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Info Meeting On Casselman River Set In Grantsville

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Jul. 28, 2011

The Youghiogheny River Watershed Association (YRWA) and the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE) – Abandoned Mine Lands Division will hold a public information meeting on the Casselman River Watershed Remediation Plan next Thursday, Aug. 4, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at Grantsville Town Hall, 171 Hill Street. All interested persons are invited to attend.

The meeting will focus on the plan developed by the MDE Baltimore staff in conjunction with the Abandoned Mine Lands Division (formerly the Bureau of Mines). According to James “Smokey” Stanton, YRWA chairman, the plan provides a comprehensive watershed restoration strategy for the Casselman River Watershed with respect to non-point sources of acidity. The intent of the plan and associated projects is to establish a comprehensive approach to assessment and eventual pollution abatement and mitigation of existing water quality problems, Stanton said.

The MDE – Abandoned Mine Lands Division expects work to begin in the watershed this fall, as early as October. Representatives of the Abandoned Mine Lands Division will present the watershed restoration plan in a brief PowerPoint presentation. Representatives of MDE from the EPA 319 grant program in Baltimore will participate and be available to answer questions.

The Casselman River flows north from its headwaters near Savage River State Forest to the Pennsylvania state line, and lies within the Monongahela River Watershed, a part of the Ohio River drainage basin. The Casselman is a high quality mountain stream noted for its populations of brook trout, stonecats, and hellbenders in the less impaired parts. The tributaries of the Casselman Watershed have shown significant reductions in the native brook trout population as a result of acid mine drainage from abandoned mine discharges, as well as episodic atmospheric deposition.

The Casselman River Watershed Remediation Plan consists of several phases, including identifying sources and major discharges, generating a list of impaired stream segments, developing a database of segments, prioritizing impaired streams, and developing solutions to correct the impairments.

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MDE Approves Discharge Permit For Grantsville Mine

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Sep. 30, 2010

The Maryland Department of the Environment reported this week that it has made a final determination on the discharge permit application by Maryland Energy Resources LLC for the proposed underground coal mine along Durst Road near Grantsville.
The department published a tentative permit determination on April 15 and conducted a public hearing regarding the proposed draft permit on May 19.

After considering all comments received either in writing or through oral testimony, the department made the final determination to issue the permit with several changes to the tentative determination.

The permittee will be required to include alternate test species in the biomonitoring study plan that also reflects the biological nature of endangered species, including but not limited to rainbow trout and stonefly.

Temperatures will be required to be monitored 24 hours per day between May 15 and Sept. 30, and sulfate will be required to be monitored weekly.

A special condition of the permit has been revised to clarify the permittee’s responsibility to comply with all state water quality standards.

The permittee will also be required to perform a feasibility study considering potential options for implementation of real-time reporting of effluent flow volume, conductivity, temperature, and pH.

In addition, a plan will be required for addressing identification of and response to the potential occurrence of acid mine drainage seeps.

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Grant Funding No Longer Available For GC Electronics Recycling Prog.

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Aug. 5, 2010

Garrett County government may need to explore alternative methods of operation to keep its popular electronics recycling program going next fiscal year, county recycling coordinator Kim Madigan told the county commissioners during a progress report on Tuesday. The county has conducted the program for three years.

To help defray costs, the Maryland Department of the Environment has provided the county’s Solid Waste and Recycling Division with two grants totaling $24,656.

Last fiscal year (July 1, 2009, to June 30, 2010) the county received $16,074 to expand the program. The division collected 75 tons of electronics during that period.

“The program had become so successful, we wanted to add an additional site for collection of materials,” the coordinator said. “We were already collecting at the Weber and Bumble Bee sites and wanted to add the Grantsville site as well.”

The county used $4,250 of last year’s grant on safety equipment – hydraulic lifts, straps, and ramps – to help site attendants manage the electronics, and the remaining was spent on hauling, processing, and collecting materials (container rentals).

Because recycling electronics has become so popular locally, the grant funding ran out quickly, and it is now costing the county money to keep the program going.

“In January, we realized the program would not make it through June 30,” the coordinator said. “We weighed our options of either shutting down a site or two, or closing the program early. But in the end, we were fortunate to have an extremely generous offer made by our electronics processor, PC Renewal (Morgantown, W.Va.), to accept all of the materials free of charge for the duration of the grant period.”

This allowed the program to continue without limitations. What also helped this year, as in the previous years, was that Solid Waste and Recycling provided additional funds.

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If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

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MDE Fines MLP Couple For Alleged Wetlands Violation

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Jul. 22, 2010

The Maryland Department of the Environment has announced 25 recent major enforcement actions seeking penalties totaling $1.2 million for alleged violations of MDE requirements for water, air and radiation management, and land.

A Mountain Lake Park couple was among those cited. Michael and Dawna Ashby paid $1,500 to the Maryland Nontidal Wetlands Compensation Fund on May 7 to resolve alleged nontidal wetlands violations, including failing to obtain MDE authorization for disturbing 400 square feet of emergent wetlands and 1,800 square feet of wetlands buffer.

Corrective actions have been completed, according to an MDE press release.

“The Maryland Department of the Environment’s top priority is to protect public health and our environment, and a consistent baseline of enforcement actions prevents further pollution and risks to public health,” said MDE Secretary Shari T. Wilson. “The vast majority of Maryland businesses which are in compliance deserve to have environmental laws fairly applied across the board.”

State law requires that prior to performing construction activity, a person obtain and implement a Soil Conservation District-approved erosion and sediment control plan for any proposed land clearing or earth disturbance greater than 5,000 square feet, which must be maintained for the life of the project.

It is unlawful for any person to introduce soil or sediment into waters of the state or to place soil or sediment in a condition or location where it is likely to be washed into waters of the state.

State law requires that property owners notify MDE before conducting any work in tidal and nontidal wetlands, their buffers, and waterways of the state. MDE assesses the impact of any work on tidal and nontidal wetlands and, if appropriate, will issue a permit authorizing the work.

For more information, persons may visit http://mde.state.md.us

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Clear-Cutting Project For Wind Turbines Abruptly Halted By MDE

Clear-Cutting Project For Wind Turbines Abruptly Halted By MDE

Mar. 25, 2010

Work began in earnest this past week in clearing forest land near Eagle Rock just south of Deer Park for the erection of over two dozen 400-plus-foot wind turbines, the first to be erected in Garrett County.
The project calls for the placement of 28 turbines along that section of Backbone Mountain, with an additional 17 in the Roth Rock area of the same mountain ridge, just south of Red House.

Startled residents in the Eagle Rock area, some located within just 15 or 20 feet of the project, used words such as “shocked” and “horrified” when they were awakened by the sound of chainsaws, trucks, dozers, and massive excavating machines felling thousands of trees adjacent to their properties. Several acres of forestland timber were leveled within a matter of a few days.

The project, however, came to an abrupt halt Tuesday after one of the residents – who happens to be a contractor – suggested that the work was being done in a manner that was not in compliance with state environmental law.

“I don’t think they counted on someone living up there who knows all about such things as excavation and building permits,” said Eric Robison, who recently constructed his own new home close to the site.

Evidently Robison’s concerns were legitimate, as the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE) ordered Constellation Energy and the contractor, All Construction Inc., Mt. Storm, W.Va., to immediately cease any further grading or disturbance activities, take corrective action to eliminate the discharge of sediment-laden water, and submit to the Garrett Soil Conservation District a revised erosion and sediment control plan to address the current plan’s sediment control deficiencies.

More specifically, according to MDE information office spokesperson Jay Apperson, a super silt fence was not properly installed at least eight inches below the ground surface, and consequently sediment laden water was flowing under and around the fence.

In addition, he said, the volume of water flow on the site appears to be much greater than the controls required by the current erosion and sediment control plan can effectively handle to prevent significant sediment flow off site.

Melisa and Justin Carrico, who reside directly across the street from the site where a high-voltage substation is to be constructed for the wind farm, contacted the Garrett County commissioners, requesting that they come out to the site to observe what was taking place. The commissioners declined the invitation, but agreed to meet with the Carricos at the courthouse Tuesday morning.

Among those present besides the Carricos were Commissioners Ernie Gregg and Fred Holliday, county administrator Monty Pagenhardt, and Robison, a neighbor of the Carricos.

“I feel as though I have lost all faith in the government to protect me,” Melisa Carrico told the commissioners in a prepared statement. “To know that what happened to me will happen to many other families, neighborhoods, and environments in Garrett County is absolutely unacceptable.”

She criticized the commissioners, saying that what is happening to her and her neighbors is an “act of destroying my safety, my environment, my property, and my community.”

“Yet you act as though you had no idea, and that you are sorry for about being part of a county government that obviously doesn’t protect its citizens,” she said.

Robison estimated the value of his new house to be at least $400,000, but acknowledged that this figure is now greatly diminished because of the project.

“Numerous groups have suggested many times that safety precautions, as well as environmentally sound practices, be implemented,” Carrico continued. “It is evident that we, the citizens of this county, were not protected. On every occasion nothing was done. You had seven years to stand up and protect us. That is your job.”

Justin Carrico said that among the reasons they purchased their house, valued at nearly $200,000, where it is was because of its quiet, pristine location, and the beauty of the forests.

“It’s certainly not quiet anymore,” he said, “and the forest right across the road, where I enjoy turkey hunting, has been leveled.”

Concern was also expressed about the damage to Eagle Rock Road, with Robison saying that it is literally being destroyed by the heavy equipment.

“That road really does not have an adequate base under it anyway, and there’s not going to be much of it left,” he said.

Reportedly, Constellation Energy will be responsible for repair and/or replacement of the road, according to the commissioners.

Melisa Carrico repeatedly asked the commissioners what they were going to do to help her and her neighbors, but Gregg and Holliday did not respond initially. Finally, Commissioner Gregg said, “I don’t know, Melisa. I don’t know.”

After hearing about the alleged violations at the site, the commissioners did say they would immediately contact the various permitting agencies involved, as well as John Cook, enforcement officer for the MDE.

Cook later confirmed that the project had been shut down, at least temporarily, and referred the matter to Apperson at the information office.

When asked what the next step would be for the contractor to be able to resume work at the site, Apperson said that he would have to install the super silt fence properly, devise and implement corrective action to eliminate the discharge of sediment-laden water as soon as possible, and have an engineer submit a revised erosion and sediment control plan to address the current plan’s sediment control deficiencies to the Garrett Soil Conservation District for review and approval.

He said that if the revised plan is not approved by April 5, the contractor would have to stabilize the entire site and not disturb earth until a revised plan is approved and implemented.

In addition, he would be required to submit copies of self-inspections for the site.

“MDE is reviewing the situation at the site to determine if the stream of water discharging from Eagle Rock Road should be considered to be state waters,” Apperson said, “in which case a waterway construction permit with additional requirements will be needed.”

Read the rest here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350

Deep Creek Hydroelectric Station To Lower Lake Level; Users Cautioned

maryland depart

Mar. 4, 2010

The record snow fall in Garrett County could cause a record spring runoff. To avoid serious and potentially damaging high water conditions at Deep Creek Lake and at its dam, the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE) has approved a request by Brookfield Renewable Power (owner of the Deep Creek Hydroelectric Station) to draw the lake level down two feet below its permitted March lower limit.
The draw-down, which began on March 1, will take place gradually, with a maximum of 0.5 feet reduction per day.

“Together with MDE, we are doing what we can to anticipate and mitigate the impacts of the spring thaw,” said David Barnhart, general manager for Brookfield’s Mid-America Operations. “As this winter proves, you never know what Mother Nature will throw at you, and an early, sustained thaw may result in higher than usual water levels.”

To a limited extent, Deep Creek Lake levels can be controlled by the hydroelectric station, which operates under a Water Appropriation and Use permit from the MDE. Under the permit conditions, the station uses water to generate hydropower, but keeps lake levels within a defined “rule band” with upper and lower limits.

The lowered water levels beneath the ice cover, combined with warming temperatures, pose unpredictable risks to recreational users of Deep Creek Lake.

“People should remember that there are always hazards to recreating on naturally-formed ice,” said Carolyn Mathews, manager of the Deep Creek Lake Recreation Area. “Lowering the lake to make additional storage space for the anticipated above-normal spring runoff may destabilize the lake’s ice. We urge everyone to take special care to stay safe.”

The MDE, Brookfield, and the Department of Natural Resources are continuing to monitor the lake levels and weather conditions to determine whether additional actions for safety of recreational users may be required

Lake levels can be found at www.deepcreekhydro.com

Read the full article here.

If you are thinking of buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! 877-563-5350