Elizabeth River Sediment Contamination

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    Elizabeth River Sediment Contamination

    Aug. 2007  - The U.S. Environmental 
    Protection Agency plans to award more than $900,000 to the Elizabeth River 
    Project to help clean up 25 acres of sediment contamination in the Money 
    Point section of Chesapeake, Virginia, which lies along the southern 
    branch of the Elizabeth River. 
    The Elizabeth River Project is a community watershed group instrumental in 
    restoring the Elizabeth River at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay in 
    southeast Virginia 
    "The cooperation and progressive results of the Elizabeth River Project 
    are encouraging to other communities that value and want to do more to 
    protect their watersheds," said Donald Welsh, administrator for EPA's 
    mid-Atlantic region. "EPA's funding can help accelerate the group's 
    restoration efforts, ultimately benefiting the Chesapeake Bay." 
    A national panel reviewed 100 projects from around the country that were 
    nominated for a share of $13.36 million in funding to restore and protect 
    watersheds. The Elizabeth River Project is one of 16 organizations whose 
    projects have been selected for funding. 
    The group can apply for a $902,500 grant, expected to be awarded later 
    this year. 
    "This promises to be a tremendous help for the restoration of one of the 
    great urban rivers of the world," said Marjorie Mayfield Jackson, 
    executive director of the Elizabeth River Project. "This funding would be 
    a major boost to the most critical projects for our watershed." 
    The funding will support removal of contaminated sediment, create 10 miles 
    of restored habitat, and help reduce toxics and nutrients in stormwater 
    runoff. Funds will also be used to support environmental projects at 10 
    Money Point industrial facilities. 
    The Elizabeth River is one of the world's largest natural harbors for 
    military and commercial shipping and a part of the ecosystem of the 
    Chesapeake Bay. It is an important tidal estuarine habitat for blue crabs, 
    striped bass, and other keystone species. 
    The Elizabeth River Project is also concerned about a proposal to build 
    the world's largest ethanol facility at Chesapeake, Virginia in view of 
    potential risks to the local environment, human health and the economy. 
    International Bio Energy Virginia has proposed to construct and operate 
    the $400 million facility. The Elizabeth River Project worries that the 
    distillery will be a major new source of air pollution, including 
    carcinogenic emissions. There are minimal controls for stormwater runoff, 
    and the facility will use more than 1.4 million gallons of freshwater a 
    day, possibly shortchanging the rest of the area's water users, the group 
    warns. 
    During President George W. Bush's 2002 State of the Union address, he 
    asked the nation's governors and tribal leaders to nominate proposals to 
    support community-based approaches to clean up the nation's watersheds. 
    Congress appropriated $13.36 million for this Targeted Watershed Grant 
    Program, which the EPA says was conceived to encourage community 
    approaches to restore, preserve and protect the nation's watersheds and to 
    promote strong public/private partnerships that lead to measurable 
    environmental results. 
    Other grants will support water quality work on the Connecticut River, 
    which is New England's longest river; support reducing phosphorus inputs 
    to Lake Champlain; and support cleansing of New York's Saw Mill River. 
    Oregon's Upper Klamath Watershed has 17 native species of fish, eight of 
    them found nowhere else in the world. The area also supports a 
    concentration of wetland complexes, used by over two million water birds.
    Water quality degradation, de-watered streams, loss of wetland and 
    riparian habitats, and hydro dams have diminished the health of the 
    system. Ducks Unlimited proposes to use the grant to improve water quality 
    with nine restoration and enhancement projects. 
    A proposed project for the Hawaiian island of Maui would purchase 13,166 
    acres of the West Maui Mountain Watershed, ensuring that forest and four 
    main streams are restored and endangered native species can flourish. 
    A complete list of the 16 grant awardees is online at: 
    http://epa.gov/twg/implementation.html. The nominations were reviewed by 
    regional and national experts. 
    
    
    







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