EPA news from CA Congressman Doolittle's office
regarding water quality Sept 9, 2004
2) New Guide to
Help Wastewater Utilities Develop EMSs and Manage
Critical Issues
The Office of
Water has issued an important new tool to help
wastewater
utilities develop
environmental management systems (EMS) for their
operations
entitled Achieving Environmental Excellence:An
Environmental
Management Systems
(EMS) Handbook for Wastewater Utilities. EMSs are a
powerful and
proven tool that can help utilities realize a number
of
important benefits
and address a wide array of challenges--including
the
need to ensure
sustainable infrastructure.
The Handbook,
which was developed in cooperation with the Global
Environment and
Technology Foundation (GETF), takes utilities
through a
step-by-step
process for developing an effective EMS, using
numerous
examples and other
tips from utilities that have successfully
implemented
EMSs for their own
operations.
The Handbook is
available at www.peercenter.net and www.epa.gov/ems
and
www.amsa-cleanwater.org and www.wef.org
For further
information, please contact Jim Horne at (202)
564-0571,
horne.james@epa.gov
3) 2004
Effluent Guidelines Program Plan Published
Published in the
Federal Register on Sept. 2, this notice presents
the
results of EPA's
2004 annual review of existing effluent guidelines
required by
section 304(b) of the Clean Water Act. The notice
also
presents the final
2004 Effluent Guidelines Program Plan required by
section 304(m).
Effluent guidelines are national regulations that
improve
water quality by
controlling the discharge of pollutants by specific
industries -- from
manufacturing and agriculture to service industries
--
into our Nation's
waters. The effluent guidelines that EPA has issued
over the past 30
years have prevented the discharge of more than 690
billion pounds of
pollutants a year.
The notice
identifies facilities in two industries for which
EPA will
begin a rulemaking
that could lead to revised effluent guidelines.
(These
facilities
manufacture vinyl chloride, polyvinyl chloride or
vinyl
chloride monomers,
manufacture chlorine using the chlor-alkali process,
or
conduct a
combination of these operations.) The notice also
identifies
two industries
without effluent guidelines for which EPA will begin
rulemakings that
could lead to new effluent guidelines (airport
deicing
operations and
drinking water supply and treatment). You can find
more
information about
the Plan on EPA's web site at
www.epa.gov/guide/plan.html.
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