Riverkeeper Boat Blog- Stormwater Issues and Ineffective Absorbent Boom at Pratt Oil Seep
Friday, 18 May 2012 21:25
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Newtown Creek today during our May water quality patrol, which began this morning.
Raining. We see several sites with very turbid discharges – we assume storm water. No sheens. No SPDES signs (pollution discharge permits).
Also, at Pratt oil seep on Queens side the absorbent boom is hung up on rip rap. It needs better rigging to be effective.
Boom at Pratt seep, Queens side.
Raining. We see several sites with very turbid discharges – we assume storm water. No sheens. No SPDES signs (pollution discharge permits).
Also, at Pratt oil seep on Queens side the absorbent boom is hung up on rip rap. It needs better rigging to be effective.
Boom at Pratt seep, Queens side.
Discharge just east of Queens side Waste Management – very close/west of Pratt seep
Strong, turbid discharge at Waste Management on Brooklyn side under Kosciusko. We’ve seen this before. It’s only visible in rain and at low tide.
Turbid stormwater discharge next to Exxon groundwater well discharge at Meeker Av (right hand of two)
Discharge at Empire Transit Mix. This is a storm drain, I think. It is right next to the pipe where we saw cement waste discharged years ago which led to EPA enforcement.
And just for fun, the Gowanus Canal, the lower intestine of Brooklyn
Green Guru Network Cloud
bag ban legislation
bread at westchester farm markets
catskills
epa mold
farming
federal government buy green
for the love of squash
garbage
heritage areas
jane goodall
obama state of emergency hudson valley
partnership grants
pipa
pixels
power
recipes for peppers
reduce reuse recycle
renee brown
restore
waste water grant










