Showing posts with label get involved. Show all posts
Showing posts with label get involved. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Register soon: Brownfields Conference room rate ending April 25

If you’re interested in learning about cleaning up and redeveloping properties with suspected or known contamination, please join us for the FREE Washington State Brownfields Conference in Spokane May 28 – 30, 2019. A block of rooms has been reserved at the Doubletree by Hilton Spokane City Center. The special room rate will be available until April 25, or until the group block is sold-out, whichever comes first. The guest list is growing and the cut off for getting the conference rate on hotel rooms is fast approaching, so register and reserve a room before it’s too late!

The goal of this conference is to bring together public and private sector stakeholders and tribes in Washington and the Inland Northwest. This event is being coordinated in partnership with the Northwest Environmental Business Council and is funded in part by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. We also want to thank the following event sponsors for their support:
  • GeoSearch
  • Hart Crowser
  • Maul Foster Alongi
  • PBS
  • Restorical Research
  • Spokane Environmental Solutions
  • Stantec
  • TSI
Please visit our conference web page to learn more and download the draft agenda. We hope to see you there! If you have questions, please contact Ali Furmall, office: 509-329-3436, cell: 509-655-0538.

Monday, July 2, 2018

Cleaning up: Give input on Marshall Landfill

The Marshall Landfill overlooks Queen Lucas Lake.
In late May, cleanup site manager Huckleberry Palmer led Carmen Nezat’s Eastern Washington University environmental geology class on a field trip to the nearby Marshall Landfill. Although the scene may look picturesque, contamination such as volatile organic compounds, methane, metals, herbicides, and nitrates are below.

Now we’re asking these students – and the public at large – to give us input on cleanup options through August 1. The draft Remedial Investigation Report documents the extent and location of contamination in groundwater and landfill gases at the site. The draft Feasibility Study evaluates cleanup options.

The seven cleanup options range from installing fencing and warning signs to excavating all the waste and moving it to a newer landfill that complies with environmental laws. The Marshall Landfill has no bottom liner. Today’s landfills are required to have double liners with a space between to collect leaks.

The landfill stopped accepting waste in 1990, but the owners didn’t complete all the steps to safely close it. Ecology is now leading and funding cleanup.

After the comment period, we’ll respond to the comments we receive. Then, we will write a draft cleanup action plan that selects one, or a combination, of the cleanup options from the Feasibility Study. The draft plan will be available for public review and comment before becoming final.

If you have questions, please contact Huckleberry at 509-329-3433 or huckleberry.palmer@ecy.wa.gov.

Wednesday, November 1, 2017

Give your input on Washington’s first statewide water quality permit for wineries

The Winery General Permit will ensure Washington wineries
protect water quality as they cultivate sustainable practices.
We are proposing a new statewide water quality permit for wineries, called the Winery General Permit. This permit will establish practices for managing winery wastewater. The comment period opens today and we will accept comments until Feb. 14, 2018.

We are also holding four public hearings: two online webinars, one in-person meeting in Eastern Washington, and one in-person meeting in Western Washington. See below for more details.

Helping Washington wineries be more sustainable

Washington is the second-largest wine-producing state in the nation. Because the wine production in Washington has increased greatly over the past decade, we decided to develop a general permit that establishes good waste management practices.

Washington state is the second-largest
producer of wine in the United States. 
This permit will help protect our waters from potential pollution. A general permit allows businesses that have a similar function to have a unified approach. Instead of each winery applying for water quality permits separately, they can apply for coverage under the one statewide general permit.

General permits simplify the permitting process – which saves both the facility and the state time and resources.

Working with the wine industry to create a solid permit

We have been working with the wine industry since 2014. We formed an advisory group to advise us. We heard from representatives of wineries that the vast majority of Washington wineries have very low annual production volumes and are already heavily regulated.

In the proposed draft we included flexibility, compliance options, benchmarks, and scaled requirements for small producers and existing facilities. The draft permit focuses on best management practices and data collection.

Wineries protect water quality and the environment
when they properly manage their wastewater.

Why is winery wastewater a concern for water quality?

The wastewater made from winemaking facilities has the potential to contaminate groundwater, which is where many Washingtonians get their drinking water.

Contamination can occur if a winery’s septic tank and drainfield system fails, if their wastewater lagoon leaks, or if they use too much untreated wastewater to irrigate their crops. Winery wastewater can have high amounts of organic matter and solids, and extreme pH ranges.

Wastewater discharges like those from winemaking facilities can:
  • Pollute groundwater aquifers that supply drinking water and the water used to make wine.
  • Kill aquatic organisms.
  • Overwhelm wastewater treatment plants causing untreated sewage to be discharged to Puget Sound and rivers.

    How can you comment?

    You can find the documents on our website. We are accepting comments from Nov. 1, 2017 to Feb. 14, 2018 on the:
    • Draft Winery General Permit
    • Revised Fact Sheet
    • Notice of Intent (application)
    • Economic Impact Analysis

        Join us online at one of our webinars:

        Join us for in-person hearings:

        Prosser
        Bellevue
        Tuesday, Jan. 30 at 10:30 a.m.
        Benton County P.U.D. - Prosser
        250 Gap Road
        Prosser, WA 99336
        Friday, Feb. 2 at 1:30 p.m.
        South Bellevue Community Center
        14509 SE Newport Way
        Bellevue, WA 98006

        Submit written comments

        We will accept written comments on the draft permit, fact sheet, and supporting documentation until 11:59 p.m. on Feb. 14, 2018. We prefer comments be submitted through our online comment form. Comments should reference specific permit text when possible.

        Submit comments

        What’s next?

        We will respond to comments and include them as an appendix in the fact sheet of the permit. If comments cause a large change in the permit, we may hold another public comment period. If there are no major changes, we expect to issue the permit in the summer of 2018.

        Check out our website for more info: www.ecology.wa.gov/winerypermit

        By: Stacy Galleher, Water Quality communications specialist
        and Stacey Callaway, Water Quality permit writer

        Monday, May 22, 2017

        Input wanted: Cleanup options for BNSF Railway Black Tank Property

        From May 22 through June 22, we are gathering public comments on the cleanup methods we’re considering for the BNSF Railway Black Tank Property in the Hillyard neighborhood. BNSF and Marathon Oil Company are responsible for cleanup because of their past activities at the site.

        The site housed an above-ground black tank that stored petroleum products, primarily the thick, heavy oil known as bunker C for fueling trains. The site also had an above-ground red tank that was used to store and transfer diesel. Areas of soil are contaminated, and a 7-acre plume of petroleum rests on groundwater 170 feet underground.
        Cross-section showing petroleum contamination in soil and groundwater
        (Courtesy of  ERM)

        Excavation with offsite disposal or capping are proposed for contaminated shallow soil. Five groundwater cleanup options are under consideration: biodegradation, bioventing/biosparging, bioventing/biosparging and manual petroleum removal, bioventing/biosparging and steam-enhanced extraction, and smoldering combustion. Bioventing/biosparging is BNSF and Marathon's preferred cleanup option.

        These cleanup methods are summarized in the fact sheet and fully described in the remedial investigation and feasibility study report.

        When contamination intersects with a freeway

        The Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) is building the North Spokane Corridor (NSC) to connect US Highway 395 with Interstate 90 in Spokane. The Hillyard portion of the NSC is within the Black Tank cleanup site. Ecology, BNSF, Marathon, and WSDOT are working together to keep both projects running smoothly.

        BNSF and Marathon have committed to a cleanup timeframe of less than 20 years, and WSDOT is planning freeway construction work to accommodate multi-purpose cleanup infrastructure so cleanup options will not be limited by the presence of the NSC.

        Educating the public about the Black Tank site and soliciting your input are important steps in the cleanup process. We have been impressed by the outpouring of public interest, which gave us the opportunity to meet with the community about this cleanup site 17 times since late 2015! The cleanup and the freeway design have and will continue to benefit from meaningful public engagement.

        It’s all about the life-giving aquifer

        Our business is protecting people and the environment. The Spokane-Valley Rathdrum-Prairie Aquifer provides drinking water to nearly 500,000 residents in the Spokane area. Protecting this vital, sole source of drinking water is our top priority for this site. Not only do we care about your health and the environment, but we drink that water, too!

        Because the contamination is a heavy oil, it is staying on top of groundwater with very little mixing occurring (imagine oil and vinegar dressing that isn’t shaken up). Because water wells are not located close to the site, drinking water is not affected by the contamination at this time, and we monitor it regularly.

        Next steps

        Please submit comments to Jeremy Schmidt online, by email, or mail (4601 N. Monroe, Spokane, 99205) by June 22. We will respond to the comments we receive.

        Then we’ll use the data gathered thus far and your feedback to draft a cleanup plan. We will hold a public meeting during the comment period for that cleanup plan.

        There is no easy answer, but working together, understanding one another’s values and constraints with a willingness to compromise, we will protect people and the environment, preserve our precious drinking water, and successfully build a freeway.

        Friday, March 17, 2017

        Commercial net pen aquaculture planning meeting March 23

        You are invited to attend the next planning meeting for updating the Recommendations for Managing Commercial Net Pen Aquaculture in Washington’s straits and estuaries.
















        Join us in person or by phone

        Those interested may attend in person or by phone. Directions on how to participate through the conference call are listed below.
        When: March 23
        Time: 8:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
        Where: Washington Department of Ecology headquarters auditorium
        Address: 300 Desmond Drive SE, Lacey, WA, 98503

        State employees learn more about day-to-day operations
        from Keven Bright of Cooke Aquaculture Pacific.
        Photo by Lori LeVander/Ecology.

        Updating the planning tools for commercial net pens

        We are working with the Washington departments of Fish & Wildlife and Agriculture to update the state's 30-year-old management guidelines for commercial net pen aquaculture.

        Through this project, we aim to deliver modern scientific information to guide state agency, tribal and local government decision makers in siting, managing, and regulating net pens in Washington’s marine waters.

        The final report will provide recommendations only - not a rule or law. Regulatory agencies will determine how these recommendations will be incorporated into their decisions around managing commercial net pen aquaculture. A key objective is to provide tools that enable decision makers to protect native Pacific salmon.

        Learn more about the project on our Recommendations for Managing Net Pen Aquaculture webpage. Subscribe to the project listserv to receive email updates.

        Wednesday, January 4, 2017

        New commercial fish farm (net pen) management tools being developed: Provide your input on project scoping by March 4

        NOTE: We have decided to extend the deadline for public input after receiving several requests for more time. This blog was edited Jan. 11 to reflect the new deadline for feedback March 4, 2017.


        Washington’s 30-year-old management guidelines for commercial, marine fish farms (net pens) are getting an overhaul. Ecology has partnered with the state departments of Fish & Wildlife and Agriculture, and the National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science to write new management recommendations useful for the industry and coastal managers – including state and local government regulators.

        View from the water of a commercial fish farm near Bainbridge Island. Photo by Jessica Payne/Ecology



        We’re just getting started, and we want your input

        The multi-year project is just getting underway and you are invited to provide input on early decisions made by the project team. Two documents are available for review and comment. You can view and download these documents on our project website.
        1. A summary of draft scoping decisions that describes early decisions made by the team regarding:
        • Geographic and topical scope
        • Scientific and technical review
        • Outreach and opportunities for interested parties to influence the outcome
        1. A writing outline that will guide the project team through fact-finding and identification of suitable safeguards and management practices. The team is especially interested in feedback on topics you would like to see addressed in the final document. This will serve as a table of contents for the final guidance document.
        We’re accepting public comments now through March 4. 

        This project is designed to give us up-to-date information on this use and better understand the concern of citizens. What we learn will help us ensure any new facilities are sited and operated consistent with current science and modern management practices. It is not designed to determine whether or not future net pens will be allowed.

        Learn more on our Frequently Asked Questions page.

        State employees learn more about day-to-day operations
        from Kevin Bright of Cooke Aquaculture Pacific.
        Photo by Lori LeVander/Ecology.

        Send us your feedback

        Please send us your feedback and help influence project outcomes.

        Submit input by March 4 to:
        Ms. Cedar Bouta
        Shorelands and Environmental Assistance Program
        WA Dept. of Ecology
        P.O. Box 47600
        Lacey, WA 98504-7600.
        Email: Cedar.Bouta@ecy.wa.gov
        Visit our project webpage to learn more. Subscribe to our listserv to get email updates and make sure you have the latest information.

        By: Cedar Bouta, Shorelands and Environmental Assistance program

        Monday, October 17, 2016

        VIDEO: Finding solutions for the Chehalis basin

        Oct. 24 UPDATE: We have decided to extend the public comment period for the Chehalis Basin Strategy environmental review after receiving five requests for an extension. The new closing date for the public comment period is Nov. 14, 2016

        The Chehalis River Basin is at a turning point. In recent years, the basin has experienced extreme and frequent flooding, and it may experience larger floods more often in the future. Habitat for aquatic species is significantly degraded and, if action is not taken, is expected to decline further. We're working with the community to address these issues.

        We are currently taking comments on our environmental review of solutions proposed for the basin. Learn more in this video, and join us at public hearings to share your feedback.


        With a new environmental report out for public review, now is the time for you to get involved and engage on potential ways to restore aquatic habitat and reduce flooding throughout the Chehalis River Basin in southwest Washington.


        Comments now being accepted on environmental review

        We have completed a draft environmental report, officially called a programmatic Environmental Impact Statement, as part of a community effort to restore the basin and put it on a path to recovery. The environmental review evaluates four basin-wide options that were developed and submitted to Ecology by the community to address these problems.

        Join us in person at upcoming public hearings

        Come join us in person to learn more and share your feedback at public hearings.

        Open houses begin at 6:00 p.m. followed by a presentation at 6:30 p.m. and public hearing at 7:00 p.m.

        Tuesday, Oct. 18 at 6 p.m.
        Veterans Memorial Museum
        100 S.W. Veterans Way
        Chehalis, WA 98532
        Thursday, Oct. 27 at 6 p.m.
        Montesano City Hall
        112 N. Main Street
        Montesano, WA 98563

        Comments will be accepted through Nov. 14, 2016. Learn more, read the report and submit your comments online at chehalisbasinstrategy.com.

        SEPA: Washington's environmental protection law

        The State Environmental Policy Act (often called SEPA) gives a formal process to identify and assess possible environmental effects of a proposal before deciding how to proceed.

        Your feedback helps Ecology understand how a proposed action would affect people and the environment. Learn more about SEPA on our website.

        Friday, September 30, 2016

        Review our report on options to help the Chehalis River Basin

        Oct. 24 UPDATE: We have decided to extend the public comment period for the Chehalis Basin Strategy environmental review after receiving five requests for an extension. The new closing date for the public comment period is Nov. 14, 2016

        The Chehalis River Basin is at a turning point. In recent years, the basin has experienced extreme and frequent flooding, and it may experience larger floods more often in the future. Habitat for aquatic species is significantly degraded and, if action is not taken, is expected to decline further.


        With a new environmental report out for public review, now is the time to get involved and engage on potential ways to restore aquatic habitat and reduce flood damage throughout the Chehalis River Basin in southwest Washington.

        Draft study ready for review

        As part of a community effort to restore the basin and put it on a path to recovery, we have completed a draft environmental report, officially called a programmatic Environmental Impact Statement.

        Our review evaluates four basin-wide options that were developed and submitted to Ecology by the community to address flood damage and aquatic species habitat. We've evaluated the impacts, both positive and negative, to people and the environment. Now we need your input.

        Send us your feedback

        We’ve worked hard to give these invested stakeholders a fair assessment of how different solutions will affect their community’s environmental planning. Now that we've completed the assessment and analysis of four basin-wide options, we're making the draft environmental report available for public review.

        Chehalis Basin Strategy website link

        Learn more, attend hearings and submit comments now through Nov. 14

        Comments will be accepted through Nov. 14, 2016. There are many ways for you to send us your input on the study. Submit your comments online or by mail at:

        Chehalis Basin Strategy EIS
        c/o Anchor QEA
        720 Olive Way, Suite 1900
        Seattle, WA 98101

        You may also comment in person at the upcoming public hearings:

        Tuesday, Oct. 18
        Veterans Memorial Museum
        100 S.W. Veterans Way
        Chehalis, WA 98532
        Thursday, Oct. 27
        Montesano City Hall
        112 N. Main Street
        Montesano, WA 98563

        For both meetings, there will be an open house at 6:00 p.m. followed by a presentation at 6:30 p.m. and public hearing at 7:00 p.m.

        All comments received during the public comment period will be addressed in the final programmatic Environmental Impact Statement, planned in 2017. 


        SEPA: Washington's environmental protection law

        The State Environmental Policy Act (often called SEPA) gives a formal process to identify and assess possible environmental effects of a proposal before deciding how to proceed.

        Your feedback helps Ecology understand how a proposed action would affect people and the environment. Learn more about SEPA on our website.