United States
Environmental Protection
m m Agency
EPA-842-N-14-005
July, 2016
\7

The Flow of... Trash Free Waters
HOW IS IT FLOWING? The First EPA TFW National Workshop
The Flow is our opportunity to
highlight recent successes, as
well as shine a spotlight on
news and other TFW-related
items.
INSIDE THIS ISSUE:
Aguas Sin Basura in Panama 2
Improved TFW Website Goes
Live
NYC B.Y.O. Bag Bill - Guest Article 3
Trash Free Trinity River Basin
TFW Expansion in Puerto Rico 4
Aquatic Trash Prevention
Great Practices
The Rapids: News Drops	5
Grant Opportunities	6
On May 3-5, the U.S.
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) hosted the first
ever Trash Free Waters (TFW)
National Workshop in
Washington, DC. This workshop
provided the opportunity for
our EPA TFW colleagues from
across the U.S. to share and
build upon ongoing TFW-related
work and to encourage action
and projects where there is a
need. We examined ways to
improve TFW Program
integration and coordination
through regulatory and non-
regulatory approaches,
discussed common resource
challenges, and built a unified
vision for the Program's future.
From a Marine Debris Program
to TFW
TFW is a re-working of EPA's
Marine Debris Program that
focused on addressing storm-
related marine debris and
sources of coastal marine litter.
It was about three years ago
when EPA recognized the need
to tackle the domestic
contribution to the global
problem of marine litter with a
different approach, including
giving the EPA Program a
different name. This Program
evolution brought flexibility to
address aquatic trash in all
waters, and emphasized the
need for proactive measures
(prevention/reduction of land-
based sources) rather than
reactive measures (cleanups and
storm debris removal) only. We
recognize that while trash
cleanups serve an important
purpose, they alone are not a
long-lasting, sustainable solution
to the aquatic trash problem.
TFW takes a holistic approach to
the aquatic trash issue by having
a land-based trash prevention
and reduction focus, because
the best way to keep trash out
of the ocean is to keep it from
entering inland and coastal
water bodies in the first place.
EPA colleagues participating in
this first ever TFW National
Workshop came from both
coastal and inland EPA Regions,
underscoring that aquatic trash
is a national problem.
TFW Across EPA
EPA has a unique capacity, as a
regulatory agency with 10
Regional offices, research labs,
and programs ranging from
ocean and coastal protection to
solid waste and stormwater
management, to address aquatic
trash and marine litter at the
source, as it moves through the
watershed, and as it settles in
the marine environment. TFW
focuses on maximizing the
Agency's ability to leverage
existing EPA programs such as
Urban Waters; National Estuary
Program; Green infrastructure;
Stormwater Management; Solid
Waste Management; Sustainable
Materials Management; Ocean
Dumping; Vessels, Marinas, and
Ports; and Making a Visible
Difference in Communities,
among others. Many of these
existing EPA programs utilize
regulatory or funding authorities
and opportunities that can help
TFW-related efforts reach its
goals.
-Laura S. Johnson, TFW National
Team Lead
Gulf States Litter Control
Policies and Programs
EPA TFW colleagues at the first EPA TFW National Workshop in Washington, DC.

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The Flow of... Trash Free Waters
Page 2
Aguas Sin Basura Updates from Panama
Jane Nishicla, EPA's
Deputy Assistant
Administrator for the
Office of In tern at ion al
and Tribal Affairs,
provided an update on
the U.S. TFW Initiative
at the second session
of the United Nations
Environment Assembly
in May.
In May 2016, staff from EPA's
Office of International and
Tribal Affairs (OITA) went to
Panama to meet with key
stakeholder sectors about the
new Waters Without Trash or
"Aguas Sin Basura" initiative in
Panama, This initiative is an EPA
partnership with the United
Nations Environment
Programme and the Peace
Corps, During this trip, OITA
gained a better understanding
of ongoing initiatives while
meeting with Panama's Ministry
of Environment, the Panama
Canal Authority, the Maritime
Authority, the Solid Waste
Management Authority, and the
Municipality of Panama City.
OITA also visited with a Peace
Corps Volunteer who is based in
a community that is active in
solid waste management and is
coordinating with the Panama
Canal Authority and others for
monthly collection services.
OITA learned of a substantial
amount of work happening at
the community, municipal,
and regional levels, but
recognized that a national
solid waste management plan
will be necessary to address
the significant marine litter
problems in Panama.
Stakeholders there have
struggled with coordination,
which is where "Aguas Sin
Basura" will add value,
bringing people together for
a public participation
workshop on marine litter.
There is political support from
the national government to
invest in waste management
infrastructure, and we hope
the "Aguas Sin Basura"
initiative will align ongoing
and planned efforts to help
the Panamanian government
take the next steps toward
tackling this complex issue.
The New and Improved TFW Website Goes Live!
EPA's improved TFW website is
now available. Please check it
out! The website contains
information on sources and
impacts of trash in our waters;
ongoing and past research
efforts investigating the
impacts of aquatic trash on
ecological and human health;
trash prevention, control, and
reduction practices; aquatic
trash mitigation and reduction
initiatives and regulatory tools;
and guidance for the public.
The TFW website can be found at
https://www.epa.gov/trash-free-
waters. Bookmark our page for
regular TFW updates and
information.
Common trash from consumer goods makes up the majority of what eventually becomes marine debris, polluting our waterways
and oceans. Plastics in the aquatic environment are of increasing concern because of their persistence and effect on the
environment, wildlife, and human health. EPA's Trash-Free Waters program is reducing the volume of trash entering U.S.
waterways.
Prevention, Control and
Sources and Impacts	Research	Reduction
•	Sources of Aquatic Trash
•	Movement of Aquatic Trash
•	Impacts of Mismanaged Trash
• Preventing Trash at the Source
Calling all...
CHAMPIONS!
We've found that a
critical component for
progress is having an
impassioned leader to
drive TFW projects from
development through
implementation.
If someone you know
has a great concept for
reducing volumes of
aquatic trash in large
aquatic ecosystems,
have them contact a
member of the TFW
team!

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Page 3
The Flow of... Trash Free Waters
New York City Passes B.Y.O. Bag Bill
Guest Contributor Jordan Christensen, Citizens Campaign for the Environment
The New York City (NYC)
Council passed legislation
placing a 5 cent fee on single-
use plastic and paper bags in
an effort to increase reusable
bag use among residents, NYC
residents discard 9-10 billion
single-use plastic and paper
bags each year, many ofwhich
litter streets and ultimately
become plastic pollution in
our oceans. Single-use bags
present a significant waste
problem for the city, with
plastic bags alone accounting
for 1,700 tons of residential
garbage per week. In order to
reduce waste and protect our
environment, City Council
sponsors worked with a
diverse coalition of
stakeholders for three years
to craft legislation designed to
encourage the public to
permanently switch to
reusable bags. After
evaluating legislation from
around the country, NYC
moved forward with a 5 cent
fee, which will reduce single-
use plastic and paper bag use
by an estimated 60-90%. The
bill closely models the
Washington, DC bill, which
implemented a 5 cent fee on
plastic and paper bags in
2010. In the first month that
DC's bill was in effect, the
number of plastic bags given
out by grocery stores
dropped from 22.5 million to
3 million. Overall, DC's
legislation has achieved a 60%
reduction in single-use plastic
and paper bags and 72%
reduction in plastic bag litter.
Globally, Ireland became a
leader in the B.Y.O. Bag
movement by placing a fee on
plastic bags in 2002 and
experienced a reduction in
single-use plastic bags of over
90%.
As of October 1, 2016, there
will be no more free, single-
use bags at check-out
counters in NYC. To ensure
residents can conveniently
make the switch to reusable
bags this fall, stakeholders
will be conducting public
education, and the city has
committed to giving out free
reusable bags to any resident
that needs one.
Tool in Development for Trash Free Trinity River Basin
The 'Adopt-a-Spot' Trinity
River Basin Project seeks to
improve water quality within
the basin by creating an
interactive geographic
information systems tool for
use in the Trinity Basin -
from the headwaters to the
mouth of the Guif of Mexico.
The Trinity Basin is the
largest river basin whose
watershed area is entirely
within the state of Texas.
This web-based mapping tool
will pinpoint litter/aquatic
trash "hotspots" and overlay
them with hotspots already
"adopted" or "fostered" by
local environmental stewards.
In turn, this map overlay
would aid energized citizens
and organizations in
identifying which hotspots
are available for them to
adopt/foster. This can
prevent land-based trash/
litter from entering nearby
water bodies. A stakeholder
group has formed a Steering
Committee and a Technical
Advisory Committee and,
after a competitive proposal
process, Texas State
University's Meadows Center
was awarded funding to
develop the database. On
May 16-17, stakeholders met
with the Meadows Center
and others to finalizethe
scope of the project. It was
agreed that the Meadows
Center will develop an
interactive, web-based
mapping tool to connect
volunteers with
opportunities to maintain the
landscapes found to exhibit
the highest accumulated
volumes of litter and/or
instream and riparian debris.
Data calls will be made to
local governments and Keep
America Beautiful affiliates in
the weeks ahead. It is
anticated that the tool will be
ready for use in late 2016.
"The TFW Initiative is
spearheading EPA's efforts
to reduce plastic pollution
discharges to our waters to
zero within the next 10
years. To achieve this goal,
we need everyone's help. I
encourage all of you to
waste less, reuse and
recycle, and properly
dispose of the waste that
cannot be avoided."
-Judith A. Enck, EPA Regional
Administrator for New Jersey,
New York, Puerto Rico, and the
U.S. Virgin Islands.
Trash Free Trinity Project Logo
features the Trinity River Basin.
The Trinity River is the third
largest river in Texas by average
flow volume.

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The Flow of... Trash Free Waters
Page 6
Upcoming Meetings
Urban Waters
NationalTraining
Workshop
Arlington, VA
July 26-28, 2016
Agricultural Plastics
and Recycling
Conference
San Diego, CA
August 17-19,2016
Our Ocean
Conference
Washington, DC
September 15-16, 2016
Mississippi-Alabama
Bays and Bayous
Symposium
Biloxi, Mississippi
November 30 -
December 1, 2016
Puerto Rico TFW Continues to Grow!
AQUATIC TRASH PREVENTION
GREAT PRACTICES COMPENDIUM
THE MID-ATLANTIC STATES
OCTOBER 2015
Click on document image above to
download the Mid-Atlantic Great
Practices Compendium
On April 8, 2016, the Puerto
Rico TFW Program successfully
scaled and conducted its
regional meeting in the
western region of Puerto Rico
for the first time. More than
150 key stakeholders from
government, industry,
community, and academic
sectors joined efforts to
support the TFW initiative
implementation on the Island,
Presenters included Marcus
Eriksen (5-Gyres Institute),
Anahita Williamson (EPA), and
the Scuba Dogs Society.
Presentations focused on
training local organizations to
characterize plastic pollution
on our beaches.
Ongoing projects of the TFW
Puerto Rico Strategy are
showing marked results. The
San Juan Bay National Estuary
Program characterized and
found that plastics account for
60% of the non-vegetative
material captured. A Zero
Waste Guide and fact sheet
for food trucks was developed
and shared with Municipal
Recycling Coordinators for
their use and distribution.
TFW has been providing
support to two additional
municipalities, Culebra and
Moca, to develop Municipal
Ordinances in compliance
with Bill 247, which banned
plastic bags as of July 1, 2016.
A video was developed with
the support of Sea Grant,
Cohemis, and Campus Verde
local environmental
organizations, and can be
found on the new PR TFW
Facebook page
(https://www. face book, com/
PRTrashFree Waters).
HP_
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im;t« .
Glass bottles in the Condado lagoon, San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Expansion of Great Practices as a National Compendium
EPA's first edition of the great
practices compendium of the
Mid-Atlantic States received
such great positive feedback
that we decided to expand the
compendium to include great
practices from across the
country! This compendium
serves as a key resource for
stakeholders and practitioners
to make informed decisions
about their future trash
prevention program
investments based on the
experiences of others.
A great practice is an activity,
technology, program, policy,
or initiative that prevents
trash from entering the
aquatic environment and/or
reduces the volume of trash.
A great practice demonstrates
measurable progress towards
its stated goals and shows a
clear return on investment
from such efforts.
Examples of great practices
previously highlighted include
aquatic trash capture and
removal devices, waste
management infrastructure
solutions, education/outreach
programs to change behavior,
and policies such as total
maximum daily loads and
plastic bag fees.
If you would like to contribute
a great practice to the
compendium, please contact
our team.

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Page 5
The Flow of... Trash Free Waters
The Rapids: News Drops
NOAA Launches MDMAP Tool for Citizen Science Surveys
U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Marine Debris Program launched
the new "Get Started Toolbox" for the Marine Debris Monitoring and Assessment Project
(MDMAP). The MDMAP is a citizen science initiative that engages partner organizations and
volunteers across the nation in completing shoreline marine debris surveys. The "Get Started
Toolbox" includes a tutorial series that covers the basics of the MDMAP, a collection of protocol
documents and user guides, data analysis tools, a searchable photo gallery of marine debris items,
answers to frequently asked questions, and even a quiz to test your MDMAP knowledge! You can
access it at marinedebris.noaa.gov/research/monitoring-toolbox.
Marine Litter at Capitol Hill Ocean Week (CHOW)
Marine litter was a panel discussion topic at the CHOW conference held June 7-9 in Washington,
DC. The panel was hosted by the Ocean Conservancy and featured experts from the business
community, non-governmental organizations, and the United Nations Environmental Program. The
panelists focused on prevention and source-reduction strategies, particularly for plastic packaging.
Several panelists mentioned the good work of EPA's TFW Program.
Marine Litter Emphasized at the UNEA and G7 Meetings
Marine litter was recently given prominent attention at two global environmental meetings: the
second session of the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-2) in Kenya and the Group of
Seven (G7) Toyama Environment Ministerial Meeting (EMM) in Japan. At the UNEA-2, the Assembly
approved a resolution on marine plastics and microplastics, calling on countries around the world to
take action on this critical issue. During the EMM, the G7 emphasized using existing global
platforms to help countries prevent and reduce marine litter, such as the United Nations
Environment Programme's Global Partnership on Marine Litter and through their Regional Seas
Programmes.
TFW at the GWRC Workshop and SETAC European Conference
Margaret Murphy, an American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Fellow at EPA,
attended two international workshops/meetings for the TFW Program: the Global Water Research
Coalition (GWRC) Workshop on May 22 and the Society for Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry
(SETAC) European meeting on May 23-26. The major focus of the GWRC workshop and SETAC
meeting was microplastic detection methodology, particularly for smaller microplastics (<300 |im),
as well ecological effects of microplastic exposure.
Washed Ashore: Art to Save the Sea
Smithsonian's National Zoo in Washington, DC is hosting a
"Washed Ashore: Art to Save the Sea" exhibition from May 27
to September 5. It is a larger-than-life exhibit of 17 marine
wildlife sculptures—from jellyfish to sharks—made entirely of
plastic pollution directly recovered from oceans. The exhibit is
created by the Washed Ashore Project, a non-profit,
community-based organization with a mission of educating
and creating awareness about plastic pollution through art.
An installation at the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington,
DC as part of the "Washed Ashore: Art to Save the Sea" exhibit.

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The Flow of... Trash Free Waters
Page 6
EPA's
Trash Free Waters
U.S. EPA Headquarters
William Jefferson Clinton
Building
1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue, N.W.
Mail Code: 4504T
Washington, DC 20460
Team Lead:
Laura S. Johnson
Phone 202.566.1273
E-mail:
Johnson.laura-s@epa.gov
Senior Advisor:
Bob Benson
Phone 202.566.2954
E-maii:
Benson. robert(a)epa.gov
Senior Consultant:
Adam R. Saslow
Phone 678.388.1670
E-mail:
Adam.saslow(5) csra.com
GRANT OPPORTUNITIES
NAS Gulf Research Program Capacity Building Grants
Deadline: Letters of intent— July 13th
Full proposals— September 14th
This funding opportunity is intended to strengthen the capacity of community networks and to
enhance the impact of their work. Proposed projects should focus on networks that strive to use data,
research findings, and scientific approaches to improve the environments and/or health and well-being
of communities in coastal regions along the U.S. outer continental shelf that support oil and gas
production. For more information or to apply, please go to
http://www.nationalacadernies.ora/aulf/arants/caDacitvarants/index.htm.
American Honda Foundation
Deadline: August 1st
This funding opportunity supports youth education, specifically in STEM (science, technology,
engineering and mathematics) education and environmental education. This includes education for
anyone under 21 years old. For more information or to apply, please go to
http://www.honda.com/communitv/apDlvina-for-a-arant.
IMOAA RESTORE Act Science Program Grants
Deadline: September 27th
This funding opportunity is focused on living coastal and marine resources and their habitats. Funding
is targeted to support two of the Science Program's priorities: research on understanding living coastal
and marine resources; and decision-support tools to assist resource managers with management
decisions planned to sustain habitats, living coastal and marine resources, and wildlife. For more
information or to apply, please go to
http://www. grants, aov/web/arants/view-opportunity. html ?oppld=284289.
Soon-to-be-Published Gulf States Litter Control Policies and Programs
In the summer of 2014, EPA
developed the Regional TFW
Strategy for the Gulf of
Mexico. One of the seven
projects stakeholders
identified was the
development of an "Atlas" of
state and local litter control
policies and programs
implemented in each Gulf
coast state. This product is
nearing completion for
publication. The document
contains data and
information from each of
the five Gulf coast states
with more than thirty
communities (most with
populations over 125,000)
and fifteen categories of
litter control programs and
policies highlighted. Each
policy/program entry
contains a brief synopsis,
contact information, and
URLs (if available). It is
hoped that this tool will
allow for the development of
peer-to-peer relations, as
government leaders can
quickly access colleagues
who have blazed a trail in
government intervention
that reduces or prevents the
flow of trash into our aquatic
ecosystems.
ATLAS OF GULF STATES
UTTER CONTROL POLICY AND PROGRAMS
6B*
The "Atlas of Gulf States Litter
Control Policies and Programs."

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