inside U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY- WASHINGTON, D.C. 20460 • MafCh 1973 'Artificial River' Flows in Athens Lab The Southeast Environmental Re- search Laboratory at Athens, Ga., started using its new ecosystem sim- ulator last month and held formal dedication ceremonies March 7. The $1-million facility provides EPA scientists with a unique tool for studying pollution in rivers by cre- ating and maintaining virtually any desired physical and chemical con- dition in an "artificial river." Called "AEcoS", for Aquatic Ecosystem Simulator, the facility is expected to help bridge the gap be- tween small-scale laboratory experi- ments, which can be carefully con- trolled but may not be realistic, and field studies where the problems are only too real but little experimental control is possible. Computer Controlled The concept of Dr. Walter M. Sanders, who heads the pollutants fate research at SERL, AEcoS is a channel of water in an environ- mental chamber regulated by a computer to maintain precise con- trols over light quality and intensity, air and water temperature, humid- ity, and water quality. Dr. Sanders said, "AEcoS will be used with mathematical models of ecosystems to study the mechanisms and interactions among microbial communities, water quality, and en- vironmental stresses. AEcoS will economize on the resources re- quired to characterize the chemistry, biology, and physics of aquatic eco- systems, or to describe the behavior of water pollutants." The AEcoS chamber is 72 feet long, 12 feet wide, and 9 feet high. The experimental stream it houses —Documerica photo, Chuck Rogers Aquatic Ecosystem Simulator at Athens, Ga., laboratory is flanked by two scientists who will use it for environmental studies: Dr. James Falco, left, project leader, and Dr. Walter M. Sanders, head of pollution fate research. is 64 feet long, 18 inches wide, and 24 inches deep. Air temperature in the chamber can be controlled to within 0.55 of one degree centigrade over a range from zero to 40 degrees. Relative humidity can be controlled with 2 percent, independent of temperature changes, and raised or lowered as much as 60 percent in an hour. Water for AEcoS flows from four 30-gallon-per-hour stainless steel deionizer-distillation units. Storage capacity is provided by four 500-gal- lon stainless steel tanks equipped with motorized mixing valves op- erated from the control room. Facilities are also provided for re- ceiving, storing, and processing large volumes of water transported to the laboratory from streams, rivers, and lakes by refrigerated trucks. Feeders located in the inflow end can inject controlled amounts of nu- trients or pollutants into the chan- nel. At the maximum rate of flow of 2,000 gallons per day, water enter- ing the channel has an average re- tention time of 12 hours. Since the flow is extremely slow compared with most natural rivers and streams, turbulent movement can be induced by activating a series (Continued on page 2) ------- EPA Rejects Impact Statement On Nuclear Plant Safety Rules The Atomic Energy Commis- sion's plans for emergency safety procedures at nuclear power plants are "inadequate," and its environ- mental impact statement should be extensively revised, EPA declared last month. The Agency gave the Commis- sion's draft statement on emergency core cooling system (ECCS) stand- ards a "category 3" rating, meaning the environmental effects of the proposal have not been adequately assessed and all alternatives an- alyzed. The rating came in a five-page letter drafted by EPA's Office of Radiation Programs and signed and sent to the AEC by Sheldon Meyers, director of the Office of Federal Activities. The letter criticized the AEC for not sufficiently analyzing the risk of a catastrophic accident. No such accident has occurred; there are no statistics. But EPA believes some quantification can and should be made, that is, numerical estimates of probabilities and confidence limits. Possible loss-of-cooling" acci- 'Artificial River' (Continued from page 1) of variable-speed paddle wheels in the channel. Gas manifolds in the chamber supply oxygen, nitrogen, and other gases required for special simulation conditions. Sunlight simulation is provided by 833 fluorescent lamps of var- ious colors and 100 infrared lamps, for a continuous intensity range from 2 to more than 6,000 foot- candles. SERL's director, Dr. David W. Duttweiler, said, "Although AEcoS cannot reproduce all conditions found in the natural environment, it provides EPA with an aquatic re- search capability which, to our knowledge, is not duplicated any- where in the world " dents were the subject of long pub- lic hearings by the AEC last fall. In such an accident, the back-up ECCS might fail to cope with the heat generated in a reactor when its reg- ular operational controls break down or misfunction. The result could be a disastrous release of radioactivity as the runaway heat would melt or rupture any con- tainer. After the hearings, the EPA letter noted, "the AEC regulatory staff's technical judgment of ECCS per- formance criteria was modified," but further detailed information on accident risk assessment is needed. EPA recommended an inde- pendent study to make a quantita- tive risk assessment, based on AEC technical studies now under way and public hearings before the final rulemaking. The letter pointed to an "appar- ent contradiction" in the environ- mental statement: on the one hand it claimed "a sufficient information base (for) . . . technical judgment concerning the risk level of all Class 9 (catastrophic) accidents," and on the other hand it asserted there was not enough information to perform a cost-benefit analysis of one type of accident, ECCS failure. EPA did not comment on specific safety procedures proposed by the AEC. "We do not believe that it is the proper role of the EPA to con- duct an in-depth engineering re- view," the letter said. EPA Scientists To Date Wine Do you have a bottle of 40- year-old scotch that you doubt is really that old? Or a burgundy whose pre-war vintage date you question? EPA scientists at NERC-Las Vegas can settle these doubts by measuring the radioactive carbon in the alcohol. But they want a generous sam- ple of the stuff. In a partly tongue-in-cheek announcement in the NERC-LV weekly newsletter, three scien- tists in the Center's Radiological Research Program offered wine and liquor dating "as a service to EPA staff . . . provided that sufficient excess of sample is submitted." And they added: "High quality wines and spirits are preferred." The method of alcohol dating was discovered by accident dur- ing a study of liquids used in scintillation counting, an ex- tremely sensitive technique for measuring radioactive substances in the environment. Find a Way and Liquor Plant or animal tissue sus- pected of containing radioac- tivity is dissolved in an organic solvent, put in a liquid scintilla- tion counter, and radioactivity of various types appears as "spikes" on a graph. Dilution of the sol- vent with alcohol was found to produce readable spikes identify- ing carbon-14 in the alcohol. Carbon-14 is a radioactive iso- tope which decays at a known rate, permitting measurement of the age of the carbon. A short technical paper de- scribing the process has been written by A. A. Moghissi, S. S. Snyder, and E. W. Bretthauer and will be submitted to a scien- tific journal. Its title is "Car- bon-14 Content of Ethanol as a Monitoring Procedure." "A sensitive method for deter- mining the carbon-14 content of ethanol (alcohol) is potentially attractive," the authors write, "not only for environmental monitoring of this radionuclide, but also for age determination of certain alcoholic beverages." — 2 — ------- Old Attitudes Still Hampering Women By Kate Stahl Women's Programs Division, EPA Obsolete attitudes are still the major roadblocks to achieving equal opportunity for woman in Federal employment. Practical ways to overcome these attitudes and realize the parity everyone pays lip service to were discussed at a three-day conference last month at Aspen, Colo. The 70 conferees included top- and middle-management women from a score of Federal agencies, both in Washington and in the field; from industry; and from national women's organizations. EPA was represented by two of its women's program coordinators, Delores Platt of NERC-Cincinnati and Ruth Sa- saki of Region V, Chicago, and my- self. Sponsored by FEB The conference was national in scope, although it was sponsored by the Women's Program Committee of the Denver Federal Executive Board, one of 25 "little cabinets" that have been organized over the last decade in all Federal regions and in major cities having concen- trations of Federal employees. The FEBs serve as linkages with the Executive Branch in Washington and focuses for interagency coop- eration at the local level. The Aspen conference was called to share the findings of many smaller FEB meetings and seminars on women's rights held over the last two years, to discuss corrective measures that could be correlated and applied nationwide. Accomplishments and failings were summarized at the opening session by Helene Markoff, women's program director for the U.S. Civil Service Commission. On the plus side she listed the appointment of more women's program coordinators at regional levels, more mandatory training of supervisors, more incen- tive awards, more women included on agency promotion panels and EPA representatives at National Federal Women's Program Conference pose with two conference speakers. From the left are Ruth Sasaki, Region V; Jacqueline Gutwillig, Citizens' Advisory Council on the Status of Women; Kate Stahl, Women's Programs Division; Frances Farenthold, National Women's Political Caucus; and Delores Platt, NERC-Cincinnati. equal employment evaluation groups, and more agencies adopting specific employment goals. Weak- nesses are still evident, she said, in cereer counseling, utilization of part- time workers, and in community efforts to develop child care centers. Bias, Not Malice Jayne Baker Spain, vice chair- man of the Civil Service Commis- sion, said that women have to over- come not so much malice, as bias— bias that has been built in both men and women since childhood. She urged the delegates to spread the word that discrimination is illegal, and to make it clear that women do not seek preference or special con- sideration, but that they do seek a fair climate. She said she and Anne Armstrong, a counselor to Presi- dent Nixon, planned to visit each cabinet-level secretary and admin- istrator to check up on Affirmative Action plans. Jacqueline G. Gutwillig, chair- man of the Citizens' Advisory Coun- cil on the Status of Women, recom- mended that the conferees look into the public schools and the degree of discrimination in schools; look into cases of denial of financial credit to women, and to urge the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment, which applies only to legal rights not social rights. Helpful actions for women as pointed out by Wilma Scott Heide, president of the National Organiza- tion for Women (NOW), were: do your homework, organize to be effective, seek in-service education and resources to do the job, identify with other women, develop and par- ticipate in programs for stated goals. For the 'Unqualified' Frances "Sissy" Farenthold, head of the National Women's Political Caucus, a Texas state legislator and former candidate for the governor- ship of Texas, said the pursuit of (Continued on page 5) ------- Sulfur Curbs Held Not Strict Enough EPA's air quality standards for sulfur oxides are not too strict, in- deed, they are probably not strict enough to protect public health. This is the conclusion of a three- year-old research program called CHESS—for Community Health and Environmental Surveillance System—led by EPA scientists at Research Triangle Park, N.C. More than 25 medical and sci- ence writers were invited to a back- ground briefing in Washington March 2 to hear EPA research offi- cials explain the findings and answer questions about them. Dr. Stanley Greenfield, assistant administrator for Research and Monitoring; Dr. John Finklea, director of NERC- RTP; and Dr. Carl M. Shy, Division of Health Effects Research, NERC- RTP, took part in the briefing. Preliminary drafts of the report are being circulated for technical revisions, and publication in final form is expected in about three months. The report summarizes 23 differ- ent studies made in a dozen cities of the relation between air pollu- tion levels and the numbers of peo- ple who get sick with respiratory and heart diseases. More than 250,- 000 persons are involved in the CHESS program, a continuing series of investigations of the health effects of air pollution. 'Not Too High' "Evidence now available provides adequate support for the position that present air quality standards for sulfur oxides are not too high," the study said. "In fact, the new sulfate -data indicate that the short-term standard may not be strict enough to be fully protective (of public health)." The standards for sulfur oxides— and for five other main air pollut- ants—were promulgated by EPA in July, 1971, as required by the Clean Air Act of 1970. Primary, or health-protective standards are to be put into effect by the States by July, 1975. Secondary, welfare- related standards, are to go into effect at a "reasonable," but still undetermined, time thereafter. The CHESS conclusions on sul- fur pollution come at a time when many spokesmen for the coal and electric power industries are press- ing for relaxation of the sulfur stand- ard, partly because of the technical difficulty and cost of removing sul- fur from fuels and partly to meet Region V Labs Consolidated Laboratory operations at EPA's Region V are being consolidated at a Central Regional Laboratory at 1819 West Pershing Road in Chi- cago, according to Regional Ad- ministrator Francis T. Mayo. The new laboratory is at the same location as the Region's Illinois Dis- trict Office. New equipment is being installed and more staff added to greatly increase the capability of the small laboratory already there. Mayo said the central facility will help the Region's Surveillance and Analysis Division, under Dr. Robert Zeller, meet the increasing demands for extensive and sophisticated an- alytical work to support EPA's mis- sion. All regional laboratory work has heretofore been performed at dis- trict offices in Minneapolis, Minn.; Grosse He, Mich.; Cleveland, Ohio; Evansville, Ind.; and Chicago. "The district office laboratories will not be eliminated, but there will be a transfer of functions to the new central laboratory," Mayo said. "The district office laboratories are performing important functions in their States, and there are some types of laboratory investigation that must be done in the field be- cause very prompt analysis is re- quired." The new facility will be under the direct supervision of Thomas Yeates. fuel shortages by greater use of high-sulfur coal. The CHESS report urges in- creased effort to rid the air of sulfur oxides, sulfate particulates, and soot that come from the burning of coal and oil in factories and power plants and the burning of trash in incin- erators. Health Care Costly The study estimated that current air pollution levels cost the country from $1 to $3 billion in health care alone. "These estimates are probably conservative," the study said, "since the calculations assumed that the costs of aggravation of chronic lung and heart disease amount to no more than $200 to $300 per case; that asthmatic attacks cost only $20 each; that the costs of acute respira- tory disease have not risen in five years; and that each case of chronic bronchitis incurs an annual cost of only $200 to $400." Eight to nine years of exposure to normal city sulfur levels trig- gered decreases in lung ventilation (breathing capacity) in children and reduced the ability of patients with chronic respiratory illness to cope with other diseases, the study said. Families exposed to three or more years of urban air pollution were found to suffer more influenza than families living outside the cities. Areas involved in the studies in- cluded New York and northern New Jersey; Birmingham, Ala., where four pollution "episodes" occurred recently; Charlotte, N.C.; and four cities in the Rocky Mountains: Magna, Kearns, Ogden, and Salt Lake City, Utah. Although more research is needed on the relation between disease and sulfur oxide pollution, the study said, "it would be prudent to control ambient sulfur dioxide much more stringently than is now planned. There is consistent, coherent, bio- logically plausible evidence that this problem may not be solved by (meeting) the present air quality standards." — 4 — ------- Baise Wins Flemming Award For Outstanding U.S. Service Gary H. Baise, director of EPA's Office of Legislation, received the Flemming Award for outstanding work in Federal government serv- ice in Washington March 1. Baise was one of ten young men and women to be honored by the Downtown Jaycees of the capital city. The awards—engraved plaques —are named after Arthur S. Flem- ming, former U.S. Civil Service Commissioner and HEW Secretary, who is still in government service as head of the Post-Conference Board of the White House Confer- ence on Aging. Baise was honored for his "extra- ordinary" organizing work which "measurably increased the effective- ness of EPA legislation." Head of the Office of Legislation since January, 1972, Baise oversees the Agency's legislative and congres- sional liaison and intergovernmental relations. One of his primary re- sponsibilities is the drafting of legis- lative proposals and the preparation of congressional testimony. Baise is a native of Jacksonville, 111., and a graduate of Western Illi- nois University, where he was a Ford Foundation Fellow and direc- tor of student activities. He earned a doctorate in law from Indiana Gary H. Baise University in 1968. He lives in Fairfax, Va., with his wife, Sandra, and their four children. Candidates for the Flemming Award must be under 40 years of age. They are nominated by the heads of Federal agencies (Baise was the only EPA nominee this year) and selected by a committee of prominent individuals, of which Arthur J. Goldberg is chairman. Summer Institutes Scheduled Two summer institutes in environ- mental education for junior and senior high school science teachers will be held in Cincinnati in June and July. Sixty men and women from schools in a six-state area will be chosen to take the two-week, in- tensive courses at the University of Cincinnati and EPA's National En- vironmental Research Center in that city. Tuition, instructional materials, and room and board in university dormitories will be free, and partici- pants will be reimbursed for their travel costs. Six quarter credits for graduate study, and a certificate, will given participants who success- fully complete the course. Session I will start June 17 and session II July 8. The Institutes are being under- written by EPA to improve environ- mental education and to develop curriculum materials and innova- tive classroom strategies. Lectures, laboratory work, and field trips will occupy eight hours per day, five days a week. The fac- ulty will include people from the University and EPA, augmented by experts from the legal and engineer- ing professions, industrialists, citi- WOMEN STILL HAMPERED BY OLD ATTITUDES (Continued from page 3) public office by women is a way to full-class citizenship. "When I ran for governor", said Attorney Farenthold, "I ran against two law school dropouts. Can you imagine what the reaction would have been if the situation had been reversed? I want the day to come when unqualified women, unquali- fied blacks and unqualified Mexican- Americans join unqualified white males running for public office." Brig. Gen. Jeanne M. Holm, USAF, said many women join the Air Force because of the training opportunities for technical skills that they can't get in civilian life. The military is operating the biggest trade school the world has ever known, she said, and every woman who comes in gets equal pay for equal work because it's been pro- vided for by law. The trend of the conference was summed up by Dr. Dorothy Gregg, a public relations official of U.S. Steel. To gain ground against dis- crimination, she said, an agency must: • Have a clear employment policy set by top management and followed down the line; • Have clear and sound objec- tives and time limits; • Get integrated training; and • Find and combat inconsisten- cies in policy and law which negatively effect the employ- ment of women. zen group leaders, and civic plan- ners. The Greater Cincinnati Federal Executive Board and, the Cincinnati Public Schools are also participating in sponsorship of the Institutes. Applicants are limited to Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, West Virginia, southern Illinois and western Penn- sylvania. Dr. P. V. Scarpino grant director, is in charge of applica- tions, which should be received by him at the University of Cincinnati, by March 30. ------- 2 Japanese Cars Meet 1975 Standards Two Japanese automakers have developed engines that apparently meet EPA's exhaust emission re- quirements for 1975 model cars without using catalytic converters, on which most American firms are relying. The Japanese engines, tested un- officially at EPA's laboratories in Ann Arbor, Mich., were built by the Honda Motor Company and Toyo Kogyo. The engines were tested unoffici- ally at EPA's laboratories in Decem- ber and January and passed their tests with flying colors. The Honda engines were of the stratified-charge type, installed in vehicles not yet on sale in the United States. The Toyo Kogyo engines were rotary Wankels in Mazda cars now on sale through- out the country. EPA engineers found that the Honda engines emitted only two- thirds of the carbon monoxide, one- half of the hydrocarbons, and one- third of the nitrogen oxides that are allowable under the 1975 standards. Double Firing Chamber Three vehicles were supplied by Honda for the tests. Each was equipped with what the company calls a "compound vortex controlled combustion" engine,, similar in con- cept to the stratified-charge engine. Each cylinder in the engine has a double combustion chamber, the smaller one supplied with a rich fuel-air mixture and the larger one with a very lean mixture. Combus- tion begins in the smaller chamber, and the burning gases then expand into the main chamber to ignite and burn the lean mixture. The air-fuel ratio for the two chambers combined is much leaner than in a conventional auto engine, which requires a richer mixture for ignition. Two of the vehicles tested had been run about 1,500 miles; the third had completed a 50-000-mile durability run, the company said. They weigh about 1,600 pounds each and carry four passengers. The test report concluded that the Group Named to Advise EPA On Water Effluent Standards A nine-member advisory commit- tee on effluent standards and water quality was named recently by EPA Administrator William Ruckelshaus to hold public hearings and provide technical information to EPA. The committee's advice will be used in the administration of the waste water discharge permit sys- tem authorized in the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972 and soon to be established. The committee members, all tech- nical specialists, include Don E. Bloodgood, emeritus professor of sanitary engineering, Purdue Uni- versity, Lafayette, Ind.; William W. Eckenfelder Jr., professor of en- vironmental and water resources, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.; Robert B. Grieves, chairman of the Chemical Engineering De- partment, University of Kentucky, Lexington; Ramon Guzman, chem- ical engineer, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan. Also Lloyd Smith Jr., professor of entomology and fisheries, Uni- versity of Minnesota, St. Paul; Martha Sager, director of the En- vironmental Systems Management Program, American University, Washington, D.C.; Blair T. Bower, Resources for the Future, Wash- ington, D.C.; Robert McCall, di- rector of environmental health serv- ices, West Virginia Department of Health, Charleston; and Glenn Paulson, staff scientist, Natural Re- sources Defense Council, New York City. Honda engines had "lower emission levels than any other gasoline- fueled engine without after-treat- ment devices ever tested by EPA " Wankel Test Results EPA tested two Mazda vehicles, one with 50,000 miles of driving completed and one with 4,000 miles. The tests showed hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide emissions of the 50,000-mile car to average about one-half of the allowable 1975 levels, and nitrogen oxide emissions about one-third of the acceptable level for 1975 automobiles. How- ever, the nitrogen oxide emissions were more than double those per- mitted under the more stringent 1976 standard for that pollutant. No loss in fuel economy, relative to current rotary-engined Mazda vehicles, occurred in meeting the 1975 standards. EPA engineers noted, however, that in general Mazda rotarys seem to get poorer fuel economy than vehicles with conventional reciprocating engines The Mazda engines did not use catalytic converters or exhaust gas recirculation systems. However, both Mazdas were equipped with thermal reactors for the control of unburned hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide No control systems for nitrogen oxides were required to achieve the 1975 standards because of the light weight of the Maza cars and the inherently lower nitrogen oxide emissions of rotary engines. Inside EPA, published month- ly for all employees of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agen- cy, welcomes contributed articles, photos, and letters of general interest. Such contributions will be printed and credited, but they may be edited to fit space limits. Van V. Tmmbull, editor Office of Public Affairs Room W239, EPA Washington, D.C. 20460 ------- RAs Issuing Ocean Dumping Permits EPA regional administrators in seven coastal regions have started accepting applications and issuing interim permits for the dumping of wastes in ocean waters. The interim permit system was set up recently by Administrator William Ruckelshaus to meet the April 23 deadline of the Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctu- aries Act of 1972. About 1,000 in: terim permits are expected to. be issued before permanent regulations are promulgated, probably by Aug. 1. Industries or municipalities seek- ing interim dumping permits should apply by letter to their regional EPA administrator, telling what they plan to dump, where, when, and how much. The regional ad- ministrator may require further data from the applicant, but EPA must act on completed applications within 10 days. Each permit issued will specify an approved dumping site, any spe- cial conditions deemed appropriate by EPA, and a time limit. All in- terim permits will expire 90 days after permanent regulations are adopted, if they have not already expired. The regulations apply to indus- trial wastes, sewage sludge, incin- erator residues, and any material not specifically exempt by law. Ex- empt materials are fishing wastes (usually banned by State laws in bays and harbors), dredging spoils (regulated by the Corps of Engi- neers), and sewer outfalls subject to regulation under the Federal Water Pollution Act Amendments of 1972. Regional Responsibility In keeping with the Agency's policy of decentralization, regional offices are responsible for issuing permits and maintaining liaison with other interested Federal agencies. EPA headquarters is responsible for setting criteria and guidelines and for providing technical assistance when needed. Information obtained from the in- terim applications is expected to help in establishing the permanent system. The applications will pro- vide EPA with an a national inven- tory of the kinds and amounts of wastes now being dumped at sea and the locations of such dumping. Designated dumping sites will be monitored by EPA in cooperation with the Coast Guard and the Na- tional Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Announcing the interim permit program, Ruckelshaus called ocean dumping "the last major escape route" for moving wastes some- where else rather than neutralizing or eliminating them. The interim regulations and the permanent ones to follow, he said, "are intended to ensure that all ocean dumping is done at desig- nated sites, that toxic materials are strictly controlled, and that infor- mation is obtained to further abate and prevent the pollution of the oceans." North Carolina Pupils Learn About Environment More than 4,000 students in six North Carolina school districts have learned about environmental prob- lems through a program sponsored by the National Environmental Re- search Center at Research Triangle Park, N.C. Elaine Hyman and Madeline Beery of EPA have taken their hour-long program of films, slide shows, games and demonstrations more than 80 times in the last six months to schools that request it. The reaction from teachers and students has been very encouraging, according to Dr. Burton Levy, NERC-TRP director of Adminis- tration, who called the project a "good neighbor" effort by the Cen- ter to inform young people in the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill area about the Agency's work. Dee Houston and Andrew Angyal of Dr. Levy's staff helped Ms. Hyman and Ms. Berry design the presentation last summer. Inspecting EPA posters after an environmental education presentation at a Durham, N.C. elementary school recently are, from left, Madeline Beery, EPA; Principal Shelred Cunningham; Elaine Hyman, EPA; and Sharon Plaughter, classroom teacher. Ms. Beery and Ms. Hyman have presented the one-hour program to 4,000 public school pupils in North Carolina. ------- Changes Set in Solid Waste Program EPA's Solid Waste Management Program will undergo a major re- direction in response to President Nixon's fiscal 1974 budget propos- als, Administrator William Ruckels- haus has announced. The change reflects the Adminis- tration's decision that Federal efforts in this field should concentrate on the regulation of toxic and hazard- ous wastes, research on resource re- covery, and technical guidance to State and local governments. The proposed budget of $5.76 million, down from $30 million in the current fiscal year, calls for a total of about 85 full-time, perma- nent employees for the program's headquarters operation in Washing- ton, a decline from the present total of 191, which are about evenly split between Washington and Cin- cinnati. In addition, the program will have two employees in each region, and other regional employees currently working on solid waste management will be reassigned to higher priority areas within their regions. "All persons affected by this new program direction will be offered other jobs within EPA," Ruckels- haus said. Expansion Seen The Agency expects to establish about 800 new positions, nation- wide, in the next fiscal year, with major increased in pesticides pro- grams and enforcement, and in water programs, he pointed out. There will be plenty of opportuni- ties for employees now working in the solid waste field to move into these expanding programs in Wash- ington or in field locations in sup- Servicemen Offered Training About 250 American servicemen received training for environmental jobs during the first year of a coop- erative program involving the Agency, the Armed Services, the Department of Labor, and the De- partment of Health, Education, and Welfare. Called Military Transition Train- ing (MTT), the program offers serv- ice men and women soon to be dis- charged instruction to qualify them for civilian jobs as operators of water treatment and sewage treat- ment plants. The courses are held at military bases in this country and overseas. Tentative plans to expand the program in Germany were an- nounced recently by Fitzhugh Green, associate administrator for International Activities. Other overseas sites include Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, the Philippines, and Taiwan. Instructors are hired, and some- times trained, by EPA, and the Agency monitors the program con- tinually to see that high standards arc maintained. Mrs Patricia Powers, unit chief in the Operator and Technician Training Section, Office of Water Programs, is in charge The 12-week courses include classroom work with "hands-on" training at water and sewage treat- ment plants that may be on the military base itself or in nearby mu- nicipalities. Enrollment is in small groups and "graduations" are con- tinuous. Mrs. Powers's group in Arlington, Va., tries to place each "graduate" in a job after he leaves the service, or steer him to further training for more highly qualified positions in the field. Funds for running the MTT pro- gram come from the Department of Labor, and HEW's Office of Edu- cation must approve all training class plans, under an interagency agreement No MTT class locations are made without a recommenda- tion from the Defense Department, but the military has no hand in running the program. port of the President's decentraliza- tion program. A vigorous effort is under way, led by the program's headquarters staff and the Agency's Personnel Management Division, to place the affected OSWMP employees. "We are working very hard to see that these employees get placed," said Samuel Hale Jr., deputy assist- ant administrator. "They are first- rate people — experienced, well- trained, and dedicated." The net effect of the shifts is ex- pected to reduce total EPA employ- ment in Cincinnati from 800 to 700 persons. However, this drop may be offest by transfers of other Agency functions to Cincinnati. 'Staying in Business' "I want to emphasize," Hale said, "that our solid waste manage- ment program is definitely staying in business. Demonstration and train- ing grants funded with fiscal '73 monies must continue to receive our attention; many of the most import- ant of these will extend through fiscal '74. "We must continue to give tech- nical assistance to State and local governments. We will continue our ongoing studies in resource recovery and waste reduction initiatives. We will be developing a new regulatory program centered on the serious en- vironmental problems caused by hazardous and industrial wastes* identifying them, setting standards for their treatment and disposal, and establishing guidelines for their implementation. "The reduction in the program's actual operating activities will not be nearly as great as the budget figures tend to indicate. It is there- fore imperative that all people work- ing directly in, or in support of, solid waste management at head- quarters, in the regions, and in the research centers continue—and in- deed augment—their efforts in this area." ------- |