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)

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 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 —

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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)

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 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 —

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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.

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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

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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.

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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."

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