EPA 'sJDffice of Wetlands,
 Oceans and Watersheds
  Sustainable Communities
    Healthy Watersheds ^
  2009 Annual Report

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                                    Note from the O WOW Director
      I take the helm as the Director ofEPA's Office of Wetlands, Oceans and Watersheds
(OWOW) at an exciting and challenging time. As EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson has
conveyed, America's waterbodies are imperiled as never before. At the same time, the
federal government, states, territories and tribes are facing serious fiscal challenges. I
fully embrace Administrator Jackson's principles of sound science, the rule of law and
transparency as our guideposts in protecting and restoring America's waters, and, as
Director of OWOW, I will strive to focus resources and efforts in those areas that hold
the most promise for delivering significant environmental and human health results. I
am committed to working with the OWOW leadership team, OWOW staff, and all
of our stakeholders to ensure that we do our best to partner with others to maximize
environmental and human health results and ensure that the public's dollar is spent
wisely.

      This Annual Report reflects some of OWOW's most significant accomplishments in
2009, which would not have been possible without the hard work of our dedicated OWOW
staff and countless state, tribal and local partners.  While we  have much to celebrate,
many challenges lie ahead.

      In the coming year, we must strengthen our efforts to clean up and restore impaired
waters, protect healthy watersheds, and address very complex environmental issues like
nutrient over-enrichment and climate change. OWOW will continue to play a significant
role in several of the Agency's major "place-based" water quality initiatives, including the
  plementation of the Chesapeake Bay Executive Order and Strategy and actions to ad-
dress the hypoxic zone in the Gulf of Mexico. As the Office of Water continues to be the co-
lead for EPA's Community Action for a Renewed Environment (CARE) program as well as
through implementation of the new Urban Waters initiative, OWOW will help champion
environmental justice and further environmental protection for underserved communities
that have been disproportionally impacted by pollution.

      OWOW will continue its critical work to assess the status and trends of the health
of the nation's waters, including the National Aquatic Resource Surveys.  We will also
continue to play an important role in partnership with the Army Corps of Engineers, in
ensuring that dredge and fill permits meet Clean Water Act requirements and that waters
that are covered by the jurisdiction of the Clean Water Act receive these protections.

      I look forward to leading OWOW in these important endeavors. We have very
dedicated and talented staff in OWOW, and working together with our partners, I believe
we  can achieve the Office of Water's vision for healthy watersheds and sustainable com-
munities.
                                          Denise Keehner, Director
                                          Office of Wetlands, Oceans and Watersheds

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                         In This Report...
                                                                Pages
About OWOW

New Initiatives/Partnerships
      National Ocean Policy
      National Lakes Assessment
      Coastal Wetlands Initiative
      Healthy Watersheds
      Surface Coal Mining

Capacity Building and Community-Based Watershed Protection
      Community Action for a Renewed Environment (CARE)
      Watershed Central and Wiki
      Climate Ready Estuaries
      Analysis of Intermittent, Ephemeral and Headwater Streams
      and Public Drinking Water Sources
      First-ever Water Quality Video Contest
      New OWOW Capacity Building Team

Marine Debris Summit
Vessel Discharges
Vessel-to-Reef Project

Stormwater Management
      New Guidance for Federal Facilities
      Reduce Runoff Video
Environmental Management and Performance
      Interactive Toolbox for Public Lands
      TMDL Results Analysis Project
      DARTER System for Section 404 Permits
      New Wetlands Program Framework

Monitoring and Assessment
      Ocean Survey Vessel Bold
      Water Quality Exchange (WQX)
      Wetlands Mapping Standard
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Presidential Task Force Proposes New Policy and

Framework for Improved Stewardship of the Oceans, our

Coasts and the Great Lakes


     From June to December 2009, OWOW's
     Ocean and Coastal Protection Division
led EPA's participation in the President's
Interagency Ocean Policy Task Force. EPA
helped to develop the nine priority objectives
proposed by the Task Force, including:

•  Ecosystem-Based Management:
   Adopt ecosystem-based management
   as a foundational principle for the
   comprehensive management of the ocean,
   our coasts, and the Great Lakes. Examples
   of EPA programs that embody ecosystem-
   based management include the 28 National Estuary
   Programs, the Chesapeake Bay Program, and the Gulf of Mexico Program.

•  Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning:  Implement comprehensive, integrated, ecosystem-
   based coastal and marine spatial planning and management in the United States. EPA
   helped to develop various aspects of the proposed Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning
   Framework, such as its geographic scope, which extends from the outer edge of the U.S.
   Exclusive Economic Zone to the mean high water line, including inland bays and estuaries.
   The Framework also may include upland areas that deliver pollutants to coastal and
   estuarine waters.

•  Resiliency and Adaptation to Climate Change and Ocean Acidification: Strengthen
   resiliency of coastal communities and marine and Great Lakes environments and their
   abilities to adapt to climate change impacts and ocean acidification.  For example, EPA's
   Climate Ready Estuaries Program increases resiliency and adaptation to climate change.

•  Regional Ecosystem Protection and Restoration:  Establish and implement an integrated
   ecosystem protection and restoration strategy that is science-based and aligns conservation
   and restoration goals at the Federal, State, tribal, local, and regional levels.

•  Water Quality and Sustainable Practices on Land: Enhance water quality in the ocean,
   along our coasts, and in the Great Lakes by promoting and implementing sustainable
   practices on land. This objective would incorporate much of EPA's work on hypoxia,
   nutrients, urban waters, marine debris,  and stormwater management.

For more information, visit: www.whitehouse.gov/administration/eop/ceq/initiatives/oceans.
(Contact: Paul Cough, 202-566-0688

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New Initiatives/Partnerships
  National Lakes Assessment Finds Degraded

  Habitat and Nutrients as Leading Causes of

  Problems in Nation's  Lakes

  Working with partners in the states, tribes, and other federal agencies, OWOW
  is leading a series of statistically-representative surveys of the nation's waters.
  These National Aquatic Resource Surveys are designed to report
  on the condition of the nation's waters using core indicators and
  standardized lab and field methods, and to help improve states and
  tribal capacity for monitoring and assessment.

    In 2009, OWOW issued the draft National Lakes
    Assessment report (www.epa.gov/lakesurvey) the first-
    ever baseline study of the condition of the nation's lakes
    :th natural and man-made).

    / Findings from the National Lakes Assessment:

        56% of lakes support healthy biological communities
        and the remaining lakes are in fair or poor condition
        (See figure on page 7).

        Degraded lakeshore habitat, rated "poor" in 36 percent
        of lakes, is the most significant of the problems assessed.
        Poor biological health is three times more likely in lakes
        with poor lakeshore habitat relative to lakes with good
        habitat. Removal of trees and shrubs and construction
        of docks, marinas, homes and other structures along
        shorelines all contribute to degraded lakeshore habitat.
                  \m
        Two nutrients—nitrogen and phosphorous — are at high levels in 20 percent of lakes. Poor
        biological health is 2.5 times more likely in lakes with high nutrient levels. Excess levels of
        nutrients contribute to algal blooms, weed growth, reduced water clarity, and other lake
        problems.

  OWOW's National Aquatic Resources Survey Team  also successfully concluded the second of
  two years of sampling for the National  Rivers and Streams Assessment (a report is scheduled
  for 2011) and moved forward with the planning for the upcoming National Coastal Assessment
  (sampling in 2010) and  National Wetland Condition Assessment (sampling in 2011). For more
  information, see www.epa.gov/aquaticsurveys (Contact: Sarah Lehmann, 202-566-1379)
Conducting a lakeshore habitat assessment
in Idaho (photo: USEPA Region 10)
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Biological Condition of the Nation's Lakes (from Draft National Lakes Assessment report)
                     National
                    All Lakes
                      49,543
         Natural Lakes
            29,308
Man-Made Lakes
    20.238
            ! Good = <20% Taxa Loss    [  ' Fair = 20% - 40% Taxa Loss   | Poor = >40% Taxa Loss
   National Summary
       56% Good
        21% Fair
       22% Poor
                           *
NLA Sampled Sites
                                                         0   3B«0  WiVSOJ
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New Initiatives/Partner ships
                                  Coastal Wetlands Initiative Seeks to
                                   Curb Growing Threats from Storms
                                    and Climate Change
                                            G\
                                            ;
                                          rowing awareness of severe threats to coastal
                                          areas posed by climate change, devastation
                                          caused by recent hurricanes, and two
                                    recent reports have prompted EPA to examine the
                                     management of the nation's coastal wetlands. A
                                     report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
                                     Administration
                             (NOAA) and the U.S. Fish
                 and Wildlife Service (USFWS) finds that,
     from 1998 to 2004, wetlands in coastal watersheds in the
Great Lakes, Atlantic, and Gulf coasts have experienced an
average net decrease of 59,000 acres per year. A second report
by the Association of State Wetland Managers recommends
facilitation among climate, watershed and coastal zone
programs, and identification and dissemination of best
management practices to protect and help wetlands adapt to
impacts of climate change.
       1
In response to these findings, EPA's Wetlands Division and Oceans and Coastal Protection
Division created a Coastal Wetlands Initiative with the goals of:

          confirming wetland loss and better understanding contributing stressors;
          identifying and disseminating tools, strategies, policies and information to protect
          and restore coastal wetland resources;  and
          raising awareness of the functions and values of, threats to, and opportunities to pro-
          tect and restore coastal wetlands.
                                                            Recent studies show an
                                                            average net loss of 59,000
                                                            acres of coastal wetlands per
                                                            year. A new Inter agency
                                                            Workgroup will coordinate
                                                            restoration and protection
                                                            strategies.
        3)
  One significant undertaking of the Coastal Wetlands Initiative is to conduct seven regional re-
  views of coastal wetlands to understand the stressors as well as restoration and protection strat-
  egies to reduce or reverse loss. EPA will use the regional reviews and follow-up workshops to
  gather input and to stimulate dialogue among stakeholders to facilitate a more coordinated and
  robust effort to protect and restore coastal wetlands. Reviews have been completed in the Mid-
  Atlantic and South Atlantic regions. In pursuing these goals and activities, EPA is coordinating
  with an Interagency Coastal Wetlands Workgroup including NOAA, USFWS, US Department
  of Agriculture, Natural Resource Conservation Service, the Army Corps of Engineers, US Geo-
  logical Survey, and the Federal Highway Administration. (Contact: Clay Miller, 202-566-1365; or
  Nancy Laurson, 202-566-1247)
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Healthy Watersheds Initiative

Focuses on Protecting Clean

Waters

      Recognizing the need to conserve and protect
      healthy aquatic ecosystems, as well as to
      restore impaired ones, EPA recently launched
the Healthy Watersheds Initiative. The Healthy
Watersheds Initiative focuses on using a holistic
approach to protect and restore ecosystems.
The cost of protecting watersheds is much less
than the cost of restoring waters, so choosing to
protect ecologically valuable systems will save
money in the long run. Additional benefits include
preserving habitat for fish and other wildlife,
providing recreational opportunities, offering
better protection against storms and floods, and
lowering water treatment costs. In April 2009,
EPA launched the Healthy Watersheds Web site,
www.epa.gov/healthywatersheds, which presents
a series  of conservation and protection approaches
and provides links to case studies and reports. The
Web site also provides tools for:

•   Habitat and biodiversity conservation
•   Green infrastructure and landscape conservation
•   River corridor protection
•   Instream flow protection
•   Land protection programs and local land use
    ordinances
In July 2009, EPA developed a 4-page fact sheet
(available on the Healthy Watersheds Web site)
that explains the approach and its benefits.  In
2010, EPA anticipates releasing a Healthy Wa-
tersheds technical guide. EPA is also working in
partnership with the states on a Healthy Water-
sheds Initiative National Framework and Action
Plan, a companion communications plan, and a
set of indicator measures for healthy watersheds.
(Contact: Laura Gabanski, 202-566-1179)
          Why EPA launched the Healthy
               Watershed Initiative

     Despite significant efforts to restore aquatic
     ecosystems in various watersheds across
     the nation, the unfortunate trend is the
     continued decline of these valuable systems.
     For example, the rate at which new waters
     are being added to EPA's listing of impaired
     waterbodies continues to outpace the rate at
     which restored waters are being removed from
     this list. Pollution and water quality problems
     tell only part of the story; our nation's aquatic
     ecosystems are also imperiled by loss of
     habitat and stream connectivity, hydrologic
     alteration, invasive species, and climate
     change.
 K number of mipenlea

taxa continue to climb (Jelks, et al, 2008)]
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EPA Signs Interagency
MOU to Improve Oversight
of Surface Coal Mining
Activities  in Appalachia

       On June 11, 2009, EPA, the U.S.
       Department of the Army, and the U.S.
       Department of the Interior signed
a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
implementing an interagency action plan on
Appalachian surface coal mining. This action
plan was designed to significantly reduce
the harmful environmental consequences of
Appalachian surface coal mining operations.
    Action Plan includes both short-and long
    i actions for:
         strengthening existing policy and
         guidance
         gathering public input
         assessing the effectiveness of cur-
         rent policy, and
         developing regulatory actions.
            A picture of a mountaintop removal site.
                  Mountaintop coal mining cannot
                  be predicated on the assumption
                  of minimal oversight of its
      environmental impacts, and its permanent
      degradation of water quality. Stronger reviews
      and protections will safeguard the health of local
      waters, and thousands of acres of watersheds in
      Appalachia."

            EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson
                                           Appalachian coal mining has buried an
                                           estimated 2,000 miles of streams in states
                                           including West Virginia. Scientific studies
                                           have increasingly identified significant water
                                           quality problems below surface coal mining
                                           operations that can contaminate surface wa-
                                           ters for hundreds of years. Data from coal-
                                           field communities also indicate that coal min-
                                           ing can be responsible for causing fish kills
                                           and contaminating fish and wildlife. A key
                                           feature of the MOU is enhanced  coordination
                                           among agencies on the review of 79 imminent
                                           mining permits, which is expected to provide
                                           for reduced environmental impacts of mining
                                           operations, improved monitoring of streams,
                                           and enhanced compensatory mitigation for
                                           stream impacts,  among other improvements.
                                           (Contact: Brian Frazer, 202-566-1652)
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                 Capacity Building & Community-Based Watershed Protection
Community Action for a Renewed Environment (CARE)
Program Reduces Pollution in Communities
                                                      LOCAL PARTNERSHIPS. HEALTHY COI^MUNITIES.
     EPA's Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
     Response and Office of Water (OW) are
     co-leading EPA's multimedia Community
Action for a Renewed Environment (CARE)
program, which is achieving measurable
environmental results at the community level.
Starting in 2011, OW will coordinate the
program with the Office of Air as its co-lead.

CARE is a community-based program that
works with county and local governments,
tribes, non-profit organizations and
universities to help the public understand and
reduce toxic risks from numerous sources.
The CARE process helps communities build
capacity to reduce toxics and pollution
through local collaboration.

This "collaborative planning" is essential
to leveraging skills and resources, looking
at problems holistically, and ensuring
sustainable solutions for the community.
The CARE program and OWOW watershed
protection programs share a focus on
holistic planning, collaboration and building
sustainable solutions for the community.

Through CARE, EPA has provided technical
assistance and $12 million in funding
cumulatively to 68 environmentally over-       ^^^^^^^^^^^_^^^^^_^^^^^^^^_
burdened communities in 34 states and
territories across the U.S. Over 90 percent of CARE projects are in Environmental Justice (EJ)
communities of concern. In addition, CARE projects have leveraged almost an additional
50 percent from local partner organizations. Over 1,500 partners have been engaged in local
CARE projects, including local and state agencies, businesses, citizen groups, and universities.

A recent evaluation by the National Academy of Public Administration (NAPA) recognized the
CARE program as a solid, tested framework for engaging communities and other stakeholders.
The NAPA Panel concluded that the CARE program has successfully demonstrated that
the concept works well to combine EPA expertise with community capacity-building to
address risks from all sources of toxics in underserved communities.  NAPA noted that CARE
partnerships are changing their environments and reducing pollution in their communities.
For more information about CARE, www.epa.gov/care (Contact: Gale Bonanno, 202-564-2243)
                                                    Toxic Discharges Reduced in
                                                          Lake Superior

                                              The Lake Superior Watershed Partnership, a
                                              CARE grantee, worked with the State Den-
                                              tistry Association in Michgian to convince
                                              more than 30 dental offices to voluntarily
                                              install mercury-amalgam separators, decreas-
                                              ing the amount of mercury discharged from
                                              Marquette's wastewater treatment plant to
                                              Lake Superior by 19 percent.

                                              The Partnership also
                                              furthered environ-
                                              mental stewardship
                                              by joining with 9
                                              faith communities
                                              (125 congregations)
                                              to focus on pharma-
                                              ceuticals in water.
                                              An Earth Day "Clean Sweep" collected one
                                              ton of unwanted medications from about
                                              2,000 people and ensured the medications
                                              were responsibly disposed.
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 Capacity Building & Community-Based Watershed Protection
Watershed Central & Wiki Offer One-Stop

Shopping for Watershed Practitioners

      Restoring the health of the nation's waterways
      requires access to a wide variety of data,
      assessment tools, and funding sources to
manage pollution effectively. It also depends on
collaboration between multiple landowners and
state, local, and federal environmental management
agencies. Approaching restoration with a well
documented watershed plan allows stakeholders
to pull all of the analyses, public goals, and
clean-up actions together into one orchestrated
water resource management effort. Until now,
local watershed managers had to search several
publications and Web sites for funding, assistance
programs, and other sources of watershed
management expertise in order to plan their
watershed projects.  To make watershed
management related information easier to
find and use, EPA developed and launched
"Watershed Central" in 2009 at www.epa.gov/
watershedcentral.

Watershed Central is a Web site that identifies,
connects, and organizes relevant federal govern-
ment and university Web sites, state and local pro-
gram resources and key publications for state and
local managers to guide them during each step
in the watershed management process. The Web
site includes a "wiki," which allows watershed
managers to share information sources and tools
by writing articles about their resources and post-
ing them online for all to see. Other users of the
"wiki" can read and comment on these articles,       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^™
rate the usefulness of watershed tools, or contact experts for additional information.

Watershed Central's Web 2.0 Wiki
EPA's Office of Water worked with the Office of Research and Development and Office of
Environmental Information to develop Watershed Central and the wiki. Watershed Cen-
tral's wiki is one of EPA's first wikis and represents the successful use of "Web 2.0" which
is, in essence, all about two-way communication and collaboration. Future plans include
modeling assistance and enhanced online mapping.  (Contact: Stuart Lehman, 202-566-
1205)
         The Wiki allows users to:
           • Share best practices, case studies and
            lessons learned;
           • See what other watershed
            organizations are doing and learn from
            them;
           • Identify partners in your watershed;
           • Rate and comment on watershed
            management tools or report on new
            tools;
           • View a map with water monitoring
            stations, land use types, watershed
            boundaries, high-resolution aerial
            photography, and more;
           • Publish watershed management plans
            for others to learn from;
           • Create a page about your organization,
            add a map, and share it amongst
            members of your group; and
           • Build the community knowledge base.
 12
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                                                  In 2009, the City ojPunta Gorda
                                                  (Florida) and the Charlotte Harbor
                                                  National Estuary Program became
                                                  the first CRE program partner_ - and
                                                  one of the first municipalities in the
                                                  nation - to adopt a plan for adapting
                                                  to climate change.
Climate Ready Estuaries: Enhancing Capacity for Climate

Change Adaptation in the  National Estuary Program

     Building on the success of pilot efforts to develop
     climate change vulnerability assessments and
     adaptation plans for six NEPs in 2008, OWOW's
Climate Ready Estuaries (CRE) program provided
targeted start-up grants and technical assistance to seven
NEP partners in 2009. Projects were diverse and built
upon lessons learned from experience with the 2008
pilots.

•  Albemarle-Pamlico Sound (North Carolina), Casco Bay
   (Maine), Barnegat Bay (New Jersey) and Charlotte Harbor
   (Florida) hosted listening and stakeholder involvement
   sessions for the public and decision makers.
•  Partners in the Delaware Estuary (Delaware) and Indian
   River Lagoon (Florida) focused efforts on developing
   vulnerability assessments leading to local adaptation plans.
•  In Long Island Sound (Connecticut-New York)
   collaborators are working on a climate change monitoring
   plan and municipal-level adaptation plan.
•  Tampa Bay (Florida) is developing a handbook to inform "climate
   sensitive" habitat restoration in the Gulf of Mexico.
•  In November 2009, the City of Punta Gorda (Florida) and the Charlotte
   Harbor National Estuary Program became the first CRE program
   partner - and one of the first municipalities in the nation - to adopt a
   plan for adapting to climate change.

In June 2009, the CRE program convened a two-day workshop, bring-
ing partners together to discuss lessons learned and ongoing chal-
lenges, and to chart a course for the program. The CRE program
captured discussions from this workshop and summarized partner
accomplishments from 2008 and 2009 in a  progress report available
for download on the CRE website (www.epa.gov/cre).  The CRE
program also continued to strengthen its online toolkit of adaptation
resources (www.epa.gov/cre/toolkit.html)  in 2009, adding an "Ad-
aptation Planning for the National Estuary Program" guide and the "Synthesis of Adaptation
Options for Coastal Areas" document. The Synthesis document has been highlighted by other
federal agencies such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and USAID,
and downloaded thousands of times. The CRE program continues to be widely recognized as
a leader and innovator in the fast-moving field of coastal climate change adaptation. (Contact:
John Whitler, 202-564-1929)
                                                       Partner accomplishments are
                                                       summarized in a new CRE report.
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Capacity Building & Community-Based Watershed Protection
 New Analysis Highlights Importance of Intermittent,

 Ephemeral and Headwater Streams to Public Drinking

 Water Sources

    A  recent analysis conducted jointly by the Wetlands Division and the Office of
   / \ Groundwater and Drinking Water highlights the importance of intermittent, ephemeral,
 JL  Aand headwater streams as sources of drinking water for about 117 million people,
 over one-third of the U.S. population. The analysis combined state and EPA drinking water
 data with stream data from U.S. Geologic Survey's National Hydrography Dataset to identify
 those public drinking water systems that rely at least in part on intermittent, ephemeral, or
 headwater streams. These types of streams are more difficult to protect after the U.S. Supreme
 Court decision Rapanos v. United States. The results were provided to Congress to inform
 their deliberations.on whether to address Rapanos legislatively. In addition, a number of news
 outlets have relied on the study to highlight local public health implications  of Rapanos. The
 data are available at a national, state, and county level at www.epa.gov/owow/wetlands/
 science/surface drinking water/index.html (Contact: Rachel Fertik, 202-566-1452)
                         Percentage »f Surface Drinking Water ('mm
                       Intermittent, Ephemeral, and Headwater Streams
   Wetlands Division staff worked closely with the Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance to provide
   technical assistance to Congress on the full suite of implications resulting from the Rapanos decision. This included
   summarizing the environmental, programmatic, and enforcement effects of the decision, the results of which were
   presented to over 70 key Senate staff.
 14
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Video Contest Recognized by White House as Milestone in

Open Government

     President Obama's 2008 political campaign revolutionized the
     use of the Internet and Information Technology,
     utilizing information sharing, social networking,
and online collaboration tools to engage citizens.
Former OWOW director Craig Hooks recognized the
value of these new technologies to reach out to younger
generations and came up with the idea of hosting an
on-line video contest. By marketing on Facebook and using other Web
2.0 tools, the contest drew an unexpectedly high number of entries. More
than 250 videos were uploaded to EPA's YouTube Channel - far exceeding
expectations. In addition, the channel generated more than 28,000 collective YouTube views
between the start and the end of June 2009 when winners were chosen, with thousands
more hits to date.  Contest submissions covered wetlands and watershed protection,
marine debris prevention and other topics.  Videos used creative and humorous ways to
convey important environmental messages. Some of the best submissions are now being
used as Public Service Announcements. In addition to the wide appeal this innovative
project had with the public, 7 different EPA program offices and 2 Regions have expressed
interest in implementing a similar video contest and approached OWOW for its guidelines/
lessons learned document.  To view (and download) the winners and honorable mentions,
visit: www.epa.gov/owow/videocontest.html (Contact: Patty Scott, 202-566-1292).
OWOW Forms New Capacity Building Team
                                                                I\
       As part of EPA's national strategy for improving water quality
       on a watershed basis, in 2009 OWOW established a cross-divisional Capacity
       Building Team to accelerate local watershed protection efforts. The role of the
Capacity Building Team is to facilitate the work of local governments and watershed
groups by providing them with the tools they need to succeed. The new team is charged
with targeting the communication of training and tools to local watershed groups and
government agencies, leveraging 3rd party providers to enhance support to local watershed
organizations, gaining better external feedback on the effectiveness of OWOW's capacity
building tools, and identifying new tools to further enhance capacity building. The team's
early accomplishments include delivering the Watershed Academy live training course
Key EPA Internet Tools for Watershed Management, with updated content at www.epa.gov/
watershed/wacademy/epatools, and completing an inventory of approximately 100 distinct
tools and activities for which OWOW has a lead role. The team will build from this base.
(Contacts: Don Waye, 202-566-1170; Alison Keener, 202-566-3222)


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Marine Debris and Vessel Discharges
:
Marine Debris Prevention Gathers Momentum after

Summit

        Marine debris is a pervasive environmental problem
        that stretches beyond the set responsibilities of any
        individual EPA office or federal agency. EPA's Marine
Debris Prevention Workgroup, led by OWOW, is using a
comprehensive approach to address the types, sources,
movement, and impacts of marine debris. Workgroup
members include the Office of Wastewater Management; the
Office of Solid Waste; the Office of Prevention, Pesticides,
and Toxic Substances; and EPA Regional offices. In 2009, the workgroup hosted a
successful two-day Marine Debris Prevention Summit to enhance information exchange
and to strengthen the links between program efforts and marine debris prevention.
Summit participants included staff from EPA Headquarters and Regions 1, 2, 3, 4, 8,
9, and 10, as well as expert guest speakers. The Summit identified a number of key
recommendations for 2010.

In addition in 2009, the Interagency Marine Debris Coordinating Committee, co-chaired by
EPA and NOAA, submitted a progress report to Congress that provided an update on all
Federal agencies' activities undertaken between June 2008 and December 2009 to address
marine debris, as mandated by the Marine Debris Research, Prevention, and Reduction
Act. This is the first progress report since the Interagency Report on Marine Debris Sources,
Impacts, Strategies and Recommendations submitted to Congress in August 2008. More infor-
mation is available at www.epa.gov/owow/oceans/debris/index.html. (Contacts: Katherine
Weiler, 202-566-1280; Ashley Greene, 202-566-1738)


  PA Tackles  Vessel Discharges
      egulations, best management practices, guidance, recommendations, and research
      are all key components of OWOW's Vessel Discharges Program. Under Section
      ,312 of the CWA, EPA is directed to develop standards and management practices
for certain discharges. In 2009, EPA began assessing the need to revise and update
vessel sewage standards and also began the development of proposed regulations to
establish best management practices for discharges incidental to the normal operation
of recreational vessels under the Clean Boating Act (CBA). The CBA will impact
approximately 17 million recreational vessels and cover discharges such as bilge water,
graywater, bottom fouling (invasive species), and cleaning and maintenance discharges
In addition in 2009, OWOW completed the Cruise Ship Plume Dilution Report that
studied the near-field dilution of treated sewage and graywater discharges from docked
cruise ships in Skagway Harbor, Alaska. (Contacts: Kathryn Benz, 202-564-1223; Brian
Rappoli, 202-566-1548)
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Vessel-to-Reef Project Provides Habitat for Fish and  Other

Aquatic Life

       On May 27, 2009, the ex-USS Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, a 522 ft. former USAF Long
       Range Instrument Platform Tracking ship previously maintained by the Maritime
       Administration, was sunk in 140 feet of water approximately six miles south-
southeast of Key West in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. EPA conducted
a number of vessel walkthroughs to assess the vessel clean-up and preparation prior to
its sinking to create an artificial reef.  The vessel was scuttled within one minute and 44
seconds.  This new artificial reef, the largest in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary
and the second largest in the world, will provide habitat for reef fish and many other
aquatic species. (Contact:  Laura Johnson, 202-566-1273)
»


This deck view of the ex-USS Gen. Hoyt S.
Vandenberg shows the modifications made to
secure items on the deck that may otherwise
break free from the vessel during sinking.
Such modifications, which help avoid the
generation of marine debris, follow the 2006
guidance document jointly issued by EPA
and the Maritime Administration, "National
Guidance: Best Management Practices for
Preparing Vessels Intended to Create Artificial
Reefs."  Two radar dishes which are 30-40 feet
in diameter can be seen in the center and upper
left hand corner of the photo. These dishes were
removed, then welded back to trimmed down
bases, and further secured to the deck with
cables. In the water surrounding the vessel is
a floating boom, used to contain any debris or
liquid that may escape the vessel during the
final cleanup and preparation.
                                                     The new submerged artifical reef will provide
                                                     habitat for reef fish and other aquatic species
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Stormwater Management
EPA Guidance Helps

Federal Facilities Better

Manage Stormwater

   In December 2009, EPA issued guidance
   to help federal agencies minimize
   the impact of federal development
projects on nearby water bodies. The
guidance, issued as part of the Energy
Independence and Security Act of 2007
(EISA) and an Executive Order signed by
President Obama, calls upon all federal
agencies to lead by example to address
a wide range of environmental issues,
including Stormwater runoff.  Under
EISA Section 438, federal agencies must
minimize Stormwater runoff from federal
development projects to protect water
resources. Federal developments that
exceed 5,000 square feet must maintain
or restore pre-development hydrology.
To assist federal agencies, the guidance
provides a step-by-step framework that
will help retain rainfall on-site through
infiltration, evaporation/transpiration, and
re-use.

     New Stormwater Video helps Communities
         Educate People about Low Impact
                   Development

   In 2009, OWOWreleased a 9-minute video, "Reduce
   Runoff: Slow It Down, Spread It Out, Soak It In,"
   which highlights green techniques such as rain gardens,
   green roofs, and rain barrels that help manage storm-
   water runoff in a more sustainable manner.  The film
   showcases green techniques that are being used in urban
   areas to minimize the impacts of Stormwater runoff.
   It includes techniques on display at the U.S. Botanic
   Garden's "One Planet - Ours!" 2008 Exhibit. It also
   highlights green practices at EPA's Headquarters in
   Washington, D.C., including six 1,000-gallon cisterns
   in the basement at EPA's West Building. This cistern
   collects roof runoff, and the water irrigates planting beds
   and the grass, helping to conserve water and reduce run-
   off to the Chesapeake Bay. The video is available online
   at: www.epa.gov/npsllid. (Contacts: Anne Weinberg,
   202-566-1217; Patty Scott, 202-566-1292)
Federal agencies can comply using a
variety of Stormwater management practices often referred to
as "green infrastructure" or "low impact development," such
as reducing impervious surfaces, using vegetative practices,
porous pavements and green roofs. Although the guidance was
developed for federal facilities, these Stormwater management
practices are generally  appropriate for a broad range of
developments. OWOW worked closely with other federal
agencies to develop the state-of-the-art guidance, which   Permable P^ment is one technique that helps
provides background information, key definitions,
case studies and recommendations on meeting the new
EISA requirements. This guidance will help federal facilities reduce Stormwater runoff,
a leading source of water pollution. Runoff can cause increased flooding and stream
channel erosion, and larger pollutant loads to surface waters, among other impacts. Copies
of the guidance  and related materials are posted at: http://www.epa.gov/owow/nps/lid/
section438/.  (Contact: Robert Goo, 202-566-1201)
                infiltrate Stormwater so that it does not runoff
                and pollute downstream waters.
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EPA and Fish and Wildlife Service Develop Interactive

Toolbox to Protect Water Resources on Prized Public Lands

       During 2009, EPA and the US Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) jointly completed a
       national assessment of the impaired waters occurring within or near public lands
       managed by the FWS, and co-developed interactive tools to help this information
become easily and routinely used at all levels of both agencies. This project was carried
out to help the FWS better protect, restore and manage the waters of prized public lands
including National Wildlife
Refuges, National Fish Hatcher-
ies, and Waterfowl Production
Areas across the nation. Using
Geographic Information Systems
(CIS) and the EPAs impaired
waters data, OWOW compared
impaired waters data with FWS
property maps to determine spe-
cific properties and waters at risk
as well as  impairment causes.
The project team compiled these
findings into mapped, tabular,
and text products. The assess-
ment revealed that, although the
waters in or near FWS properties
were in better condition than US
              ,              ,       Total Impaired Waters In/Near FWS Properties by State/Territory
waters in general, some impaired areas                          -
do exist (see Figure). A total of 804
impaired waters totaling 10,755 km in length and 2,510 sq km in area occur in or near 303
FWS properties. The most common impairment causes include nutrients, oxygen depletion,
pathogens, and mercury.

Rather than create a final report text alone, OWOW developed a number of interactive tools
to enable FWS, from the individual refuge manager up to the regional or national strategic
planner, access to the most relevant data. A full, national GIS database of the assessment
maps and data tables was  provided to the FWS, along with a "read-only" version browsable
by users without GIS skills. Additionally, a master spreadsheet was developed to enable
matching individual properties, impaired waters, and their characteristics at local, regional,
or national scales as needed. To promote watershed approaches, the assessment also reag-
gregated the project data by watersheds with FWS property  and identified the waters with
existing Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs). All of the interactive data and the final report
will be housed on FWS and EPA Web sites to support access and use throughout both agen-
cies.  OWOW continues to work with additional federal partners on this important safe-
guard for public lands. (Contact: Douglas Norton, 202-566-1221)
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TMDL Results Analysis Project Shows Major Progress in
Restoring Polluted Waterbodies
Ui
                                                              -™fo study sh°™d *<* ™st ™DLs
       •nder the Clean Water Act (CWA), developing impaired
       waters lists and Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs)
       are key parts of restoring impaired waters. A TMDL is
a calculation of how much pollution a waterbody can receive
and still meet water quality standards - and an important step
toward reducing that pollution.  Until the TMDL Program
Results Analysis Project, however, there was limited evidence
of the effectiveness of the CWA's impaired waters listing and
TMDL program. This multi-year project's goal was to analyze
impaired waters program progress and its driving factors,
providing insights for TMDL program improvement. Because
TMDLs occur midway along a sequence of program steps
toward restoration, this project studied all stages before,
 .          i f    i  .mi i-r^T  •    i         -11        "een at ^east partially implemented through permits or
during, and after the TMDL in order to consider the       nonpoint source control actions in thdr watersheds
broader context in which the TMDL program operates.

 )uring 2009, OWOW created a public Web site to house over 30 study reports, fact sheets, techni-
cal papers and other products developed under the Results Analysis Project. This site was de-
signed around the "impaired waters pipeline" concept, with five CWA program stages that im-
paired waters pass through en route to full restoration. The project carried out multiple studies on
all five stages.  Web site highlights from each stage include:

       Listing. The listing process has led to the identification and tracking of over 43,000 impaired waters
       nationally; improvements in state list submission and Integrated Reporting were documented in results
       analysis fact sheets online.
       Planning. TMDL development passed the 40,000 stage during 2009, and additional national GIS map-
       ping of impaired waters with TMDLs and impaired watershed boundaries were produced to aid states
       in restoration planning.
       Implementing. A statistical study of all TMDLs in EPA Region 5 determined that 80% of TMDLs had at
       least some activity occurring to implement pollution controls (see bar chart above). Other studies as well
       found that a majority of TMDLs have increased actions to improve water quality.
•      Improving. A two-state study identified driving factors linked with water quality improvements from
       TMDL implementation; another study identified methods for states to document incremental improve-
       ments for performance tracking.
•      Recovery. Using lessons learned about the driving factors underlying TMDL successes, Recovery Po-
       tential Screening methods were developed and published to help guide states toward better restoration
       investments that restore more waters earlier, more consistently, and more cost-effectively; a Recovery
       Potential tools site is being developed.

Visit TMDL Program Results Analysis Web site  at: www.epa.gov/owow/tmdl/results/. (Contact:
Douglas Norton, 202-566-1221)
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              Data on Aquatic Resoun
                  Effective Renuliitton (PAH
   y.S, ENVWQWMENTAI, PftQTiCTlQN MS
(igB
DARTER System Improves Tracking of Wetlands Permits

   In October 2009, OWOW announced the release of an upgraded Data on Aquatic Resources
   Tracking for Effective Regulation (DARTER) system. DARTER is EPA's system to manage
   its workflow in the Clean Water Act (CWA) Section 404 permit program.  Section 404
requires a permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, or states with EPA-approved
wetlands programs, for the discharge of dredged or fill material into waters of the
United States. EPA plays a number of roles in the Section 404 permit program including
developing and interpreting policy, guidance and environmental criteria used in evaluating
permit applications, determining the scope of geographic jurisdiction and reviewing and
commenting on proposed Section 404 permits. DARTER allows EPA staff to:

      •  Track agency involvement in pre-application coordination, review of public notices for
         proposed permits, and proposed jurisdictional determinations;
      •  Prepare and share EPA-generated jurisdictional determinations; and
      •  Access shared data from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' national regulatory program
         data management system (ORM2).

Improved data access and management will enable EPA to more effectively review CWA
404 permits and to document environmental improvements resulting from those reviews.
(Contacts: Brian Topping, 202-566-5680; Rose Kwok, 202-566-0657)


New Wetlands  Program Framework  Provides  Roadmap for

Successful State and Tribal Wetlands Protection Programs

   A  primary objective of EPA's Wetlands program is to build state and tribal capacity
  /\  for wetlands protection. In 2009 OWOW finalized, with extensive state and tribal
JL  Ainput, a Core Elements Framework that provides a comprehensive menu of program
building activities for all wetland programs, from emerging to well-developed. The core
elements are basic program functions that form the foundation of wetlands management
and protection in a state or tribe:

      1. monitoring and assessment;
      2. regulatory activities including 401 certification;
      3. voluntary restoration and protection; and
      4. water quality standards for wetlands

State and Tribes now have a clear roadmap to reach their wetland program goals from
where ever their program currently is. www.epa.gov/owow/wetlands/initiative/estp.html
(Contact: Rebecca Oils, 202-566-1378)

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Water Quality Monitoring
Ocean Survey Vessel (OSV) BOLD

Conducts Valuable Scientific  Surveys

     The OSV BOLD supported regional and headquarter
     priorities along the East Coast, Gulf of Mexico, and
     Caribbean, during 2009. A wide variety of environmental
monitoring was conducted over 238 sea days. Some 35 scientific
surveys were performed and!2 educational events were held
for the public and community leaders at several major ports,
including ports in urban waters.

The primary mission of the OSV BOLD is to conduct surveys of the nation's Ocean Dredged
Material Disposal Sites (ODMDS).  Nine disposal sites were evaluated along the East
and Gulf coasts in 2009. The data collected indicate that the disposal sites are being used
properly; they are performing as designed; and no impacts to human health or aquatic life
were demonstrated. The Tampa, FL disposal site, in particular, has become a rich habitat
for fisheries and numerous benthic communities, including coral.  The success of the Tampa
site validated the engineering and management efforts that established the site.  Future
monitoring will ensure that ongoing disposal work will not adversely impact this diverse
habitat. (Contact: Kennard Potts, 202-566-1267)

Web-based WQX Puts Water  Quality Data at  the Fingertips

of Scientists, Policy Makers and the Public

f*^^ WOW continues to improve the ease with which organizations large
I    land small can store their water quality monitoring in a national
V—X warehouse. Once data are stored in the National STORET Data
Warehouse, they are accessible to scientists, government policy makers, and
the public.

In 2009, OWOW completed a three-year transition to the Water Quality Exchange (WQX)
framework (the successor to the STORET data system). OWOW also  developed a new
flexible tool for small data system owners called WQX Web, which allows any organization
with a connection to the Web to share its data nationally with others.  Many smaller groups
across the country manage their water quality monitoring data using software tools such
as Microsoft Excel or Access. WQX Web is designed to accept output from these types of
applications for submittal to the National STORET Data Warehouse.

OWOW also collaborated with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) on a Web services proj-
ect to facilitate data analysis. The collaboration resulted in a common inter-agency data
exchange that allows users to seamlessly pull water quality data from the two largest
repositories of water quality information — EPA's National STORET Data Warehouse and
the USGS' National Water Information  System (NWIS) — using the same data template. For
more information, see www.epa.gov/STORET (Contact: Charles Kovatch, 202-566-0399)

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Final National Wetlands Mapping Standard Will

Transform National Wetlands Inventory

      Accurate geo-locational information about wetland resources
      is a prerequisite to managing the resource well. In 2009
      OWOW came closer to realizing this national goal through
completion of the National Wetland Mapping Standard. Issuance
of the standard culminates three years of work by a Federal
Geographic Data Committee workgroup of multiple Federal
agencies, States, NGOs and contractors. A consistent national
standard will allow multiple wetland management agencies
to share data and understand where the wetlands are, track
changes, and work towards a mutual goal of better resource
protection and management.  The availability of compatible
mapped wetland data will also transform how the Fish and
Wildlife Service collects and uploads data to the National
Wetland Inventory. The ability to compile data from numerous
sources means that the Inventory can be more comprehensive and current
(Contact: Margarete Heber, 202-566-1189)
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-
 ^*
               EPA Document Number: 840R10001
          United States Environmental Protection Agency
            Office of Wetlands, Oceans and Watersheds,
             1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. (4501T)
                     Washington, DC 20460

                          April 2010
                     www.epa.gov/owow

    EPA would like to recognize the following individuals
and organizations for contributing photographs for this report:
                 NOAA's National Ocean Service
                        Douglas Norton
                        Kennard Potts
                     Bill and Sharon Draker
                        Laura Johnson
                         Brad Cannon
                         Carrie Perry
                       USEPA Region 10
                        John McShane
                         April Wiese
  Please note that mention of any commercial product, enterprise or service
               does not mean that EPA endorses them.

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