Hi Kate,
Karen G. has just posted a comment on your blog post, The Latest Slap in the Face of GLSM!:
Thank you for the information on Grand St. Mary's Lake. I was looking for a home on the lake and by all this information there is no way I will ever move to this lake.
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Ohio EPA Sets Record Year with Nearly $1 Billion to Improve Water Quality in 2017$1.7 Billion Set for 2018Ohio EPA issued more than $936 million this year to finance projects that upgrade drinking water infrastructure and improve the quality of Ohio’s lakes, rivers and streams — more than ever before in the 28-year history of the state’s revolving loan programs. All Ohio EPA loans are provided to communities at below market rates, and this year resulted in a combined savings of more than $150 million for Ohio’s counties, cities and villages.
“It’s important for Ohioans to know that Ohio EPA is helping communities and business with compliance, technical and financial assistance,” Ohio EPA Director Craig W. Butler said. “We were able to make this nearly billion dollar investment in water quality improvements because these funds are carefully managed, and we are meeting frequently with county commissioners and mayors to understand their community needs and build positive working relationships between state and local governments.”
Notable for 2017:
A summary of the projects may be viewed on Ohio EPA’s Division of Environmental and Financial Assistance web page. For 2018, Ohio EPA has already approved a plan to finance more than $1.7 billion in projects for further improving the quality of the state’s surface water.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency was created in 1972 to consolidate efforts to protect and improve air quality, water quality and waste management in Ohio. Since then, air pollutants dropped by as much as 90 percent; large rivers meeting standards improved from 21 percent to 89 percent; and hundreds of polluting, open dumps were replaced with engineered landfills and an increased emphasis on waste reduction and recycling.
Karen G. has just posted a comment on your blog post, The Latest Slap in the Face of GLSM!:
Thank you for the information on Grand St. Mary's Lake. I was looking for a home on the lake and by all this information there is no way I will ever move to this lake.
Comment actions:
Delete | Mark as spam
Go to Weebly.com
Questions? Visit us at help.weebly.com.
- The Weebly Team
Weebly values your privacy.
If you wish to stop receiving these emails, click here to unsubscribe.
Weebly, Inc - 460 Bryant Street #100, San Francisco, CA 94107
PUBLIC INTEREST CENTER, (614) 644-2160
CITIZEN CONTACT: Mary McCarron
Ohio EPA Sets Record Year with Nearly $1 Billion to Improve Water Quality in 2017$1.7 Billion Set for 2018Ohio EPA issued more than $936 million this year to finance projects that upgrade drinking water infrastructure and improve the quality of Ohio’s lakes, rivers and streams — more than ever before in the 28-year history of the state’s revolving loan programs. All Ohio EPA loans are provided to communities at below market rates, and this year resulted in a combined savings of more than $150 million for Ohio’s counties, cities and villages.
“It’s important for Ohioans to know that Ohio EPA is helping communities and business with compliance, technical and financial assistance,” Ohio EPA Director Craig W. Butler said. “We were able to make this nearly billion dollar investment in water quality improvements because these funds are carefully managed, and we are meeting frequently with county commissioners and mayors to understand their community needs and build positive working relationships between state and local governments.”
Notable for 2017:
- Improvements to wastewater infrastructure (which affect the health of Ohio’s surface waters flowing into Lake Erie and the Ohio River) received $861 million this year;
- $65 million was directed toward improving Ohio’s public water systems;
- $10 million was issued for projects that restore wetlands and counter the loss of Ohio’s natural water resources;
- $36 million was provided in principal-forgiveness financing at zero percent interest (meaning borrowers are not required to repay the loans);
- $13 million was distributed across 51 counties for home sewage treatment system (septic) replacement and upgrades;
- 17 loans were issued for large projects of $10 million or greater including combined sewer overflow projects in Cuyahoga, Hamilton, Franklin, Lorain, Lucas, and Summit counties along with large wastewater treatment plant improvements in Miami and Henry counties; and
- $258 million was awarded for projects to separate combined sewer overflows in the Lake Erie watershed.
A summary of the projects may be viewed on Ohio EPA’s Division of Environmental and Financial Assistance web page. For 2018, Ohio EPA has already approved a plan to finance more than $1.7 billion in projects for further improving the quality of the state’s surface water.
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency was created in 1972 to consolidate efforts to protect and improve air quality, water quality and waste management in Ohio. Since then, air pollutants dropped by as much as 90 percent; large rivers meeting standards improved from 21 percent to 89 percent; and hundreds of polluting, open dumps were replaced with engineered landfills and an increased emphasis on waste reduction and recycling.
SPRINGFIELD NEWS-SUN
Updated: 1:39 a.m. Sunday, Dec. 5, 2010 Posted: 10:43 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 4, 2010
More rules won’t help Grand Lake St. Marys, Kasich says. He says a handful of farmers are recalcitrant in cleaning up lake.
By Laura A. Bischoff
Columbus Bureau
COLUMBUS – Gov.-elect John Kasich urged farmers to self-regulate and police one another when it comes to protecting the environment, including Grand Lake St. Marys.
“I am not big on imposing rules and regulations on 100 people when we need to take one person out and put him in the stockade and throw some fruit and vegetables at him,” Kasich told members of the Ohio Farm Bureau on Friday.
“We are committed to improving the situation at Grand Lake St. Marys in a rational, common sense way,” Kasich said. He noted that his newly appointed agriculture director, Jim Zehringer, a Republican lawmaker and farmer from Fort Recovery, will lead the effort.
Over the last two summers, the 12,700-acre man-made lake suffered from algae outbreaks that led to Ohio Environmental Protection Agency advisories to avoid contact with the water. The algae blooms are caused by run off of manure and fertilizers from watershed lands feeding the lake — mostly farms.
Kasich told reporters on Friday: “There are a handful of farmers who are recalcitrances. What I don’t want to have to do is punish everybody for the sins of a few. So, we got to go whack their knuckles first. And that’s what Zehringer will do. Unfortunately, if they don’t want to clean it up, we won’t have a lot of choice. We’ve got a lot of farmers down there doing a lot of talking to the people that don’t want to cooperate ... clearly, something has to be done at that lake.”
Really, Gov. Kasich, a whack on the knuckles for a $51 millon+ loss to our community. the people while the agribusiness