                 single  industrial  air  pollution
                 source to be the subject of an EPA
                 compliance   schedule since  the
                 Clean Air Act  Amendments were
                 passed in 1970.
                   The order  was issued after three,
                 lengthy EPA conferences with the
                 corporation,  Indiana Pollution Con-
                 trol  Board,  and  Gary   officials
                 during May  and  June. (EPA had
                 issued a violation notice to the cor-
                 poration  on  April  15,  giving U. S.
                 Steel 30 days to meet with the EPA
                 to formulate a clean-up schedule.)
                   The Gary plant became subject to
                 federal enforcement in May of 1972,
                 when the EPA accepted  Indiana's
                 implementation plan  for  meeting
                 1975 ambient air quality standards.
                 U. S. Steel,  in  April of this year,
                 was  still not on  an   enforceable
                 clean-up  schedule.
                   The  June  22  order  subjects  the
                 Gary  plant  to   a   number   of
                 deadlines for cleaning up emissions
                 from  specific  sources. The
                 deadlines  range from December,
                 1973, to December, 1975, when the
                 plant  must  have  completed coke
                 oven emission controls.
                   During the course of the three
                 conferences,  Indiana issued two or-
                 ders against  the company, which
                 contain  essentially   the same
                 requirements as those in  the EPA
                 order.
  EPA will give primary respon-
sibility to enforcing the clean-up to
Indiana.  But by issuing its own or-
der, EPA will have  the  ability to
assure the clean-up takes place. In
the event of a default by the com-
pany,  EPA  can invoke  civil and
criminal  penalties of up to $25,000
daily and one year in  prison.
  The orders issued by  Indiana and
the EPA are similar in a number
of respects. Both provide for a Dec.
31,  1974 deadline  for   cleaning
emissions from the Gary plant's tin
mill  boiler  house,  scarfing
operations, and the no. 3 sintering
plant. They both provide for a Feb.
1, 1974 clean-up of the coke boiler
house; and  for clean-up of  the
Universal Atlas  Cement  plant by
Nov. 1, 1974. And both provide for
the Dec.  31, 1975 date  of cleaning
coke batteries.
  The EPA order differs slightly
from the Indiana orders  in that:
  * EPA will require coke battery
maintenance.
  * The  EPA  order  establishes
definite compliance  schedules for
the no. 3 and no. 4 open hearth fur-
nace shops and  foundry.  If U.  S.
Steel  elects to continue to operate
these facilities, controls  must be in-
stalled by April 1, 1975. If the cor-
poration  elects  to  replace  these
facilities, they must be  phased out
by  Dec. 31,  1973. The  Indiana or-
ders did not provide  for the choice
of installing controls, but, instead,
set dates that the facilities must be
closed.
  * The EPA requires slag process
operations to be in compliance by
May 1, 1975. Indiana's orders did
not deal  with these emissions.
10

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Short  Subjects
Orchid,    Onion   Prizes    Given
  In the true spirit of giving credit where credit is due,
the Western Communities Architects Association (West
of Chicago) again this year bestowed its orchid (for
good  environmental deeds)  and  onion  (for  en-
vironmental  no-no's) awards.  Onions went  to  the
village of Villa Park, 111. for putting a parking lot in the
scenic Illinois Prairie Path; and to the city of Aurora for
a "profusion of bewildering signs"  in town.
  Orchids went to the Shell  Oil  Co. for a well-
landscaped gas station in Glen Ellyn; to Mrs. Yvonne
Burt,  of Wheaton, for her work in landscaping a park
there; and to  Kenneth Zweifel,  Naperville  Plan Com-
mission  chairman, for a good sign ordinance.
  Three  other  individuals  received  orchids, also:
Richard  Young, Kane County environmental director
for his  "genuine and constant  concern for the total
ecological process,  his  belief that giving  nature  a
chance is the most practical and economical solution to
many planning problems, and his talent for being able
and  willing to communicate his  concerns." Michael
Brock, a teacher at Oswego High School. Oswego also
got an orchid for promoting environmental awareness;
and Thomas J. O'Donnell, scoutmaster of Boy Scout
Troop 65 in Western Springs, got one for helping set up
a glass reclamation project.


  The World Wildlife Fund has  begun circulating  a
pamphlet describing what people can do to cut down
on  pollution.  But  the  pamphlet also  gives capsule
descriptions  of the extent  of  various  pollution
problems, and what may be done in the future to get
rid of them. It was written by Malcolm B. Wells, a con-
servationist from Cherry Hill, N.J. Information on the
pamphlet, which deals with people, not animals, can be
obtained from the fund, 910 17th St. NW, Washington,
D.C. 20006.
  The Dutch may have hit on a way to cut down on
polluting cars in the city. They initiated a "white bike"
program. The bikes are painted white and are left on
the street for anyone to use for free. The only catch to
the scheme is that the bikes  must be returned to the
original spot for someone else to use. The program has
been so successful that the Dutch are now planning a
"white car" program in downtown Amsterdam. They'll
have a fleet of 100 battery-driven, two-seat cars parked
at 15 stations. They're not free like the bikes, but a $16
initial fee and $8 key fee will be used. The cars will be
recharged in the stations after use.
  Children, from now on, will have their own forum
for telling us all what they think about ecology. A new
publication, Kids For Ecology, will be published six
times  yearly  by  Zoles,  Ltd.,  P.O.   Box  P-7126,
Philadelphia, Penn. 19117. The magazine will contain
bylined poems, puzzles,  articles,  and  drawings  by
children. Subscriptions are $4 a year.

  A Region V environmental reporter won a Nieman
Fellowship  award  in journalism  in June.  Whitney
Gould, environmental reporter for the Madison (Wis.)
Capitol Times, will go to Harvard University this fall to
study in any part of the university he chooses.

  And on the lighter side, a San Francisco  Chronicle
columnist has  "translated"  for  the layman a tricky
technical term—ppm, or parts per million. Herb Caen
writes what the term means: "Justin Mace, bless him,
has the  answer: 'One part per million is one ounce of
vermouth in an 8,000 gallon tank car of gin'."

  The Caterpillar  Canoe  Club,  of  Sandwich, 111.
cleaned up Illinois' Fox River  from Montgomery to
Yorkville in June.

  The Committee  on  Lake Michigan Pollution,  a
citizens' group to protect Lake Michigan in Illinois, has
begun a public awareness program. The committee is
gathering signatures and donations to publish an ad-
vertisement urging  the boycott of products connected
with pollution of the lake. Further  information on the
project can be obtained from the committee, Box 583,
Wilmette, 111. 60091.

  In  Indiana,  the   Ball  State  University  board  of
trustees recently approved establishing a Department
of Natural Resources within the university. The In-
stitute of Natural Resources at the university also was
renamed the Institute of Environmental Studies. Fur-
ther information on curricula can be obtained from Dr.
Clyde  Hibbs,   Chairman,   Department  of  Natural
Resources, Ball  State, Muncie, Ind. 47306.

  The Save Lake Superior Association,  1707 9th Av.,
Two  Harbors,  Minn., is opposing  proposals of those
living around the "lower Great  Lakes"  to reduce out-
flow  from  Lake Superior to control  erosion.  "The
water's high here  and throughout the Great Lakes
primarily because of natural forces," the association's
"News" said in June, and concluded that these natural
forces should not be tampered with at the detriment of
those around Lake Superior.
                                                                                                  11

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                                     EPA's   transportation   propos-
                                     als may limit  auto  use  in  cities
   On June 15, the EPA took its first significant action to
 place the  burden of pollution  control on the public
 rather than big  industry.
   For 18 urban areas, the EPA proposed transportation
 plans designed to allow the compliance by 1975 with
 federal air quality standards.
   Since it  was formed in 1972, the  EPA has issued a
 number of environmental regulations. Most, however,
 have been aimed at industry, requiring  that sector of
 the economy to  accept the burden of cleaning the en-
 vironment.
   Although automobile emission limits require clean-
 up  by  Detroit  and  foreign automakers, the trans-
 portation  plans  are likely to affect directly the urban
 driver.
   EPA Acting Administrator Robert  Fri put it this way
 when  he  announced the  new  transportation  plan
 proposals:  "We  are  basically  . ..  asking  people to
 change their habits—their  long-standing and intimate
 relation with the  private automobile. This is  a fun-
 damental  change, but the only one that fundamentally
 will work."
   EPA had no choice in proposing  the transportation
 plans for the 18 cities. A court order overturned EPA's
 decision  to delay implementing transportation  plans
 until 1977. The  states then were required to submit
 their plans by mid-April, and EPA must review, reject
 and/or approve the states' plans by August 15.
   It's a tight time table both for the states and EPA, but
 the Federal District  Court ordered  it.
   Basically, Fri  told a Washington  press  conference
 that was piped into EPA's 10 regions, the EPA will be
 looking for transportation plans that stress the use of
 mass transit, encourage and require maintenance of
 vehicles,  and assure a good traffic  flow.
   Both mass transit and vehicle inspection and main-
 tenance help save fuel. Vehicle inspection and main-
 tenance also helps cut down auto emissions, as does a
 good traffic flow. Idling cars emit more pollutants than
 moving ones. So EPA proposed  combinations of these
 strategies, including limiting on-street parking in order
 to get the  1975 standards met.
   In turning down the city plans  (which were for-
 mulated by the individual states). EPA did not criticize
the reports already  submitted.  In  most cases, EPA
recommended refinements  in the plans.
   For other cities, the EPA has held off making specific
proposals because the state plans  were submitted too
late for evaluation by June  15.
  Other urban plans submitted by the states were ap-
proved,  including those for New  York  City; Bir-
mingham and Mobile, Ala.;  and Rochester,  N.Y. Plans
for Kansas City, Mo., and Kansas City, Kas.; and Baton
Rouge, La.  were also approved  pending changes that
may be needed to be made based on public comment.
  In all, the EPA's action involved 37 urban  areas in 23
states.
  Here are highlights of the action taken in Region  V:
  Chicago's transportation plan as submitted by the
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency was rejected.
The U.S.  EPA  did  not,  as  of  June 22,  propose
regulations for Chicago because the plan was sub-
mitted too late for full evaluation and promulgation of
regulations.
  The U.S. EPA  noted, however,  that  the state's
estimates that certain transportation  control strategies
would reduce  auto-related emissions by 50 per cent
were overly optimistic. Instead, the federal  agency
said,  the controls  probably would  reduce pollutant
levels  by 44 per cent. The Illinois plan  called for
limitations of on-street parking in the central business
district  to  increase  traffic  flow,  expansion  of  the
already-implemented  vehicle testing  program, and
limitations on  new off-street parking facilities.
  Cincinnati's  plan,  as submitted by the  Ohio En-
vironmental Protection  Agency,  also  was  rejected
because the state submitted insufficient data to support
its estimations of pollutant level reduction. The state
plan called for programmed mass transit and highway
improvements. U.S. EPA is proposing that the city also
implement  a vehicle  testing  system.
  Indianapolis'  plan, submitted  by the  state Air
Pollution Control Board, did not  provide  for  trans-
portation plans because its  data  indicated the 1975
standards were met in 1972. The federal agency said,
however, that the monitoring equipment in the city was
not properly maintained, and that 1971  data must be
used. EPA also proposes that the city ban back-yard in-
cineration.
  Minneapolis' plan  also was rejected  because EPA
was uncertain whether completion  of a new interstate
bypass highway would discourage  more traffic  in the
central business district. EPA also questioned whether
a program to improve traffic flow would be  completed
by mid-1975. The EPA proposed that the  Minnesota
Department of Natural Resources, which submitted the
plan, consider limiting new off-street  parking facilities,
begin a vehicle testing program, the retrofit vehicles
with controls.
12

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EPAlog
EPA   offering
   new    books
New  Publications

  "Questions  and  Answers  from EPA's Second
National Citizens' Briefing" answers some of the most
commonly-asked questions about EPA's programs. The
booklet also gives insight into the  reasoning  behind
EPA decisions and  how citizens can  participate in
regulatory and enforcement processes. Single copies
are available free from the Office of Public Affairs, U.
S. EPA, Washington, D.C. 20460.
  "Selected  Publications on the Environment," is a
catalog of EPA's  publications that are available,  com-
plete with a reader service order blank in the back. The
publications listed  are  free for single copies. The
booklet can be obtained from the  EPA's Office of
Public  Affairs, 1  N.  Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111. 60606.
  "A Drop  to Drink" is  a report on the quality of the
nation's drinking water.  The publication  is a boiled-
down version of EPA research and reports that formed
the basis for the pending drinking water standards bill
in Congress. Single copies are free from EPA Office of
Public  Affairs, 1  N.  Wacker Dr., Chicago 60606.
  "Action for  Environmental Quality," is a 22-page
color booklet on standards and enforcement for air and
water pollution control. Free copies  are available from
EPA Public Affairs,  1 N. Wacker Dr., Chicago 60606.
  Because  of demand,  EPA has reprinted  the
publication  "Toward a new Environmental Ethic." It
explains, with  sensitivity, why a pure environment  is
needed. Single  copies are free from the Office of Public
Affairs, 1 N. Wacker Dr., Chicago,  111. 60606.
  With the courtesy of  the Tuberculosis Institute of
Chicago and Cook County, the Region V Public Affairs
Office, 1 N. Wacker Dr., Chicago 60606, has received
copies  of Ringlemann charts for distribution. The chart,
a useful tool in assessing air pollution smoke density, is
copyrighted  by the  Plibrico Jointless  Firebrick  Co.,
Chicago.
The  Federal Register

  As  a matter of  public record,  notices of EPA
hearings,  proposed  rulemakings,  promulgations of
regulations and other regulatory actions are published
in the  daily  Federal Register. It is available at most
libraries or by an annual subscription rate of $25 from
the U. S.  Government Printing Office, Washington,
D.C. 20402.
  May 21—Regulations requiring state water resource
planning were published . .. EPA established toleranc-
es  for  three  pesticide  chemicals on  agricultural
products  . . .  Five companies  applied  for  EPA
registration of pesticides containing DDT.
  May 22—In this  issue, EPA published the final
regulations  for  the National   Pollutant  Discharge
Elimination System (NPDES) . .. also published were
proposed rules requiring cities to assess user charges
for sewage treatment and  a cost recovery system for
the cost of treating industrial wastes . .. Also set was a
pesticide tolerance.
  May 23—EPA amended, effective May 23, standards
for opacity of air  contaminants . .. Proposed were
rules governing disposal and storage of pesticide con-
tainers (comments due by July 23)  and guidelines for
preparing  water quality management plans for states
... A temporary tolerance for a pesticide  was set.
  May 30—EPA published proposed regulations for
planning and management of waste treatment facilities
... A  correction was published relating to proposed
regulations for the NPDES system ... And tolerances
and exemptions for tolerances were set or proposed for
six pesticides, including BHC.
  June 1—A tolerance for the pesticide Ethephon was
set ... And the EPA also published revised air im-
plementation plans  for three  states. None were  in
Region V.
                           Continued on  page 14

                                              13

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 EPAlog ...
   June 4—EPA published regulations, effective July 5,
 outlining the maintenance auto manufacturers  may
 perform on  test vehicles  for certification under the
 Clean Air Act.  The regulations apply to 1975 model
 year autos,  and include requirements that warning
 devices  be installed on cars to alert  motorists when
 emission controls need  servicing .... Both the  EPA
 and  Council for  Environmental Quality  published
 projects for  which environmental  impact statements
 are  available.
   June 5—EPA approved  revisions to Delaware's air
 implementation plan  . .  And proposed  that nitrogen
 oxide standards be loosened.
   June 6—EPA published allowable tolerances for the
 pesticides  sodium and potassium arsenate as residues
 on animals.
   June  7—In  this  Federal Register are  the  final
 regulations regarding  the  requirement to give prior
 notice  when  filing  citizen  suits.  Copies  of  this
 regulation can be obtained from Region V EPA Public
 Affairs,  1  N. Wacker Dr.,  Chicago. 111. 60606.
   June  8—EPA  published   requirements   for
 preparation,  adoption, and submittal of implementation
 plans or transportation control measures .. . Also in
 this  issue are proposals for the reclassification of air
 quality control regions (comment period is open for six
 months) . . .  Two pesticide actions were published . . .
 And the Council for Environmental Quality gave notice
 on the availability of Environmental Impact statements
 upon which  it  has  commented.
   June 11—A temporary tolerance for a pesticide was
 established .  . .  Proposed standards of performance for
 seven new stationary source categories were published
 (comments due  by  July 26) and additional categories
 for new sources were added for later regulation.
   June 12—Acting Administrator Robert Fri agreed to
 extend a stay on orders prohibiting the use of the per-
 sistent pesticide Mirex  to  allow the  Allied Chemical
 Co. to spray  Mirex  on Hawaiian pineapple fields. Full
 hearings on whether to permanently cancel Mirex' use
were scheduled for  the end of June . .  . Also published
were  proposed  regulations  to   prohibit  sex
discrimination under any program or activity receiving
assistance  from the EPA  under the Federal Water
Pollution Control Act.
  June  14—The  EPA  published  a  notice  on  the
procedures it will take in the future to publish ex-
planations  of regulatory  decisions and standards ...
The Council  on Environmental Quality also published
a  list  of federal  projects it  has  reviewed  for  en-
vironmental impact.
  June 15—In this issue, the EPA revoked its earlier
disapproval of New Jersey's air implementation plan.
  June 18—EPA promulgates regulations requiring the
assessment by states of the impact on air quality of
construction programs and other activities that may not
involve  direct  pollution  from mobile or  stationary
sources  . . .   Two  notices relating  the  pesticides
Ethephon and a chloride polymer.
  June 19—The issue  sets up procedures EPA will
follow in the event states ask for a one-year extension
for submitting implementation plans under the Clean
Air Act ... The agency also established a temporary
tolerance for the  pesticide isopropyl.
  June  20—EPA  set  down  regulations  approving,
disapproving, and setting compliance schedules under
state implementation plans for meeting Clean Air Act
ambient  air   quality  standards.   Contained   in  the
regulations are specific  dates for  stationary source
emitters, proposed rules for states in which all or parts
of the plans were disapproved, and a series of hearing
dates for July.
  June 21—EPA established a temporary tolerance for
a pesticide . . . Published were proposed rules for the
administration of federal grants, contracts, or loans un-
der the Clean Air Act (comments due by Aug.  6).
  June 22—In this issue, EPA gives notice of a number
of activities under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide,
and Rodenticide Act ... Also  published  were actions
on a number of state  air implementation plans and
transportation controls . . . None of the actions refer to
Region V states.
  June  25—EPA  established   a   tolerance   for  the
pesticide thiabendazole, effective  June 25.
14

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EPA  Action
Clean    autos   affordable,    and
EPA   labs   provide   interest
  On June 22, the EPA released a position paper en-
titled "Clean Air and the Automobile," which con-
fronts some of the major public issues  involving the
federal auto air pollution emissions program.
  The EPA holds that carbon monoxide and hydrocar-
bon reductions set by  Congress are  necessary  to
protect public health, and that transportation plans and
similar strategies cannot alone assure the standards are
met. The EPA also holds, in the paper, that the extra
costs of installing emission controls in autos are not out
of proportion to options consumers purchase on cars,
such  as vinyl roofs and air conditioning.
  Copies of the report are available from the Office of
Public Inquiries, EPA 401 M Street SW., Washington,
D.C.

  In a regulation proposed in the June 21 issue of the
Federal Register, industrial facilities found to be in
violation of air pollution regulations would  not be
eligible for contracts, grants, or loans from the federal
government. The  regulation also would require the
EPA  to list facilities  that are  violating the act. The
listing is planned to be used as a tool to bring about
voluntary compliance  with regulations. Comments on
the proposed regulation are due by the beginning of
August and should be sent to the EPA's  Office of
Federal Activities, Washington, D.C.  20460.

  Do-As-We-Do  Dept:  Forty-seven EPA employees
have decided to set a good example for ecologically-
sound commuting. Hah7 the workers in EPA's Office of
Radiation Programs in  Washington,  D.C. decided to
charter a bus when their office was relocated. It was as
inexpensive to all as  participating in four-man car
pools. They call their chartered  bus the "Radiation Ex-
press."

  The past 10 years have shown a decrease in sulphur
dioxide and particulate (dust)  levels in many urban
areas, according to a  recent EPA study. The sulphur
study was conducted in 32 cities from 1964 to 1971; the
particulate  studies in  116 cities from 1960 to  1971.
Single  copies  of  the report,  "National Air Quality
Levels and  Trends in Total Suspended Particulates and
Sulphur Dioxide Determined by Data in the National
Air Surveillance Network" are available from EPA
Public  Inquiries, 401  M  St. SW, Washington,  D.C.
20460.
  It  seems  that  EPA's  National  Environmental
Research Center (NERC) workers in  Las Vegas have
jobs  that  never  cease to be  interesting. The "Com-
munique," published by NERC-Las Vegas, highlighted
these activities in its late May issue: All lakes in Illinois
were  sampled under  the  National Eutrophication
Study; a semiannual beef herd roundup was completed
for cows living around Nevada nuclear test sites (the
cattle are "guinea pigs" to determine radiation levels in
living tissue from tests,) and they kept tabs on the after
effects of a nuclear experiment to extract natural gas
from the ground.

  EPA's National Environmental Research Center in
North Carolina reported in June that thermal pollution
could cause changes in weather and climate patterns.
This manmade heat, according to scientist J. T. Peter-
son,  already  is  affecting  weather  in  some  areas.
Washington, D.C.'s frost-free growing season is longer
than  in adjacent  rural areas.  He  predicted  that
precipitation downwind outside cities may be on the
increase, while  the  cities  may  have less  fog  and
snowfall. All because of manmade heat.

  The Waukesha (Wis.) Water Utility has joined other
public water supplies in Region V as being certified for
interstate use. The approval is required from EPA for
water  supplies  used by  bus,  train,  and  aircraft
passengers.

  On June  5, the EPA proposed performance standards
for  asphalt  concrete plants, petroleum refineries,
petroleum  storage tanks,  secondary lead  smelters,
secondary  brass  and bronze ingot production plants,
iron and steel plants, and sewage treatment plant in-
cinerators.  The  standards  are  for new sources or
existing facilities  modified to  increase production.
Requests for background documents and comments on
the proposal  should be made to Emission Standards
and  Engineering Division,  EPA Research  Triangle
Park, N.C. 27711, Attn: Don  R.. Goodwin.

  A team of marine scientists from the U.S.S.R. arrived
in Washington to  participate in  a cooperative  study
with EPA on the  effects of pollutants on marine
organisms. They stayed two  weeks, until the end of
May.

                          Continued on page 16

                                            15

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EPA  Action  .  .  .
  A contract for nearly $5 million will help the EPA
determine what  happens to  air pollutants once they
leave  their sources. Science has learned they don't
escape the earth's  atmosphere,  but  more  study is
needed  to  determine  exactly  what  does happen to
them.  The Rockwell  International  Science  Center.
Thousand Oaks,  Calif., will set up 25 remote sensing
stations around St. Louis.  Mo. to conduct  sophisticated
studies of pollutants in the atmosphere. They'll also he
looking at possible weather  effects from  pollutants.

  On  June 2(i. a federal District Court Judge in Min-
neapolis  ruled  the EPA must  release  water con-
struction grants  funds to Minnesota.  The ruling  by
Judge Miles Lord  was similar to a May New  York
District Court  decision on the same issue. Judge Lord,
in his decision, said EPA does not have  discretion in
allocating funds,  and thus must  spend them when they
are needed and appropriated. The judge said, however.
that EPA does have discretion in obligating the funds,
or. in other words, approving a particular facility  for
funding  under the grants program.
  Duke University has been awarded an EPA grant to
study crabs.  The  university's  Marine  Laboratory,
Beaufort.  N.C.. will  study  the effects of mercury on
crabs, and determine  whether juvenile crabs are more
sensitive than  the adults. The $52,000 grant was award-
ed  by the EPA's  National Marine  Water Quality
Laboratory  at Narragansett. R.I.
  Besides all the other duties Skylab performed  before
the  astronauts splashed  down  to  earth in  June, the
mission aided NASA  in  providing resources and in-
formation to EPA from atmospheric studies of suspend-
ed particulates. Skylab's big eye in  the sky also zeroed
in on Illinois' controversial Oakley Dam project  near
Monticello,  111. to see  what  it looks like from that high
above.
  The Great Lakes Basin Commission, a federal-state
agency in which EPA participates, reports that 300,000
lake trout fingerlings will  be planted in Lake  Huron
this  year.  They're being  planted  by the  Michigan
Department of Natural Resources.

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