Monday, January 28, 2008

Atlantic Water Quality Monitoring update


Hello Ocean Eco-Activists,

I wanted to give you an update regarding our Water Quality Monitoring program for Palm Beach County. (on hold for now)

As I previously mentioned, we were interested in finding out if the public would support a Non-profit/Non-funded Independent Water Quality Monitoring program with donations.

Pilot Phase 1 of the project would include: (collaboration not partnerships)
A) EarthRehab and Volunteers (possibly Jupiter High School Environment Club) to collect the Live water samples and obtain data like temperature, salinity, date, time, visibility, current tide status, and photography.
B) Samples would be delivered to Reef Rescue for fecal coliform bacterium testing.
C) Test results would be deciphered by SEFCRI, made public, and copies would be sent directly to the sponsors.

I submitted several news stories regarding my intentions and posted on-line in Forums and Message Boards including YourHub, Topix, Palm Beach Post, Orlando Sentinel, Sun-Sentinel and many others.
Unfortunately I could not find a pulse or get any response from the general public without the support of BIG media.

From December 14th up to our current date several Funds and Grants have been made available from EPA, and DEP (millions) to establish and maintain a WQM program.

We (EarthRehab) have invited the EPA and DEP to discuss the funding further and have approached the Dept. of Agriculture for appropriate legal direction.

I will continue to seek for the Media to announce our program and its mission.
‘An Independent WQM program for the Atlantic Ocean and Florida’s Future.’

Cordially,

William Djubin
Founder
EarthRehab
http://www.mygreenlicenseplate.com/

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Noteworthy Water News for January 2008

2008 Noteworthy Water News facts links:

North and South Florida battle for drinking water from 2 rivers.
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20080114/D8U5K15G0.html- AP Press News Link.
Jacksonville and Orlando want water rights to the Ocklawaha and St. Johns River.
The Orlando district developed the proposal after determining that areas of Central Florida could reach their groundwater limits within five years, and that by 2025 it will need 200 million gallons of water a day from alternative sources.
Partly because of the fast growth of central Florida, half a billion gallons of water are being pumped out of the deep underground Floridan aquifer each day.

Los Angeles, Orange County, California will soon drink treated Sewage water.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-reclaim2jan02,0,7789563.story?coll=la-home-center - LA Times News Link
Public acceptance was also helped by the fact that since 1976 the county has been pumping about 15 million gallons of reclaimed sewer water a day into the groundwater basin to protect it from saltwater intrusion.
For decades, the aquifer has been plagued by saltwater that flows in as fresh water is pumped out of underground reservoirs along the coast. The condition can be checked and reduced by injecting treated water back into the ground to act as a shield.

Environmental Groups vs. SFWMD and regulations on Pollution and Sewage Dumping into Lake Okeechobee, Florida – ENS News service Link
http://www.nbc4.com/news/14967385/detail.html
Friends of the Everglades, Florida Wildlife Federation, and Fishermen Against Destruction of the Environment, all represented by Earthjustice - contend that millions of gallons of polluted water coming off of half a million acres of sugar cane fields and cities are pumped into Lake Okeechobee by the South Florida Water Management District.

South Florida’s tougher new water restrictions Begin January 15, 2008- Sun Sentinel
http://www.redorbit.com/news/science/1214214/south_floridas_tougher_new_water_restrictions_will_start_tuesday/index.html
"We have never seen water levels this low, this early in the dry season," said water district spokesman Jesus Rodriguez. "These (restrictions) are about the immediate water supply concerns."

Water Quality Monitoring for Coastal Palm Beach County- YourHub News link
http://tc.yourhub.com/Jupiter/Stories/News/About-Town/Story~415366.aspx While contemplating where to start with the Coral Reef Initiative, much research has led me to understand that Florida does not have an existing Water Quality Monitoring program for the Inlets and Beaches. No program- No Funding- No-reporting. What a shame. A recent DEP report shows that of 1 in 5 Inland Water Basins, 272 bodies of water in Florida are classified as Impaired. (X5 = >1000 bodies).

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Water Quality Standards


Mentorship received a few years back:
A 2 time General manager of the Year at the #3 busiest restaurant in Orlando held a meeting with his Mgmt. team, I was a member and was present.
He asked for the current Assistant General Manager to leave the table and go into the kitchen and return with a cooking pan that meets our standards.
A short dispute arose on his return with a clean new pan; so the General Manger went to the kitchen and returned with a filthy, blackened from carbon, rusty Pan and exclaimed:

'No, this is our current standard for cookware, simply because we allow it to exist.'

We fixed the cookware issue immediately and also terminated the bottom 12 personnel on the Staff, mixed from different departments.
We raised our Standards by 40% quickly and consequentially increased our volume.

Reason for the short story:
Water quality standards should not be judged at their best, nor should they be judged vs. other bodies of water from other locations.If we (Florida) have 272 known bodies of water classified as Impaired, and that possibly over 1000 may exist, then Our Current Water Quality Standard is “Impaired.”

Sunday, January 6, 2008

272 Water Bodies Impaired in Florida

the original web-site that brought you this report
http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/dec2007/2007-12-21-092.asp

Thank you Environment News Service.

272 Water Bodies Impaired in Florida

The following is a Florida DEP Document that was found on-line, it proves that Water Quality Monitoring is needed for Florida.
272 Bodies of Water were classified as impaired, some with immediate attention and action needed.
Bacterium, Fecal Matter, High Ammonium, High Oxygen and Sulfur is present throughout the report.
The following report is for selected areas of interest, no mention of the Loxahatchee River District . Palm Beach County is not mentioned in this Report.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This is the original PDF File that must be downloaded to view, sorry.
We are working on the encoding to Word, so that the document can be shared more easily.
Click the ICON Below..

Group 5 Basin list.

Brought to you by EarthRehab, www.mygreenlicenseplate.com