WERU News Report 8/13/14

Producer/Host: Amy Browne

Through a Freedom of Access request, WERU has obtained records of communication between Maine’s Department of Environmental Protection and the Craig Brook National Fish Hatchery over the past several years, documenting a pattern of serious concerns about repeated phosphorus discharge violations (and formalin discharges in the past) from the hatchery and potential impacts on the adjacent Alamoosook Lake.

In a letter dated December 20th, 2010, a representative from Maine’s Department of Environmental Protection referred to what they called a “long list of violations” and underlying compliance issues dating back over several years. Quoting from the DEP’s letter:

“The violations include a few, isolated pH violations, consistent quarterly and annual total phosphorus violations, a long list of formalin violations and frequent incorrect reporting of the number of formalin violations”.

Formalin is a form of formaldehyde, a known carcinogen. It is used to treat fungal infections. The phosphorus in this case is from the fish food and waste.

The letter goes on to say that the phosphorus violations were “a very serious concern, because the loadings are consistently increasing over time, with the violation of the annual total limit occuring earlier every year and amassing to a greater total every year”. The 2010 letter states that “The formalin violations are of serious concern as well” and says that Craig Brook National Fish Hatchery “needs to develop methods that will not only protect its fish stocks and rearing process, but that will not create toxic effects in the environmental” Further, the DEPs letter refers what they call a “large number” of incidents of incorrect reporting by Craig Brook on Discharge Monitoring Reports.

The next letter from the DEP to the fish hatchery that was provided to us via a Freedom of Access request is dated April 4, 2014. In that letter the DEP acknowledges that there have been no further formalin violations reported since 2011, but that “[t]he phosphorus violations are a very serious concern, because the loadings are far higher than the permit limits, which were established to protect Alamoosook Lake.”

That is followed by a letter and proposed Administrative Consent Agreement sent by the Maine DEP to Craig Brook National Fish Hatchery on June 18th of this year which includes a list of on-going phosphorus discharge violations, recommendations for addressing the problems, and proposed penalties for non-compliance, which include a fine of $100 per day for each day the hatchery is in violation. [NOTE: According to a lake assocation member, this figure could be higher, as the agreement calls for $100 PER VIOLATION per day]

The consent agreement isn’t valid until it is signed by both parties, and that has not yet happened. Because it’s under review, both parties refused to comment on the specifics.

Yesterday, in part one of this report, we spoke with members of the Alamoosook Lake Association, and a lake scientist who described the impacts of phosphorus on lake water quality, and ongoing efforts to monitor for those impacts on Alamoosook Lake.

Today staff at Craig Brook give us a tour of the 125 year old facility this week, and talk about the work they are doing there, trying to protect the various strains of Atlantic Salmon from Maine’s rivers from extinction. What follows are some excerpts – in some places you’ll hear the sounds of the water or fans running in the background. Our tour guides are Project Leader Peter Lemothe and Chris Domina, the Assistant Project Leader.

FMI:
http://www.fws.gov/northeast/craigbrook/index.html
http://www.alamoosooklakeassociation.com/Alamoosook_Page/Welcome.html
http://ellsworthme.org/soilandwater/AlamoosookSurvey.html

WERU News Report 8/12/14

Producer/Host: Amy Browne

Maine’s Department of Environmental Protection is locked into a struggle with a polluter in Hancock County that has been severely out of compliance with environmental regulations for several years. Complicating the situation is the fact that the polluter in question is a federal agency charged with protecting Atlantic salmon from extinction. WERU has obtained records dating back more than 7 years documenting Craig Brook National Fish Hatchery’s discharges of phosphorus – and at one point formalin, a form of formaldehyde, into Alamoosook Lake. The DEP has also accused the hatchery of a large number of incidents of incorrect reporting on their “Discharge Monitoring Reports”. A “Notice of Violation” was issued in 2010 but the DEP has determined that the phosphorus violations are continuing.

Today, in part one of this report, we’re talking with Chip Stubbs, past President of the Alamoosook Lake Association, lake scientist Dr Karen Wilson, and another member of the lake association, John Greenman. (For full disclosure, John Greenman is a WERU volunteer and member of the board, but he joins us today as a guest.)

FMI:
http://www.fws.gov/northeast/craigbrook/index.html
http://www.alamoosooklakeassociation.com/Alamoosook_Page/Welcome.html
http://ellsworthme.org/soilandwater/AlamoosookSurvey.html

WERU Special: Mainers Speak Out – Palestine 8/7/14

Producers/Hosts: Carolyn Coe & Amy Browne

*Note- Due to a recording error, the introduction to this program was omitted, but the transcript of the intro follows:

Welcome to this WERU Special – Mainers speaking out about Israel and Palestine. It’s August 7th, 2014. I’m Amy Browne.

A group of Mainers visited Senator Collin’s office in Portland earlier this week, to – in their words “object to her support of Israel’s international war crimes against civilians, to the $3.1 billion annual military aid to Israel supplied by U.S. taxpayers, and to the senator representing AIPAC [ the American Israel Public Affairs Committee] rather than her Maine constituents.” WERU’s Carolyn Coe was there and recorded their comments, which we’re going to hear now, then we’ll be opening the phone lines at the half hour for your reaction and comments on the issue.

WERU News Report 8/6/14

Producer/Host: Amy Browne

Segment 1: Mainers who have been victims of con artists and thieves may never received restitution, even if a court orders it, according to a recent investigation by the Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting. In a series of reports that will be published over the next several days, they describe the problems with the system and how lives are being impacted. We spoke with the authors of the series, Marina Villeneuve and John Christie:

Segment 2: The Maine Farm Bureau is asking for the public’s help as they assist the former Moo Milk organic dairy farmers in Washington County in transitioning to another market. David Bright of the Farm Bureau explains:

WERU News Report 8/5/14

Producer: Carolyn Coe

Segment 1: Farm/art exchange
Segment 2: Palestine

Reversing Falls Sanctuary in Brooksville has launched the 2014 farm/art exchange to investigate “how humans’ connection to the land is central to the restoration of the health of the earth and our own survival.” It pairs area artists and farmers.
In July, artist Patricia Wheeler and Tinder Hearth bakery owners Lydia Moffet and Tim Semler discussed song, local history, and some of the challenges in operating their business.
Then, from a recording in Beit Sahour, Palestine, in May, Dr. Mazin Qumsiyeh speaks about human rights, government hypocrisy and a failed Israeli military operation.

Guests:

Lydia Moffet, Tinder Hearth Bakery owner
Tim Semler, Tinder Hearth Bakery owner
Patricia Wheeler, multimedia artist, Deer Isle

Dr. Mazin Qumsiyeh, activist and biology professor at Bethlehem and Birzeit Universities

Reversing Falls Farm/Art Exchange: rfsfarmblogspot.com
https://www.facebook.com/tinderhearth
Video about 18 cows of Beit Sahour: http://indirvideo.gen.tr/zan-studio-the-wanted-18-trailer-870.html

WERU News Report 7/23/14

Producer: Carolyn Coe

Topic: Jordan Valley, Palestine

Key discussion points:
Israel’s occupation of Palestine has made life for Palestinians in the Jordan Valley very difficult. Palestinian farmers and herders struggle as Israel controls their water access, has implemented severe land use restrictions and export barriers, and has demolished their homes. As family debt rises, Palestinians often seek employment in the expanding Israeli colonial settlements.
The agricultural settlements lack enforcement of labor protections, so Palestinian workers receive less than the Israeli minimum wage, and they work without sick days or pensions. They are often recruited by a Palestinian go-between who takes a significant cut in the workers’ pay. Palestinian children comprise as much as ten percent of this workforce.

Guests:
Rashed Sawafta, organizer, Jordan Valley Solidarity
Feras Yousef Salam Abeyat, agricultural worker in Tomer settlement
Ivan Karakashian, advocacy unit coordinator, Defence for Children International, Palestine
Amjad Jaber, director, Palestinian Ministry of Labor, Jericho
Hamza Zbeidat, field organizer, Ma’an Development Agency
Taleb Ali Salam Abeyat, agricultural worker in Tomer settlement
Hamda Ali Masoud Ibdirat, agricultural worker in Massu’a and Tomer settlements
Ahmed Saeed, farmer, Palestinian Farmers’ Union
Jamal Juma’, coordinator, Stop the Wall campaign

Ma’an Development Center www.maan-ctr.org
Defence for Children International, Palestine, www.dci-pal.org/
Stop the Wall campaign, www.stopthewall.org
Jordan Valley Solidarity www.jordanvalleysolidarity.org

WERU News Report 7/22/14

Producer/Host: Amy Browne

Segment 1: The South Portland city council voted last night to pass the an ordinance preventing tar sands exports from the harbor there. For several years environmentalists have expressed concerns that the direction of flow of an existing pipeline to Montreal might be reversed so that tar sands from Canada could be piped to the deep water port in South Portland. The extraction of tar sands has had a devastating environmental impact, and concerns about the potential dangers of piping the corrosive substance and the pollution caused by processing it were also cited as reasons for passing the ordinance. While the ordinance still could be overturned by referedum, the news this morning is being called historic by some, and is drawing attention from across the country. The Natural Resources Council of Maine has been working on bringing attention to the tar sands pipeline since 2009. Dylan Voorhees is NRCM’s Clean Energy and Global Warming Project Director:

Segment 2: The tar sands issue is also part of the wider movement for climate justice, which is taking hold on college campuses across the state, notably – as we’ve reported in the past – in the form of student-led pressure to divest from fossil fuel industries. Iris SanGiovanni is one of the organizers of that movement, and one of the resources she and other youth can tap into here in Maine is Pine Tree Youth Organizing. We spoke with Iris, and with Christine of PTYO, to learn more about that group, what they have to offer the community, and how the community can support their efforts:

WERU News Report 7/16/14

Producer/Host: Amy Browne

Today we’re talking with Ron Huber, Executive Director of Friends of Penobscot Bay, about that group’s efforts to enlist the assistance of state and federal environmental protection agencies to help access the impact of decades of chemicals and fertilizer companies on the shoreline at Kidder Point in Searsport.

FMI: http://www.penbay.net/ and http://penobscotbay.blogspot.com/