Archive for September, 2010

Got Waste?

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

The Stearns County Household Hazardous Waste collection truck travels to cities throughout the summer collecting unused hazardous products such as paints, garden chemicals, poisons, fluorescent bulbs and automotive chemicals. They collect products that should not be disposed of in the garbage or down the sink. The collections are finished for this year – the last one was September 11 in Cold Spring.

Disposal of motor oil and anti‐freeze can still be done at various public used oil facilities – the sites are listed on the Stearns County website http://www.co.stearns.mn.us/Environment/RecyclingandWasteDisposal/HHWMobileUnit

Tri‐County Solid Waste is open throughout the year for waste disposal. For information about Tri‐County Solid Waste and other sites that can take waste, see the website http://www.co.stearns.mn.us/Environment/RecyclingandWasteDisposal/DisposingofHouseholdHazardousWaste

The Household Hazardous Waste collection truck will be coming to a location near you next summer. http://www.co.stearns.mn.us/Environment/RecyclingandWasteDisposal/DisposingofHouseholdHazardousWaste 

Get Involved Where You Live - Clean Ups on September 25!

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

Join us in celebrating and protecting our nation’s public lands - wherever you live! National Public Lands Day is a great opportunity to help the environment while exploring some of our nation’s amazing great outdoors with your friends and family. NPLD is the nation’s largest hands-on volunteer effort to improve and enhance our public lands. Last year 150,000 volunteers joined together around the country to celebrate service and recreation by planting trees, removing trash, building trails and bridges and restoring our water resources.

Find a location in your state or ZIP code.
http://www.publiclandsday.org/involved/sites.htm

Drug Take-Back Event this Saturday, September 25th from 10:00 - 2:00 pm!

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is lending its support and expertise for drug take-back events sponsored by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). The events will take place at 1,700 sites around the country on Saturday, September 25 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Citizens may bring unwanted solid prescription and over-the-counter medicines to any of these locations so they may be disposed of safely. Liquids, such as cough syrup will not be accepted.

Unused drugs that sit on shelves around the home may present a danger to people as well as ecosystems. Removing unused medications from households can help prevent intentional misuse and unintentional poisonings of children and pets.

Dumping the medication down the drain or flushing it down the toilet can become a source of water contamination. EPA continues to investigate whether such contamination adversely impacts human health or aquatic life.
 

Find a collection site near you:
http://www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov/takeback/

** Sherburne Co. Sheriff’s Office, Palmer Public Safety Building at 4180 105th Ave SE, Clear Lake  MN, 55319 is the closest drop off site to the St. Cloud region.  **

Learn more about pharmaceuticals as pollutants: http://www.epa.gov/ppcp/

Today is “Protect Your Groundwater Day”

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

Today is an important day, as it is the first annual ”Protect Your Grounwater Day“.  With 95% of all freshwater supplies being contained in groundwater aquifers, it is so important that we make good decisions on how we manage the land above the aquifers to keep them as a safe source of drinking water. 

 To protect “Your” groundwater supplies try following these simple tips:

 1. Dispose of chemicals properly.  Check with your City Hall to find out when a Household Hazardous Waste Collection day is happening in your community.  Be sure to store chemicals inside until they can be disposed of properly.

2.  Take used motor oil to a recycling center.  

3.  Limit the amount of fertilizers and pesticides used on your lawn.
 
4.  Perform regular maintenance on your septic system.

5.  Pick up pet waste immediately.

6.  Seal unused wells to prevent surface water from entering the well.

7.  Conserve water to ensure your well won’t go dry.  Some deep water aquifers take hundreds of years to replenish and at that rate we use more than what is available.  Do your part and make small changes to use less.

8.  Manage stormwater runoff to keep it free of contaminates.  Here in Central MN we have an abundance of sandy soils.  This keeps our landscapes dry, but it also means that any water that hits the surface quickly infiltrates into the ground taking with it any contaminates it was exposed to. 

9.  Test your well to make sure it is free and clear of potential contaminates.  Each year you should test for nitrates and bacteria.  It should be tested for nitrates more frequently if you are expecting a child or have an infant less than 6 months old, since groundwater high in nitrates can cause blue baby syndrome.  Another important time to test the well is after the area has been flooded.  Flooding can introduce a whole host of contaminates into the groundwater that comes from your well. 

10.  Become a member of your local Wellhead Protection work group.  Contact your City Hall to learn how you can be more involved.


 

Monday, September 13th, 2010

Protect Minnesota’s Waters 

Is Your Construction Site Ready for Snow and Rain?

The construction season is coming to a close. Site preparations need to be completed before snow cover so that adequate protection is on-site during winter thaws and the spring snow melt. Site inspections need to start as soon as runoff or construction begins.

Follow these steps to protect your construction site:  

1.  Plant seed for spring   

2.  Cover slopes & dirt stockpiles with mulch  

3.  Inspect silt fences and other stormwater controls 

4.  Clean dirt out of drainage ditches, sediment basins & stormwater  inlets                                                                                 

For more information call or visit: 

Stormwater Hotline651-757-2119 or 800-657-3804 or visit: http://www.pca.state.mn.us/water/stormwater/stormwater-c.html 

EPA to Reconsider Final Rule on Stormwater Discharge for Construction Site

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Updated: August 18th, 2010 11:45 AM GMT-05:00

EPA to Reconsider Final Rule on Stormwater Discharges for Construction Sites

Office of Advocacy, Small Business Administration

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today the Office of Advocacy applauded the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) decision to reexamine its final rule for stormwater discharges for construction sites. The Office of Advocacy had estimated that the regulation had the potential of costing business $10 billion annually, with minimal environmental improvement and would adversely affect housing affordability for millions of Americans. Small firms make up 97.7 percent of the construction and development industry.

“EPA’s decision to review its rule should be viewed as a step towards finding the appropriate regulation that protects our environment and doesn’t overburden small business,” said Susan M. Walthall, Acting Chief Counsel for Advocacy. “A regulation that is based on accurate data, with the opportunity for public input, will benefit us all.”

On April 20 (http://www.sba.gov/advo/laws/comments/epa10_0420.html) of this year the Office of Advocacy issued a letter petitioning EPA to reconsider the final rule for stormwater discharges for construction sites. The petition identified errors in EPA’s data review and analysis that contributed to a stringent numeric standard of 280 nephelometric turbidity units (NTU). The petition also stated that providing the opportunity for public comment on the data and methodology would have improved the rule.

A significant concern that Advocacy included in its April 20th petition was that EPA misinterpreted vendor data from a construction site in Seattle, Washington, as representing 15, instead of 3, pretreatment systems. This correction alone would drive the limit to approximately 500 NTU.

For more information and a complete copy of the letter, visit the Office of Advocacy website at www.sba.gov/advo.

September Mississippi River Forum

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

“Development and Application of Minnesota’s River Eutrophication Criteria, with a Focus on the Mississippi River and its Tributaries”

Steve Heiskary, Research Scientist, MN Pollution Control Agency (MPCA)

Light breakfast provided. Free.

The MPCA has developed draft eutrophication (nutrient) criteria for rivers aimed at meeting Minnesota’s aquatic life use standards and Clean Water Act interim goals.  A “multiple lines of evidence” approach was used to develop the criteria. Both month’s presentations will provide an overview of how the criteria were developed and how they would be applied for water quality assessments; the October presentation will also discuss the effort to create a site-specific river nutrient standard for the Mississippi River from St. Paul south, and how it compares to the overall proposed statewide river nutrient standard. Specific reference will be made in both presentations to the Mississippi River and its major tributaries.

LOCATIONS:

*September 17: St. Cloud City Council Chambers–400-2nd Street South, St. Cloud, 56301.

*October 15: Bonestroo Offices–2335 West Hwy 36, St. Paul, 55113.

 

The Mississippi River Forum is made possible by the generous support of the Mississippi River Fund and the McKnight Foundation.

———————————-

RSVP by contacting Lark Weller at 651-290-3214 or emailing lark_weller@nps.gov

World’s Greenest House

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

The “greenest house” is the subject of an article in the July issue of Atlantic Monthly magazine.  It is pretty inspirational – we can’t all do everything but it is good to have environmental goals in mind. The text of the article follows….

Paul Holland and Linda Yates thought it only natural, when they set out to build a luxury home six years ago, that theirs would be the world’s greenest. In Silicon Valley, even competition is environmentally conscious.

The couple’s 5,600-square-foot home will be outfitted with a host of aggressively eco-friendly technologies and materials: a recycled-steel roof that diverts rainwater to a 50,000-gallon underground cistern; reclaimed stone left over from the construction of Chicago skyscrapers; solar panels powerful enough to provide electricity to the home, charge five electric cars, and still return energy to the grid; a cedar interior cut from sustainable forests (where trees are selectively harvested to minimize environmental damage); doors and windows of Portuguese eucalyptus approved by the Forest Stewardship Council; oak floors salvaged from old granaries; recycled-glass sinks; a recycled-steel kitchen hood.

The house has no paint, ducts, or HVAC, and it uses no fossil fuels. Sliding glass walls let in the breeze during the summer, and in the winter the home’s ground-source heat-exchange system pumps water deep underground to be warmed by the Earth’s thermal energy, then pushes it up to heat the floorboards. The home’s climate, lighting, and irrigation will be controlled remotely—by iPad, of course.

The phrase world’s greenest home isn’t entirely a boast. Green accreditation is conferred by the U.S. Green Building Council, a nonprofit that measures eight areas of sustainable building for its Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design ratings, including waste, water, energy, materials, and habitat. The Holland-Yates residence will easily exceed the top “LEED platinum” rating when it’s completed in November, and should earn the most LEED points of any home ever built. Its engineering was innovative enough to flummox San Mateo County officials, who initially wouldn’t approve a toilet system that fed into a front-yard meadow, and had to be persuaded that it wasn’t a health hazard.

All of this effort and expense—the couple says the finished complex will cost 2 to 5 percent more than “traditional homes,” which in their neighborhood start at about $5 million—is intended to serve a larger social purpose: to edify others and inspire them to build sustainable, regenerative houses. Holland and Yates plan to train docents to give tours of their home, and they want to create a Web site detailing the materials and vendors used for every aspect of its construction. They hope that, as with any “open source” project, others will carry on and improve what they’ve begun.

Day Highlights Groundwater Protection

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

On September 14, the National Ground Water Association (NGWA) will launch its first annual “Protect Your Groundwater Day.” With 95 percent of all available freshwater from aquifers underground, being a good steward of groundwater just makes sense. The event will focus solely on groundwater protection, emphasizing the protection of groundwater resources through contamination prevention and water conservation.

Most surface water bodies are connected to groundwater. In addition, many public water systems draw all or part of their supply from groundwater, so protecting the resource protects the public water supply and impacts treatment costs. NWGA especially urges well owners to protect their groundwater and reduce risks to their water supplies.

For more information, http://www.ngwa.org/public/PYGD/pygd.aspx.