Showing posts with label Advocacy Project. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advocacy Project. Show all posts

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Advocacy Project: Letter to Elected Official


December 10, 2011

Representative Chip Cravaack
House of Representatives
508 Cannon House Office Building
Washington, DC 20500

VOTE YES ON H.R.425: Great Lakes water Protection Act

I write to you today in efforts to express my concern regarding combined, untreated sewage dumping into Lake Superior as well as the whole network of Great Lakes.  I hope to secure your support on the issue of amending the Federal Water Pollution Control Act that would establish a deadline for restricting sewage dumping in to the Great Lakes and also to fund programs that would improve wastewater discharged into the Great Lakes

The Great Lakes provide 30 million Americans and also many Canadians, with drinking water each day.  Due to all the pollutants that are being dumped into the lakes, sewage is having a great impact on not only the concern of our drinking water, but it is threatening the health of the lakes and upsetting the circle of life that make them a part of a working system. The lake give us a fishing as well as a multibillion dollar recreation and tourism industry bringing in Duluth, and many other cities, a great income.  This lake is a precious piece of our city and its livelihood, and thus, needs to be respected and protected. It is a resource that we can not get back easily, if at all, once it is dead.

If this bill is passed, plants will have 20 years to upgrade facilities and ensure that their processes are running correctly and to specification.  Voting in this bill will also allow fines to be placed more easily on those plants that are currently not following the regulations already in place thus bringing in more funds as well as creating a catalyst for change. By not making this bill a priority, we run the risk of more lakes hitting the tipping point of their inability to dilute the billions and billions of tons of sewage that goes into the lakes each year.  This means not only dead lakes incapable of producing food and supporting life, but also toxic and unfit to swim in. Most noticeably, this will effect our ability to get potable, safe water and running the risk of various illnesses and diseases found in other places of the world where clean water can not be obtained. These health risks, if allowed to grow, will not only have detrimental effects on us individually but collectively as well.

Clearly there will be costs involved for the public treatment works to ensure they are up to regulation and to have the appropriate treatment processes and programs available. However, I urge you to think past this opposition and look towards being a voice for support of a creative solution.  We all have water to drink now - with twenty more years of toxic sewage dumping we shorten the life of our lake safety. Looking for a solution now and planning methodically ahead while we still have time to figure out how that can be made possible, the sewage treatment plants will save themselves the potential urgent demands and institution of fines that come with urgency and panic if our water hits the tipping point of safety. Saving funding now will only allocate the loss of funds, and health, somewhere else in the future.

I want to express my sincere appreciation for your time and attention to this correspondence, as well as to this very important issue. I urge you as a citizen who appreciates the beauty and gifts of the lake as well as a voting constituent. I sincerely encourage you to consider the issues at hand and the bigger picture and encourage your vote in support of H.R.425. I would be more than pleased to assist with further information as well as hear your thoughts, understandings and concerns.

Sincerely,
Judy B. 

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Advocacy Project: Fact Sheet



Many Pollutants threaten the Great Lakes. 

Facts about raw sewage threatening our water.


What we need to know…
The Great Lakes provide 30 million Americans with drinking water and support a huge multi-billion dollar recreation and tourism industry. (EPA – United States Environmental Protection Agency)

Many pollutants that get in to the Great Lakes remain there because it is a relatively closed system. (EPA Quality of Our Nation’s Water report)

Where does this pollution come from?
Pollution in the Great Lakes comes form multiple sources. A few of which are landfills, urban runoff, and combined sewer overflow. (EPA Quality of Our Nation’s Water report)

A study for the Healing Our Waters Great Lakes Coalition reports in 2009 five U.S. cities on the Great Lakes - “Detroit, Cleveland, Buffalo, Milwaukee and Gary, Ind.-discharged 41 billion gallons of untreated sewage and filthy storm water into the lakes”.

A 2006 study revealed that 20 cities containing one third of the regions population produced three trillion liters of waste a year equaling 1.2 million Olympic swimming pools of waste a year or 100 pools a day.

Every year beaches are closed due to combined sewer overflow contaminating lakes. (Great Lakes Commission)

Why does this happen?
Heavy rains often overwhelm combined sewer pipes, forcing cities to discharge untreated sewage and storm water into the nearest lake or river. (Healing Our Waters Great Lakes Coalition report and safewater.org)

What is happening around this issue?
The EPA is suggesting “blending”, allowing untreated sewage blended with rain water to be dumped in the lakes. Currently the clean water act strictly prohibits this due to the health risks raw sewage imposes. (FreshWaterFuture.org and the EPA)

What is being done to help preserve our water and resources?
There are bills H.R.425 and S.147 proposed to more easily assess fines currently in place for breaking the law, and to instill new fines giving 20 years to upgrade sewage treatment infrastructure. (Illinois Review)

What can we do to help?
All or any of these…
Ask your House Representative to vote yes on bill H.R.425 or your Senator to vote yes on S.147, the Great Lakes Water Protection Act.

Contact your local environmental agency and let them know this is important to you.

Nationally, contact the EPA directly. Ben Grumbles, Assistant Administrator for Water is the point person for blending. 202-564-5700 or email grumbles.benjamin@epa.gov.



SOURCES












Sunday, November 20, 2011

Advocacy Project: Issue Overview

Lake Superior - Duluth, MN


What is the issue? 
The Great Lakes are becoming extremely polluted. They provide drinking water for 30 million people, swimming, recreation, food. Businesses depend on the lakes having water that can be made potable for citizens in the United States and Canada.


What current Legislation is proposed to address this issue?
H.R.425  TITLE: Great Lakes Water Protection Act.
"prohibit publicly owned treatment works (POTWs) from intentionally diverting waste streams to bypass any portion of the treatment facility if the diversion results in a discharge into the Great Lakes"

go to http://thomas.loc.gov/home/thomas.php
Search for "water" and then control/find "H.R.425"


Who is affected the most? What is to be lost? Gained?
Passing the bill means water sewage plants would accrue fines after the 20 years given to upgrade their facilities if they did not meet the legal levels. Fines currently in place are capped at $37,500/day and would increase up to $100,000.  This bill would make it easier to assess fines for those not meeting current set levels.

Not passing the bill; the fish, animal and plant life and the whole eco system will continue to be drastically affected.  There are already signs in places along the lakes warning of water pollution and to avoid all contact.   We who drink that water may feel it is us that are most effected, especially as water become more expensive and harder to filter.

What is gained by not passing this bill?  Status quo. Waste continues to be dumped. There will be less planning for upgrading systems and spending money to do so at treatment facilities.

What is gained by passing the bill? Our water supply has a longer life. Money is saved for filtering the drinking water. Animals and the ecosystem continue, and perhaps do some healing.  Money is  gained in fines going  to “generate financial resources for the Great Lakes states to improve wastewater treatment options, habitat protection and wastewater treatment systems.”


Consequences for individuals most effected, families and society?
Cost of drinking water filtration would increase for water treatment plants and citizens affecting us on an individual, family and societal level. Currently many illnesses arise each year from sewage in our drinking water; this would get worse.   Lake Superior, being the largest Great, takes longer for contaminants to be noticed.  There will be continued costs to society to cleaning the lake waters. jobs and businesses will be lost as people making their living  working on the lake as fisherpersons, and eventually, recreation as those activities are not safe. Families may have struggles and this effects economy and society.


What is the economic Impact? To whom?
If the bill passes, treatment facilities will spend money upgrading to meet standards. There will be fines for those facilities not meeting standards in time.  Economic costs if the bill does not pass are going to be costs keeping water clean enough to drink. We currently pay for that process and will, mostlikely continue. There is lost revenue from those whos livelihood depend on the lake in fishing or recreation.  Chicago says that swim bans alone cost them 2.4 million each year in revenue. If illnesses arise from untreated water, that is another potential economic burden.


What are economic benefits? To whom?
Benefits, as it stands now, are gained by publicly owned treatment works that handle sewage not having to make changes in how they handle and route waste saving them money.


What are the social costs? Who bears them?
We all bear the cost if this does not pass. We may bear it no matter what, but the speed of the water toxicity will be much faster as a whole and certainly in particular areas.  We need water to live. This not only affects our actual life, but water scarcity creates higher prices, fear and physical discomfort or illness. These things do not bring out the best in mankind. Who knows what chaos could occur out of desperation. Perhaps that is a long way down the road, or seems extreme, but if water can only be had by those who can afford it, that could set up very dangerous scenarios. If you add issues with diseases that can come with untreated sewage, that leads to a whole new set of challenges socially as well.

Where do we go for water if the lakes are not filterable?  Looking at the information on this website that shows potential water shortages for various reasons, in the U.S.
http://www.global-warming-forecasts.com/water-supply-shortage-water-scarcity-climate.php
We see that going somewhere else to provide water isn't a very feasible option.


What are the social benefits? Who benefits?
Social benefits if the bill is passed will probably go unnoticed. We will have water and all the other benefits the Great Lakes bring us and, for society, this will be uneventful. We will still have concerns over the water because even with the change, we have work to do to clean and keep the lakes clean.  The thirty Million people who utilize the Great Lakes for drinking water will benefit greatly.


What are the barriers? How can they be overcome?
The barriers are the sewage treatment plants not wanting to spend money to upgrade, perhaps not having the money to upgrade. My guess is that other industries around the Great Lakes not wanting to do their part effects the treatment facilities in justifying their stance on not spending funds to upgrade. For instance, The Coast Guard resists forcing shore disposal for the shipping industry causing two million pounds of cargo residue to be tossed in the lake each year saving $35 million each year for the shipping industry.  Legislation has been relaxed for shipping, the treatment plants may want to get the same benefits. Citizens groups don’t have the money and man power to do as much education is needed. 

I’m not sure how these hurdles can be overcome.  Senator Durbin who is involved in the bill says “the bi-partisan legislative efforts reflected the public’s desire to keep the Great Lakes clean”. Hopefully that means that if people keep making their voice heard action will be more easily taken. 


What resources are needed to address this Issue?
Money is always a helpful to use it to educate about the issue or as a tool to get people and government to do what we want. People need to keep speaking, sharing the facts, and working for this. Perhaps we can have some sway the treatment plants by pointing out it is 20 years and technology will have changed by then making some of these things easier. We can support and promote treatment plants and companies that are on board and following the guide lines even if the only real result is creating awareness about the issue. 


What is the history on this issue?
The Clean Water Act has been in effect for 30 years and the amount of untreated sewage released into rivers and lakes is astounding. 1.3 trillion gallons according to Great Lakes Aquatic Habitat News. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has proposed relaxations allowing more untreated waste to be dumped. This bill is looking to tighten some restrictions back up. 


Who would support and oppose this issue?
Supporting this issue would be people living on the lake or in the area who use the lake for water, food and recreation.  Waste treatment plants on the path to improve. People that believe the lakes are  a precious resource and that scarcity of clean water is a potential.  Native American people who believe in taking care of mother earth now and for future generations. The rest of the U.S. as time goes and less clean or just less water is available to other parts of the country. 

Opposing this issue would be publicly owned treatment works that don’t have the funds to make the changes.  


How can you involve allies and opponents in advocacy efforts?
These are publicly funded plants. We need to continue helping them and politicians understand the big picture of consequences to our drinking water, economy, health, revenue lost, etc.   We can point out the 20 year window to make changes. Making the commitment to changes now may take away mandatory changes with less warning if things get worse rapidly. Those voting live in areas around the Great Lakes and these issues effect us all. According to the Buffalo News, these improvements will stimulate the economy which tends to be something they are interested in hearing about.  


What do I recommend?
The eco system of the lakes are very complex; it's easy for us take them for granted by not understanding the intricacies of the balance and chain of events that happen when that balance is stressed.  This issue isn’t in our drinking glass at the moment: we need to think to the future. Vote yes for this policy. 


References








Sunday, November 13, 2011

Advocacy Project: Healthy People/THOMAS

Choose 1 HealthyPeople 2020 environmental objective (or sub-objective) in which you are interested. Give its definition, its target, and its baseline.

2020 ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH OBJECTIVE: 
Surface and ground water quality
OBJECTIVE:   EH-4  Increase the proportion of persons served by community water systems who receive a supply of drinking water that meets the regulations of the Safe Drinking Water Act
BASELINE:  89 percent of persons served by community water systems received a supply of drinking water that meets the regulations of the Safe Drinking Water Act in 2005
TARGET:   91 percent


Find a related bill in THOMAS or the state legislation/bill search. Report the following information as shown in the example. (Be sure to link to where you found this information). As shown in the last two lines, include what action you recommend and the appropriate political representative you would contact to share your opinion.

BILL:
 H.R.425 
LATEST TITLE: Great Lakes Water Protection Act
OFFICIAL TITLE AS INTRODUCED: To amend the Federal Water Pollution Control Act to establish a deadline for restricting sewage dumping into the Great Lakes and to fund programs and activities for improving wastewater discharges into the Great Lakes.
SPONSOR: Rep Dold, Robert J. [IL-10] (introduced 1/25/2011)  
Cosponsors (1)
LATEST MAJOR ACTION: 1/26/2011 Referred to House subcommittee. Status: Referred to the Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment.
RECOMMENDATION: Vote YES for H.R.425 Great Lakes Water Protection Act
MY POLITICAL REPRESENTATIVE: Congressman Chip Cravaack 







Sunday, November 6, 2011

Advocacy Project: My Political Representatives

Find below my political representatives, their affiliation, contact information and website.

PRESIDENT
Barack H. Obama .
Democrat
Contact -
Via the web - http://capwiz.com/politicsol/mail/?id=3181&lvl=F&chamber=P
or - http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact
Via the mail - 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, DC 20500 (202) 456-1414

Website - http://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/president-obama


CONGRESSPERSONS
Amy Klobuchar - U.S. Senate
Democrat
Contact -
302 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20500

202-224-3244
Website - http://www.klobuchar.senate.gov/

Al Franken - U.S. Senate
Democrat
Contact Information - 
Via the web - http://www.franken.senate.gov/?p=email_al
309 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20500

202-224-5641
http://www.franken.senate.gov/

Chip Cravaack - U.S. House
Republican
Contact Information -
Via the web - http://cravaack.house.gov/index.cfm?sectionid=58&sectiontree=3,58
508 Cannon House Office Building
Washington, DC 20500
OR
Gerald W. Heaney Federal Building and United States Courthouse
515 West First Street, Room 235
Duluth, MN 55802
Phone: (218) 740-7803
http://cravaack.house.gov/


STATE LEGISLATORS
Kerry Gauthier - MN House
Democrat
225 State Office Building
100 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
Saint Paul, Minnesota 55155
651-296-4246 or 800-704-4945
rep.kerry.gauthier@house.mn
http://www.house.leg.state.mn.us/members/members.asp?id=15348

Roger Reinert - MN Senate
Democrat
Contact
100 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
State Office Building,
Room 149
St. Paul, MN 55155-1206
651.296.4188
sen.roger.reinert@senate.mn
http://www.senate.leg.state.mn.us/members/member_bio.php?district=07


GOVERNOR
Mark Dayton
Democrat
Contact -
Via the web - http://mn.gov/governor/contact-us/form/
Office of the Governor
130 State Capitol
75 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
St. Paul, MN 55155
Telephone: 651-201-3400
Toll Free: 800-657-3717
Minnesota Relay 800-627-3529
http://mn.gov/governor/


COUNTY BOARD PRESIDENT
St. Louis County doesn't seem to have a president. Instead 7 County Commissioners
Contact information for the clerk -
Contact
Patricia Stolee, Deputy County Auditor - Clerk of the County Board
Phone:218-726-2385
StoleeP@stlouiscountymn.gov
http://stlouiscountymn.gov/GOVERNMENT/BoardofCommissioners.aspx
http://www.stlouiscountymn.gov/


MAYOR
Don Ness
Democrat
Mayor's Office
dness@duluthmn.gov
Room 402, 411 West First Street
Duluth, MN 55802
Phone: (218) 730-5230

Contact Via Pacebook - http://www.facebook.com/ness.duluth
http://www.duluthmn.gov/mayor/

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Judy's cloud contempletory introduction

Welcome to Judy's Cloud Contemplations!!

I'm a student at the University of Minnesota of Duluth. A Community Health Education and philosophy major with a psychology minor. I love living in Duluth for many reasons.  I, however, would be thrilled if we could keep it from snowing and creating ice on the sidewalks.   This would make the winters FAR more enjoyable. 

The origins and inspiration for this outlet of expression are my Environmental Health class here in Duluth, MN.

What will this blog include? Well, that is still a mystery.  The assignment sheet of course gives me a guide, but, knowing me I'll get off topic and find tangents to add to my collection of directions.  Like clouds my thoughts, creativity, writing and living are sometimes very distinct and separated both nebulous and sometimes more defined shapes. And others are all mushed together in a very unified, solid, clearly defined way, yet others come together, bump into each other, grab a little bit from another cloud and move along together or blow a different direction.

So....

We will all find out what will be contained within together.

There are 5 possible types of posts on my blog. They include:
  1. Advocacy Project
  2. Eye Openers
  3. Reflections
  4. Read N Seed
  5. Share and Voice
If you notice at the bottom of this post, the categories will be listed as labels. This post is has been labeled with all five kinds of posts. You will also see the number of each kind of post in my Labels Gadget at the top of the page. All post titles from now on will begin with one of the categories above.
The members of my web group are


  1. Colton@Coltons Healthy Lakes  
  2. Hannah@Hiking with Hannah
  3. Sarah @ Sarah's EcoEndeavors
  4. Amy and Kristen @Enviro-Surfing with Amy and Kristen


It will be fun getting to know each other and learning no fun eco stuff!


You can subscribe to my blog by clicking the subscribe gadget in the gadget column. You can also follow my blog by clicking "Follow this Blog" in the gadget column. You can see my complete profile and all the blogs I am following by clicking on "See Complete Profile."

Thank you again for stopping by.  I'll do my best to keep this fun, interesting, thought provoking and... I'd say educational however that isn't usually a word that keeps 'em coming back.

Happy reading and keep your head in the clouds.

Judy


Picture credit:
http://blogs-images.forbes.com/kenrapoza/files/2011/05/question-cloud1.jpg