Pleasure boaters the prob ?
SEWAGE OVERFLOWS TO BE MAPPED Christina ShockleyMarch 20, 2006Public interest groups say, on average, more than 850 billion gallons of untreated or partially treated sewage is dumped into U.S. waterways each year. Notifying the public of these events is sporadic, but one city has started to tell the public of when — and where — overflows occur. The GLRC's Christina Shockley reports: Federal guidelines say officials need to notify the public of sewage overflows, but the rules are vague… and sometimes not followed. Kevin Shafer is executive director of the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewage District. In a somewhat unusual move, it’s set up an online map of area waterways that will highlight where, exactly, sewage is dumped into the water. Shafer says, in the past, specific information wasn’t so easy to get. "We would notify the Public Health Department and then they would notify everyone that there’d been an overflow. We never really pinpointed the location, unless someone from the media or general public called." Shafer says people should avoid areas where overflows have occurred because of bacteria and viruses that could be in the water. Meanwhile, some states in the Great Lakes region are working on updating notification requirements about sewage overflows. For the GLRC, I'm Christina Shockley. © 2004 Great Lakes Radio Consortium back