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Status of EPA Ocean and Coastal Programs in New England. EBC Ocean and Coastal Resources Committee Meeting April 25, 2007. People Love the Ocean. Fish and wildlife habitat Commercial shipping/ recreational boating Commercial/recreational fishing. Swimming/sunbathing Energy production/
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Status of EPA Ocean and Coastal Programs in New England EBC Ocean and Coastal Resources Committee Meeting April 25, 2007
People Love the Ocean • Fish and wildlife habitat • Commercial shipping/ recreational boating • Commercial/recreational fishing • Swimming/sunbathing • Energy production/ transmission • Water supply (desalinization) • Wastewater disposal • Commercial/residential development
Maybe Too Much • Habitat loss/degradation • Fishery stock depletion • Eutrophication • Harmful algal blooms (e.g., red tide) • Beach/shellfish bed closures • Contaminated sediments • Non-native, invasive species • Coastal erosion
What Tools Do We Have Already? • Clean Water Act • Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act (Ocean Dumping Act) • Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899 • Coastal Zone Management Act • Oil Pollution Act • National Environmental Policy Act • Endangered Species Act • Magnuson-Stevens Sustainable Fisheries Act
Who Are Our Partners? • NOAA • National Marine Fisheries Service • Regional fisheries management councils • National Estuarine Research Reserve System • U.S. Army Corps of Engineers • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service • Wildlife refuges • State water quality, coastal zone, and fisheries agencies • Nongovernmental organizations
What is the Ocean and Coastal Protection Unit Responsible For? • Technical support (NPDES/NEPA) • National Estuary Program • Ocean dumping • NEPA compliance (for EPA actions) • Vessel waste management • Beach Program • Monitoring/research • U.S. Ocean Action Plan
We Provide Technical/Biological Expertise • NPDES • Marine discharges • Power plants • Aquaculture • Essential Fish Habitat (EFH) • Endangered Species Act (ESA) • Environmental Review (NEPA and other) • LNG terminals and pipelines • Offshore wind development • Desalinization facilities • Fishery Management Plans • Sand/gravel extraction • Transportation
We Oversee the NEP • “Estuaries of National Significance” • Casco Bay (1990) • New Hampshire Estuaries (1996) • Massachusetts Bays (1990) • Buzzards Bay (1985) • Narragansett Bay (1985) • Long Island Sound (1985) • Each receives ≈$500,000/year (except LIS) • Management conferences with broad stakeholder involvement implement CCMPs • Facilitate implementation of “core” CWA programs in watershed framework
We Regulate Ocean Dumping • Dredging and dredged material management • Coordinate with Corps, NMFS, USFWS, and states • Sediment testing to determine “suitability” for aquatic disposal • Green Book/Inland Testing Manual, Regional Implementation Manual • Disposal site designations • Five designated sites (Portland, Mass Bays, RI, CLIS, and WLIS) • Disposal site management and monitoring • Site Management and Monitoring Plans (SMMPs) • Disposal Area Monitoring System (DAMOS) • Vessel disposal-at-sea • Burial-at-sea
And Try to Make Sure EPA Complies with NEPA • EPA “actions” subject to NEPA • Designation of ocean dredged material disposal sites • New discharges subject to NPDES • Construction grants • Special Appropriation Projects (e.g., earmarks)
We Help States Manage Vessel Waste • No Discharge Areas • Current NDAs include RI and NH coastal waters, Buzzards Bay and several other embayments in MA, Casco Bay in ME, and from the RI border to Branford in CT • Pending application for Branford to Greenwich in CT • Salem Sound, Cape Cod Bay, and South Shore in MA under development • Regional strategy to complete NDA designations for coastline by 2010
And Monitor Beaches • Federal BEACH Act of 2000 • Requires regular, consistent monitoring of most public beaches and public notification of results • Authorizes annual grants to coastal states to support state and local monitoring programs (~$220-260,000/year) • Clean New England Beaches Initiative • Goes beyond BEACH Act requirements to encourage identification and elimination of pollution sources causing beach closures • Promotes new technologies for monitoring and source identification • EPA conducting/supporting sanitary surveys
We Participate on the Gulf of Maine Council on the Marine Environment • GOMC initiated in 1989 • State and provincial agencies and organizations, supported by federal government • Coordinate activities across political boundaries to manage Gulf as single ecosystem • 2007-2012 Action Plan goals: • Protect and restore coastal and marine habitats • Protect human health and ecosystem integrity • Encourage sustainable marine-dependent industries
We Pay Attention to New Initiatives, Federal … • Pew Ocean Commission report (2003) • U.S. Ocean Commission report (2004) • U.S. Ocean Action Plan (2005) • Interagency Committee on Ocean Science and Resource Management Integration (ICOSRMI) • Northeast Regional Association of Coastal Ocean Observing Systems • Subcommittee on Integrated Management of Ocean Resources (SIMOR) • Federal/State Task Team on Research Priorities • Northeast Regional Ocean Council
Northeast Regional Association of Coastal Ocean Observing Systems Advisory Committee • Formed in January 2006 in response to U.S. Ocean Action Plan recommendation • Advisory committee of “users” to guide development • Incorporates existing ocean observing systems: • Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System (GoMOOS) • Martha’s Vineyard Coastal Observatory • UNH Coastal Ocean Observation and Analysis Center • UMass School for Marine Science and Technology • UConn National Undersea Research Center
Northeast Regional Ocean Council • Formed in August 2005 in response to U.S. Ocean Action Plan recommendation • Resolution proposed by RI Governor Carcieri, adopted by NEGC/ECP • Promotes regional collaboration on ocean management issues: • Ocean energy resource planning and management • Ocean and coastal ecosystem health • Maritime security • Coastal hazard response and resiliency
And State: Massachusetts Ocean Management Task Force • Formed in 2003 to: • define guiding principles • examine MA coastal policies/legal framework • determine data requirements • examine organization of governance over state waters • Issued final report in 2004 with 15 recommendations • In March 2005 Gov. Romney filed “An Act Relative to Ocean Resources and Conservation” • Bill in committee, no action
We’re Involved with Monitoring/Research Efforts • National Coastal Assessment (NCA) • Coordinated by ORD with Regional and state support • Implemented by NEPs (in New England) • Results provided in National Coastal Condition Report
More Monitoring and Research • MWRA Outfall Monitoring Science Advisory Panel (OMSAP) • Enforce compliance with NPDES permit conditions • GOMC Ecosystem Indicators Project (ESIP) • Coordinating with ORD AED research • Tiered aquatic life use (TALU) • Nutrient criteria • Contaminated sediment
Monitoring/Research (cont) • OSV Bold – EPA’s new ocean survey vessel (replaces OSV Anderson) • Supports EPA statutory and regulatory mandates • Supports EPA’s oceans and coastal program mission • Dive Unit • Operates under EPA Dive Safety Program • Attached to ORD AED Dive Unit • Four certified EPA divers • Conduct joint operations with NOAA, MA DMF, and Corps
What Have We Done Lately? • Technical review/documentation on NPDES permits: • Brayton Point Station (Mt. Hope Bay) • Taunton Municipal Light and Power (Taunton River) • Mirant-Canal (Cape Cod Canal) • Salem (Salem Harbor) • GE/Resco (Saugus River) • EFH/ESA consultations for industrial/municipal dischargers • Technical comments on NEPA documents: • LNG terminals (Weaver’s Cove, Neptune, Northeast Gateway, Downeast, Quoddy Bay, Providence, Broadwater) • Cape Wind • Fishery Management Plans • Pilgrim Nuclear Power plant re-licensing
What Have We Done Lately? • NEPs • Collectively restored/protected about 2200 acres of habitat • Leveraged over $96 million of federal, state, local funding • Ocean dumping • Formed LIS Regional Dredging Team to review projects • Hosted National Dredging Team/Regional Dredging Teams meeting in Boston in May 2006 • Updating Site Management and Monitoring Plans for Mass Bays and Portland disposal sites • Vessel waste management • Developed NDA Implementation Plan with goal of completing designation of all New England coastal waters by 2010 • Approved NDAs for Casco Bay, Groton to Branford in CT, and Plymouth/Duxbury/Kingston in MA in 2006
We Spent Some Time at the Beach… • Beach Program • EPA staff conducted sanitary surveys in Cohasset, MA, assisted ME DEP with a survey in Kennebunkport, and helped RI DOH with a multi-agency survey targeting closures at Newport and Middletown coastal beaches • Several states/municipalities used monitoring results and sanitary surveys to identify and eliminate pollution sources (e.g., Beverly, MA is investigating a habitat restoration project in response to recommendations from our 2004 and 2005 surveys) Beach Closure Days, 2002-2006
And Some Time on the Water • OSV Bold in New England in July 2006 • Assisted NOAA, FDA, and WHOI with paralytic shellfish poison survey off Massachusetts coast (stations depicted below) • Monitored Portland and Mass Bay disposal sites for sediment chemistry, toxicity and bottom features • Conducted public outreach/education events in Portland, Boston, and New London • Attended chief scientist training in Miami, FL in November
And in the Water • Dive Unit • Collected eelgrass samples in Cohasset Harbor as part of a broader state and federal assessment of water quality in Cohasset, MA. • Worked with city, state, and federal agencies to delineate eelgrass beds in a proposed construction area in Gloucester Harbor, then helped harvest several thousand eelgrass shoots to transplant in Boston Harbor • Worked with OEME and NMFS to assess benthic impacts from dredged material placement for beach renourishment outside Green Harbor, MA. • Conducted a benthic habitat assessment within the Palmer River, in Swansea, MA at the location of a proposed desalination facility intake structure.
Broader Issues • Global climate change • Weather extremes, flooding • Impacts on biodiversity and species migrations • Changing ocean circulation patterns and temperatures • Sea-level rise
Broader Issues • Increased need for energy and transportation facilities • Inappropriate coastal development • Lack of robust biological data for estuaries and coastal waters • Coastal and estuarine monitoring a low priority for states • Unexploded ordinance/WMD Report: Army secretly dumped chemicals offshore By John M.R. Bull, The (Newport News, Va.) Daily Press via AP
Contact Information • Melville P. Coté, Jr., ManagerOcean and Coastal Protection Unit U.S. Environmental Protection Agency One Congress Street, Suite 1100 (COP) Boston, MA 02114 (617) 918-1553 cote.mel@epa.gov • http://www.epa.gov/region1/topics/water/ocp.html