
Release date: 09/08/2008
Contact Information: David Kluesner (212) 637-3653, kluesner.dave@epa.gov
(New York, N.Y.) The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) recently awarded a $60,000 cooperative
agreement to the Association of New Jersey Environmental Commissions
(ANJEC) in Mendham, New Jersey to educate the public on actions that
can be taken individually, and as communities, to restore the health
and beauty of the Passaic River and its watershed. Assistance funds
such as this are awarded by EPA to focus resources and efforts on
regional high priority areas, such as the Passaic River watershed,
which includes the Passaic River, 80 miles long from its headwaters in
Morristown to its confluence with Newark Bay, and the Passaic River
watershed, covering 787 square miles in New Jersey and 148 square miles
in New York. In recent years, EPA and its federal and state partner
agencies have initiated a number of actions to accelerate the pace of
contaminated sediment cleanup in the lower Passaic River and to restore
the watershed’s natural resources.
“We’re cleaning up the Passaic River and restoring
its watershed,” said EPA Regional Administrator, Alan J. Steinberg.
This cooperative agreement helps empower Passaic River communities,
governments, businesses and individuals to meet the challenge before
all of us as environmental stewards of the Passaic River.”
ANJEC is teaming up with Future City, Inc., the
Lower Passaic Watershed Alliance, the Passaic River Institute at
Montclair State University and the Ramapo River Watershed
Intermunicipal Council to carry out this project, which starts this
month and will take approximately one year to complete. ANJEC and its
partners will use the funds to develop and disseminate outreach
materials tailored for municipal environmental commissioners, local
officials and the public. These materials will help raise awareness of
the presence and value of watershed resources and events, reduce
pollution, minimize wastes, improve environmental stewardship practices
within the watershed and promote healthy communities by increasing
public awareness of the risks of consuming contaminated fish and
shellfish. Resource guides, displays and a project Web site will be
produced and workshops will be held to train environmental
commissioners, local officials, businesses and others on the various
federal and state watershed restoration funding resources and programs
potentially available to help their communities.
For more information on the Lower Passaic River Restoration Project, visit the project Web site at http://www.ourpassaic.org or http://www.epa.gov/region02/passaicriver. Information about ANJEC can be found on their Web site at http://www.anjec.org.
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