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Christie DEP Casually Notes That DEP Has Known About The Lead In Drinking Water Problem “For a Generation Or So”

June 8th, 2016 No comments

Accountability at Christie DEP flows like water off a duck’s back

No consequences for failure – no reforms after disasters

duck2

“If we had any inkling that we had high lead levels in our water,” [Superintendent] Gundersen said, “we would have initiated this testing a long time ago.”   ~~~ “Scope of lead risk a serious lesson for North Jersey school districts” [Bergen Record, 5/30/16]

Was I the only one to hear Christie DEP Assistant Commissioner Dan Kennedy casually note in passing during Legislative testimony that DEP had known about lead in drinking water problems for “a generation or so”?

It sure seems that way, because Kennedy’s bombshell passed without notice by members of the Senate Environment Committee, the intrepid NJ press corps, and a packed room of environmental lobbyists.

DEP Assistant Commissioner Kennedy was testifying to the Committee on Monday about a package of bills to finance water infrastructure.

Kennedy casually dropped that hand grenade in response to a question about lead from Chairman Smith, who asked Kennedy if NJ Environmental Infrastructure Trust (EIT) funds could be used for lead abatement projects.

In the course of his response, Kennedy casually noted that DEP had known about the lead problem for “a generation or so” and – without missing a beat – droned on in his longwinded and evasive response to Smith’s question.

I was stunned, and thought the revelation would prompt shock and outrage by Committee members and denunciations by the press corps.

Silly me – and I wrote about that months ago – I even boldfaced it for emphasis

DEP scientists and regulators have known for many years that there are loopholes in testing and treatment requirements under the Safe Drinking Water Act and that as a result thousands of children were being exposed to unsafe levels of lead and many other chemicals.

They did NOTHING with that knowledge. REPEAT: NOTHING to warn the public or close gaping regulatory loopholes. …

Where is the media on all this?

It is a far bigger scandal than Bridgegate.

When that post was ignored, I doubled down two weeks later with another post, assuming that if State policymakers and the media didn’t give a damn about black kids in NJ cities, maybe they might care about white people in suburban homes.

Again I shouted in boldface – and again got no response:

With all the focus on lead growing out of the Flint Michigan and Newark Schools tragedies – including criminal charges filed against State regulators –  I thought the DEP data hidden in plain sight would be mined by intrepid reporters and NJ’s “environmental justice” advocates.

I was terribly wrong on both counts.

So here is the lead data, from DEP’s Private Well Testing Act Report (2008):

Lead samples in homes – A total of 5,523 (11%) of the homes had lead levels above the previous Ground Water Quality Standard of 10 μg/l. This number increased to 9,368 (18%) of homes that had lead levels above the new Ground Water Quality Standard of 5 μg/l. This indicates that many homes still have lead in their plumbing systems, since it is unlikely that it originated from the raw ground water supply.” (page 18)

I even Tweeted Kennedy’s remark.

Crickets all around.

Despite the fact the DEP is the lead agency for protecting and regulating public water supply and implementing the federal Safe Drinking Water Act and NJ State Safe Drinking Water laws, they have been invisible in this whole issue.

The regulatory system is completely broken and so is the legislative oversight mechanism and media accountability.

Over and out.

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Why Is NJ Media Keeping NY Gov. Cuomo’s Pipeline Kill A Secret?

June 8th, 2016 No comments

Huge activist victory – Democracy in action – News blackout

Christie DEP gets another pass

NY state actives protest in Albany NY, calling on Gov. Cuomo to kill the Constitution pipeline

NY state activists protest in Albany NY, calling on Gov. Cuomo’s DEC to kill the Constitution pipeline

One would think – with pipeline battle raging across the state from Cape May to Bergen County involving thousands of residents – that New York State Governor Cuomo’s recent kill of the proposed Constitution pipeline would be big news and of interest to the NJ press corps.

It is an extremely rare event for environmental regulators to deny a permit for an economically significant billion dollar project – about as rare as a jet plane crash. One would think surely that would spark significant media coverage.

What Cuomo and his DEC did was – like his moratorium on fracking – of national significance, particularly with respect to the power of State’s to resist FERC and avoid federal preemption. The NY permit denial also  has huge implications for the power of States to use the federal Clean Water Act and State water quality standards to block fossil energy projects. It also shows the political power of well organized protest.

One would be wrong about all that.

NJ media didn’t cover the story when it broke on Earth Day – see NY media coverage, including a major story on the Wall Street Journal’s Business page:

NJ media didn’t do any followup stories about the implications – for a very good example of that, see this Bloomberg story (which also ignores NJ):

When Bordentown and Chesterfield filed a related challenge to the NJ Natural Gas’ SRL pipeline modeled on NY State’s decision, it generated only one day local coverage.

The NJ media again was AWOL again when DEP Commissioner Martin got grilled on exactly that issue during the Assembly Budget Committee hearing. Curiously, even Assemblyman Singleton, who asked Martin questions, failed to mention the NY DEC permit denial. I wore about that in this post:

And I and others testified at length on exactly this issue  during Monday’s marathon meeting of the Senate Environment Committee.

So, what explains this virtual news blackout on an extremely controversial and significant statewide story?

The standard Chomsky critique is that the mainstream media is corporate owned, desperate for advertising revenues, and won’t report news that hurts corporate interests or advertisers.

That practice is even more pronounced in stories that tend to empower citizens, like when activists pressure politicians and win huge victories over corporate interests, democracy in action, like this:

Sheldon Wolin described the media’s role in these dynamics well in his book “Democracy Incorporated: Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism”

Is that true in this case?

I challenge NJ media to disprove the critique.

Or did I just miss all the NJ press stories about how the NY decision could impact the various NJ pipeline battles being waged by thousands of activists across the state?

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Senate Will Decide Fate Of Christie Flood Hazard Rule Rollback

June 7th, 2016 No comments

Assembly Will Pull The Veto Trigger On June 16

Senate Is Waivering

A digression

Correction: I was wrong when I recently wrote this:

Most of the bad stuff will be adopted in June. Sweeney will have no visible fingerprints on the deal.

In fact, the bad stuff was not adopted in June – it was adopted in May when DEP Commissioner Martin signed the rule (after both Houses of the Democratically Legislature had voted to veto the rule and the Senate Environment Committee Chairman “put a round in the chamber” and  urged him not to. Ordinarily, that act of defiance would be a suicidal move – unless Martin knows something we don’t. Now, what might that be?)

It is unclear whether the “no fingerprints” prediction will come about, but it was based on this comment from Senator Sweeney:

404. COMMENT: The proposed Category One designations would appear to be more about curbing development than enhancing water quality standards. Unfortunately, this new regulatory proposal tips the balance even more against the economic prosperity of the areas, district 24 and 3. (127, 221)  (source: DEP regulatory document) 

But I want to begin this post with a very revealing anecdote, which speaks volumes on the depravity that parades as dignity in Trenton in the toxic Christie era.

Lies are good for business

The lead witness for the business community (Chamber of Commerce, NJ BIA, NAIOP) at yesterday’s Senate Environment Committee hearing on a Resolution (SCR 66) to veto the Christie DEP’s proposed flood hazard rules was lawyer Dennis Toft – previously with the disgraced law firm Wolff & Samson –  a man I have described as a “heavy hitter”.

During his introduction, Chairman Smith praised Toft as “the best environmental attorney in the state”.

Take a look at all the damage Toft has done to protections of public health and the environment during the Christie regime:

Toft testified that the C1 steam buffer regulations (SWRPA) the Christie DEP rolled back were a major barrier  to redevelopment:

within 150 feet you could do nothing. … There has been no process to redevelop those sites. Developers are stymied because they can’t go within 150 feet.  The rules eliminated the hardship exemptions.

Smith challenged Toft’s claim regarding the lack of a process to be granted a hardship waiver.

DEP agreed with Smith, but was unable to answer Smith’s question about how many hardship waivers were granted.

Later in the hearing, during my testimony, I noted that Toft’s claim that C1 buffer rules served as a barrier to redevelopment was false, because the rules do not apply to previously disturbed land. Redevelopment within the existing disturbed footprint is not restricted by the C1 buffer rules (and there are not many C1 waters in urban areas anyway).

I also noted that Toft’s claim “within 150 feet you could do nothing” directly contradicted DEP Ray Cantor’s testimony that so many waivers were issued that DEP had to make it easier to get them.

After the hearing, in the hall outside the hearing room, I ran into Mr. Toft, who told me that I should continue to mention his name on my blog, because it was good for his business.

Right. You keep on misleading Legislators, Mr. Toft. Great for the professional reputation in Trenton. An apt quote to close:

“‘these men were hollow to the core, reckless without hardihood, greedy without audacity and cruel without courage …’ the only talent that could possibly burgeon in their hollow souls was the gift of fascination which makes a splendid leader of an extreme party.” ~~~ Hannah Arendt in The Origins of Totalitarianism, citing Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness (quoted from Giroux)

Anecdote over – Now to the hearing

The Senate Environment Committee today heard testimony on SCR 66, the Resolution already passed by both Houses of the Legislature to veto the Christie DEP’s proposed rollback Flood Hazard, Stormwater and Coastal zone rules as inconsistent with Legislative intent.

Pursuant to the Constitutional procedure, a second passage by both Houses is required to formally strike down the proposed rule, which was adopted by DEP,  after and despite a stern  warning by Chairman Bob Smith not to do so:

“It would create a lot of good will with the Legislature to adopt a consolidated rule,’’ Smith told the department, which has been working on the proposal for more than five years. “Save yourselves some heartbreak. Put it in one rule.’’ (NJ Spotlight – 5/17/16)

The Senate Resolution was heard “for discussion only”, so it is unclear whether the Democrats – who control the simple majorities in both Houses needed to veto Governor Christie DEP’s rollback – will have the courage of their convictions and follow through, or whether they will bow to the same powerful development interests that convinced the Christie DEP to roll back some of DEP’s most stringent land use regulations.

Senate Environment Committee Chairman Smith began the hearing by noting that the Assembly will vote to kill the rule on June 16.

So the fate of the proposal is in the Senate, where I’m certain that Mr. Toft and his friends at the Chamber of Commerce, NJBIA, NAIOP, and the Builders Association are putting a full court press on Senate President Sweeney.

That is very troubling, because Senate President Sweeney said THIS about the DEP’s buffer protection program during the Corzine Administration, who was weakening the program at the time but apparently didn’t go far enough for Sweeney:

404. COMMENT: The proposed Category One designations would appear to be more about curbing development than enhancing water quality standards. Unfortunately, this new regulatory proposal tips the balance even more against the economic prosperity of the areas, district 24 and 3. (127, 221)  (source: DEP regulatory document) 

There was some good testimony by Mike Pisauro and Deb Mans (especially on urban rivers), so folks might want to listen to the marathon 2 hour+ hearing.

I don’t want to go into any detail here about what I said today – I’ve written about most of it many times before, most recently in this post. Interested readers can listen to the hearing here. (but it was a wonderful 25 minute discourse!)

Going deeper into the weeds, here is a followup letter I sent to OLS and Legislators to document my testimony today – the New York State DEC denial of a water quality certificate is key:

Letter to Legislators

Judy – As requested by Chairman Smith, below please find links and excerpts to the documents I referred to in my testimony today on SCR 66.

At the outset, to get a sense of how DEP is spinning the regulatory nuance, I urge you to review DEP’s claims in the response to comments adoption document that the SWRPA was “never a “no build” prohibition and that this was anticipated and resolved by the DEP in the February 2004 response to comments 440-441, 36 N.J.R. 716). See page 118 of the adoption document:

http://www.nj.gov/dep/rules/adoptions/adopt_2016xxxxa.pdf

The cited DEP’s response to comments does NOT say what DEP now claims it did. DEP omitted the fact the the DEP response to comment said that DEP: “anticipates proposal of an amendment to the rules” to provide a hardship waiver. That anticipated rule was never proposed.

You should also read the hardship waiver in the Highlands rules for an example of a rigorous review process and standard. Instead, DEP is making FHA buffer disturbance of C1 SWRPA’s hardship waivers easier to obtain and lowering the standards of approval.

I) Significance of Water Quality Standards

To understand the significance of an affirmative regulatory requirement to demonstrate compliance with State Surface Water Quality Standards, please read the NY State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) denial of the Clean Water Ac Section 401 Water Quality Certification for the proposed Constitution Pipeline:

http://www.dec.ny.gov/docs/administration_pdf/constitutionwc42016.pdf

By repealing the SWRPA, the DEP is eliminating the only linkage between stream encroachment permit requirements and Surface Water Quality Standards.

Today, DEP gave conflicting responses to this criticism. Ray Cantor and Ms. Kopkash claimed it was resolved in the adoption document, but contradicted themselves by later by saying it was resolved in the Concurrent proposal.

Both claims are false.

The adoption document does not resolve this problem by cross referencing the Stormwater rules, because the SWRPA C1 provision of the storm water rules has been repealed, thus the stormwater rules are an empty shell with respect to a bridge to C1 Surface Water Quality Standards.

Similarly, in the concurrent proposal the DEP summary falsely claims that the stream encroachment permits are linked to compliance with surface water quality standards, “similar to” the wetlands regulations:

These requirements are similar to the requirements at N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.2(b) for the issuance of a freshwater wetlands or open water fill individual permit, with amendments to reflect that the proposed subsection is only applicable to riparian zones to a Category One water, making some of the considerations applicable in the freshwater wetlands context not applicable under this subsection, and are intended to ensure that activities within 150 feet of a Category One water or regulated tributary to a Category One water are only conducted when there is no alternative to the activity and that the activity will not lead to the violation of State water quality standards and laws or otherwise have significant adverse environmental consequences.

The wetlands regulation (NJAC 7:7A-7.2(b)) that DEP claims the CP is “similar to” explicitly requires that wetlands permits:

5. Will not cause or contribute to a violation of any applicable State water quality standard;

But the actual text of the CP rule does not include this language from the wetlands rules. While other provisions from the wetlands rules were included in the CP, this critical language was not.

The CP does not require compliance with State water quality standards or include this “cause or contribute to” language from the wetlands rules.

II) Christie Administration Policy Context of proposal

The FHA rule proposal was not a policy neutral attempt to align and streamline allegedly duplicative stream buffer programs (SWRPA and riparian zone). Connect the dots:

1. DEP Transition Report:

The C1 buffer program is targeted and the rollback strategy is openly presented as a recommendation in the DEP Transition Report (see “Omnibus Rulemaking” on page 13)

Reexamine buffer requirements in urban/disturbed areas and Planning Areas 1 and 2 designated for growth under the State Development and Redevelopment Plan (hereinafter referred to as the State Plan) as applied to wetlands, C-1 waters and potential Threatened and Endangered species habitat under Flood Hazard, Stormwater, and Wetlands rules.

2. Governor Christie’s Executive Order #2 regulatory policy objective is to provide “regulatory relief”

http://nj.gov/infobank/circular/eocc2.pdf

3. DEP Commissioner Martin’s “Transformation Plan” is designed to implement Gov. Christie’s EO#2, EO#3 to reduce “job killing Red Tape” and provide “common sense” regulation and Martin’s “customer service” management model.

http://www.state.nj.us/dep/commissioner/2010transformationplan.pdf

4. DEP Report on Category One Program Evaluation –

The Report explicitly links the C1 evaluation recommended in the DEP Transition Report with Martin’s Transformation Plan

“B. Reviewing the Science: C1 Antidegradation Designation Process 1. Stakeholder Discussions

In keeping with the NJDEP’s core transformation principles, this review of the C1 designation process is designed to be inclusive and transparent encouraging input from both internal and external stakeholders. An in-house internal stakeholder discussion was held on September 13, 2010. This was followed by a meeting with external stakeholders on December 10, 2010.   (page 7)

http://www.state.nj.us/dep/wms/bears/docs/c1-final-integrated-paper201211.pdf

Finally,, here is the Appellate Division decision relevant to headwater protections being lost by repeal of SWRPA that are not replaced by riparian zone – Without evidence, DEP claims this is “rare” case (see response that begins on page 112):

http://www.nj.gov/dep/rules/adoptions/adopt_2016xxxxa.pdf

IN THE MATTER OF THE NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION CATEGORY I WATERSHED DETERMINATION

http://njlaw.rutgers.edu/collections/courts/appellate/a1499-06.opn.html

The SWRPA buffers apply to intermittent streams without defined bed and banks, as the Court found:

“The intermittent stream exists without definable bed and banks but is identifiable as a linear depression, commonly referred to as a “swale.” The Stormwater Management Rules do not require that a perennial or intermittent stream be defined by bed and banks in order to have a SWRPA established. N.J.A.C. 7:8-5.5(h)1.1 states: “A . . . special water resource protection area shall be provided on each side of the waterway, measured perpendicular to the waterway from top of bank outwards or from the centerline of the waterway where the bank is not defined . . . .” (emphases mine)

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Sparta Mountain Logging Debate Pits Ecologists Against Commercial Logging and Hunting Interests

June 5th, 2016 No comments

Breaking the code on the “Young Forest” Scam

[Update below]

Mark DiIonno of the Star Ledger (now NJ.Com) wrote his column on the Sparta Mountain debate, see:

But things are not really that obscure – here’s my note to Mark on his story:

Mark – good story, but this is not a “he said, she said”.

John Cecil is trained in logging, Emile DeVito is a PhD ecologist. So are the academic and consulting biologists that oppose this. Very big difference.

Cecil has 8 staffers – several are loggers – he needs to generate funding for.

NJ Audubon has strategic interests and substantial organizational revenues and political interests in this “Young forests” initiative.

Significant revenues include a $140,000 grant from a NJ billionaire. NJ Audubon has significant federal grant and State partnership funding opportunities involved in this work. Some of the science and regulation is relevant to lucrative industry “mitigation consulting” and land preservation deals and consulting project revenues involved with mitigation or restoration requirements of DEP permits. It literally pays to have good relationships with DEP. For the billionaire documentation, see:

http://www.wolfenotes.com/2016/03/billionaires-elite-hunting-club-gave-nj-audubon-140000-to-develop-sparta-mountain-logging-plan/

Politically, NJ Audubon forms a coalition with sportsmen – hunters -and the outdoor recreation industry (from ORV’s to guns). It’s old fashioned political log rolling (pun intended – ecologically it’s a mutualistic relationship that is parasitic).

NJ Audubon CEO Eric Stiles runs NJA like a consulting firm – he and Mike Catania (of Duke Farms demolition repute) are known as NJ’s “entrepreneurial conservationists”

NJ Audubon even partners with Donald Trump:

http://www.wolfenotes.com/2016/03/nj-audubon-partners-with-donald-trump/

DEP DFW has very similar strategic, economic and political interests – hunters are a major source of revenue and the staff’s training tends to be biased toward management of game species.

Nationally, this “Young Forests” initiative is the exact opposite of what environmentalists did to the forestry industry back in the 1970-80’s, blocking logging projects to protect endangered birds, like spotted owl.

The logging industry learned that lesson and very cynically now have teamed up with hunters and money hungry entrepreneurial conservation groups and underfunded State wildlife and forestry agencies. They obscure the logging by justifying the cuts to protect endangered birds, and spread money around to buy support for that.

The code is broken.

Wolfe

[end note – the same process – whereby politically reactionary and corporate economic forces seize progressive victories and twist them for private gain – is illustrated by corporations seizing the 14th amendment’s due process protection in the late 19th century, the recent U Supreme Court’s “Citizens United” case that found protected free speech in corporate political contributions, and the Tea Party seeking affirmative action for white men.]

[Update: I want to print this excellent comment on the Star Ledger story, as I have made many of the exact same points in a series of rambling posts, but this comment puts those issues on the table with far more technical finesse than I have managed:

Observer16

This is not a slam dunk. Not just a few environmental professionals are very concerned. Watch Emile DeVito here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ck_XcNqitig

I’m a  a birder and an environmentalist and I’m VERY concerned. I’m not alone. I’ve been to Sparta WMA and read the circa 78 page proposal. It is very open-ended about scale of clearing, while much of it technically “Seed Tree” cutting, that still removes vast majority of a section of stand. A reasonable person could easily conclude it could be up to 700+ acres as written, though its likely half that if not less. The many scientists, like Dr. Emile DeVito (who is both a bird, plant, and ecology expert) who helped with the Highlands Coalition letter, or commented publicly, are justifiably worried.

Golden-winged Warblers are in trouble and something needs to be done. But is Sparta the best place? Will it work? Biggest threat to Golden-winged Warblers in NJ is hybridization with Blue-winged Warblers who already moved into Sparta and are increasing. Probably dominate. The hybridization ‘front’ is now well north and west into the Poconos. Converting part of Sparta into early successional forest isn’t going to stop it, it might encourage it by creating more entries from ROW cuts. NJAS hasn’t discussed this at length.

More forest edge openings could facilitate cowbirds penetrating the forest jeopardizing Golden-wingeds and interior forest birds nesting success. While edge species are declining in the Appalachians, by and large Towhees, Field Sparrows, etc are fairly common and not hurting here in NJ.

THE SPARTA FOREST IS NOT “UNHEALTHY.” It will not “let it go burn and die” if there’s no timbering. The trees we saw in several places were healthy, diverse in size, height, age and species. The rugged terrain brings in plenty of sunlight and allows windfall so wasn’t all fall uniform canopy by any means. We saw many very uncommon, vigorous wildflowers in excellent blooming shape, some right along trail edges, others protected by the laurel and rhododendron thickets NJAS suggests removing. These  support Black-throated Blue Warblers in PA.

Sparta already has some of the state’s highest biodiversity. There are 40 state-listed plant species of which at circa at least 6-8 are state endangered. NJ Audubon admitted they a thorough survey was too costly. Logging (access, skidders [yes, they were described in the plan] and trampling) will cause a lot of collateral damage. If it doesn’t kill rare, sometimes undocumented populations, then sudden habitat changes from shade to sun could, even in open, sunlit locations.

A C1 trout Stream runs through Sparta that normally requires a 300′ riparian buffer to filter run-off, keep trout waters shaded and cool protecting water quality. The proposed buffer is sometimes only 40′!  The Forestry BMPs they’re using date to 1995 and recommend planting with worst invasive. Not likely to do that but they don’t protect flora and fauna, they guide how to timber.

NJAS says they’ll enhance habitat for Bog Turtle also, but is it even there? The two objectives are mutually exclusive—Upland clearing for Golden-winged Warblers could harm federally endangered species downslope.

Should other existing rare bird and endangered plant species be sacrificed for a long shot?Should a plan that has good chance of failing with high stakes for other species go forward? NJ Audubon hasn’t published last 15 years worth of bird surveys that I’ve seen, nor provided an accounting of the odds.

Timbering and activities opens up pathways for invasive species, huge problem for NJ forests. Deer browse, while not a major issue at Sparta, could increase with enhanced access. Deer eat the natives and avoid unpalatable invasives causing them to proliferate and necessitating herbicides.

The plan’s preamble reads:“logging activities were unsustainable, and eventually the industries crawled to a standstill when trees were no longer available for harvest……The public’s attitude towards “preserving” public land became ingrained on passive ownership, and local industries associated with the harvesting and processing of forest products from these properties declined steadily… it is imperative that public officials consider the socioeconomic impacts of their actions… public land management that does not consider the monetary value of natural resources within the long term stewardship framework is not only irresponsible, but should be considered a violation of the public trust. 

If I thought Golden-winged Warbler success had really good prospects, NJAS agreed to scale this project back, forego revenues from timber sales (say they’re just rolling them back in), produced real scientific proof this wouldn’t damage soils, went slow and lightly, and showed keen interest in shrubs and rare plants, I’d feel better about this

 

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Response to NJ Farm Bureau Lies On Highlands Water Quality Rollback

June 3rd, 2016 No comments

Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field, till there be no place, that they may be placed alone in the midst of the earth! ~~~ Isaiah, V, 8

The NJ Farm Bureau has a Letter-to-the-Editor in today’s Bergen Record, see this link.

In order to rebut their lies and spin, I fired off this LTE that I doubt they will print (I submitted a much shorter version!):

Dear Editor

I am compelled to rebut misleading statements and outright falsehoods published in a letter by the NJ Farm Bureau  “Septic change good for the farmers” regarding the Christie DEP’s proposed Highlands “septic density standards”.

The current DEP rules were designed to prevent degradation of water quality, as mandated by the Legislature in the 2004 Highlands Act.

In order to cut through the spin on this debate, it is important to understand why the Legislature passed the Act.

A 2002 US Forest Service study that found that local zoning and lax environmental regulations would allow massive development that would compromise critical water supplies and natural resources of the region, see:

http://na.fs.fed.us/pubs/stewardship/ny_nj_highlands02_hr.pdf

In the Highlands Act, echoing the prior USFS finding, the NJ Legislature found that pre-existing DEP regulations were not sufficiently protective of the Highlands’ water and natural resources and needed to be strengthened in a 400,000 acre “Preservation Area”. The Act does not call for “balancing” economic development in the Preservation Area. Rather, the Act only allows very limited development that is compatible with stringent regulatory standards designed to protect water and natural resources.

The current DEP rules are based on USGS groundwater monitoring well data in locations where groundwater is pristine and not impacted by human pollution. This is known as “natural background” conditions, a concept long well understood and part of DEP’s own scientific methods and regulations.

There its nothing new or extreme about the concept of natural background. In addition to being a well know scientific concept, DEP’s rules define it:

Groundwater Quality Standards: (NJAC 7:C-1.4)

  • “Background water quality” means the concentration of constituents in ground water which is determined to exist directly upgradient of a discharge but not influenced by the discharge, or is otherwise representative of such concentration of constituents as determined using methods and analyses consistent with the requirements of N.J.A.C. 7:14A-10.11(g).
  • “Natural quality” means the concentration or level of constituents which occurs in ground water of a hydrologic unit without the influence of human activity, other than the effects of regional precipitation of air pollutants (for example, acid precipitation). The natural quality for SOCs is established as zero (0.0) except where the SOCs are the result of air transport from outside the State, enter the State from ground water transport of pollutants having their origins in other states, or are created entirely by natural processes. Where natural quality for other constituents is not ascertainable from generally acceptable scientific studies, the lowest concentrations known to exist within the same or a similar hydrologic unit and setting (that is, depth) within the classification area shall be used to represent the natural quality, provided, however, that for pH, corrosivity and hardness, the most representative concentration shall be used.

Surface Water Quality Standards (NJAC 7:9B-1.4)

“Natural water quality” means the water quality that would exist in a waterway or a waterbody without the addition of water or waterborne substances from artificial origin.

To prevent degradation of that natural background water quality, the current rules allow one septic system per 88 acres of forested lands and one per 25 acres of farmland. The DEP Highlands rules were upheld by the NJ Courts and found to be “based upon substantial credible evidence … and a valid exercise of the agency’s discretion” …  and  “a rational, scientific basis for establishing the septic system density standards, and that the Farm Bureau did not meet its burden of proving the Department’s methodology was arbitrary or capricious.” (see page 5 of the DEP proposal).

The Christie DEP proposal would allow a significant increase in allowable septic systems to promote development, slashing the current 88 acres to just 22 and the 25 acres to 11-12 acres.

The Legislature did not direct DEP to promote economic development or “balance” economic development in the Preservation Area, or to use water quality regulations as a means to compensate landowners.

In addition to misinterpreting the Highlands Act, more specifically the NJ Farm Bureau make the following false statements:

1.  NJFB claim: “The proposal used a wealth of scientific data from the U.S. Geological Survey.

This is false. Ninety six percent (96%) of the data come from the NJ DEP’s “Private Well Testing Act” database. DEP did not use this data for the current rules because in the 2003 and 2008 PWTA Reports, DEP found that the data has “limitations” and is not reliable because it has not undergone independent credible “quality assurance and quality control” (QA/QC), see page 5 “Limitations of the data”:

http://www.nj.gov/dep/watersupply/pwta/pdf/pwta_report_final.pdf

2. NJFB claim:  “it  appears the DEP and its impartial Science Advisory Board agreed that the rule needed reconsideration.”

This is misleading, as suggested by the weasel word “appears”.

The DEP’s Science Advisory Board never stated that the rules needed reconsideration. Rather, back in 2014, the SAB reviewed DEP’s new Highlands nitrate statistical model (later used in the USGS study and by DEP as the basis for the 2016 proposed rollback) and found the data lacked QA/QC and assumed that this lack was OK:

  • “The analyses in the PWTA dataset were conducted by NJDEP-certified laboratories, although they were not as fully qualified as were the [USGS] NWIS data.” (p.3)
  • “The model assumes the wells used to obtain the PWTA nitrate concentration values are similar to those used in the 2008 [USGS] NWIS evaluation. (p.7) (SAB Report, see:

http://www.state.nj.us/dep/sab/Final%20WQQC%20Report%20-%20Median%20Nitrate%20Model%20for%20Highlands.pdf

“Not as fully qualified”? What does that mean? It contradicts DEP’s own findings in the PWTA Reports of 2003 and 2008 that there was NO QA/QC (among other data limitations).

The SAB conducted their “review” via two phone calls! That’s some rigorous review, no?

They never consider whether this DEP model and use of the Land use/land cover categories instead of the Preservation Area was consistent with the Highlands Act.

Their finding of statistical significant validation is highly questionable:

The WQQC [SAB] requested validation of the model by applying it to only the well-validated individual NWIS data. The linear correlation between the data and the predictions was about 22%. Although noisy, this was judged to be statistically significant. (page 4)

Under DEP Administrative Order, the SAB is prohibited from considering regulatory policy, a bright line they trampled in this Report. The SAB relies on this fig leaf to evade that restriction:

It should be noted that the WQQC focused exclusively on the validity of the model1 to predict median nitrate concentration, and not on how the model predictions might be used to regulate septic tank density.

That fig leaf, i.e. that the SAB “did not consider how the model might be used to regulate septic density”, flat out contradicts the NJFB claim.

Finally, the SAB inadvertly admits the fatal bias in the method, i.e. that the media values and data were not “natural background” conditions, but correlate with and reflect LAND USE and anthropogenic nitrogen pollution:

Are the model’s results appropriate for use by land use capability zone?

Yes. The combination of choice of input parameters and the modeling approach is able to generate estimates of median nitrate concentrations that take into account land use effects at the regional level that are improvements over estimates that could be made in the absence of this approach. (page 5)

The USGS Report was more honest on this issue. USGS specifically noted a locational bias due to anthropogenic nitrate loadings:

There is spatial bias in well locations because many sampled wells are located in urban areas; thus, a bias in median nitrate concentrations was expected. Over-representation of urban and possibly agricultural areas and under- representation of forested areas in the combined NWIS-PWTA database must, therefore, result in higher median nitrate concentrations for all water samples than the actual median concentration for groundwater underlying the entire Highlands Region or any Area, Zone, or Area: Zone combination. (USGS at page 14)

Taking land use effects into account conflicts with the reliance on natural background condition as a target, which is mandated in the Highland Act’s standard to prevent degradation of water quality. The fact that the DEP SAB ignored this critical fact severely erodes their credibility.

3. NJFB claim:  “it was determined that smaller lot sizes could still adequately protect groundwater in this region.”

Note the passive tense: “it was determined”. By whom? In what document?

Neither the SAB nor the DEP made this finding.

Regardless, it is irrelevant because the Highlands Act directs DEP to prevent the degradation of groundwater quality in the Preservation Area, not simply to “adequately protect” it (as DEP attempted under pre-Act lax regulations the Legislature properly over-rode and strengthened in the Highlands Act).

Bill Wolfe

Bordentown, NJ
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