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Oct 24, 2022

Lower Saint George River - as a shellfishery and as receiving waters for Thomaston and Warren Sewage treatment plants discharges

A bit of information about the lower Saint George River's softshell clam stocks and the govt records of the  two sewage treatment plants that discharge into it.  Both clams and the treatment plants appear to be doing well, each possibly for different reasons.

St George River Shellfish and Sewage treatment plants 

Soft-Shell Clam Recruitment in the St. George and Weskeag Rivers (2017 & 2018)

Regional clam ordinance for Saint George South Thomaston, Thomaston, Cushing and Warren

Georges River Regional Shellfish Ordinance  

&  Georges River Regional Interlocal Clam Management Agreement of 2002  (table of contents below)


Sewage Treatment plants that pump into the lower Saint George

Links to their EPA pollution webpages The most recent  sewage license  and the one before.

Thomaston sewer permit 2018

Thomaston sewer permit  2003

Warren Sanitary district sewer permit 2016 

Warren sanitary district sewer permit 2010

Maine Water Company discharge permit 2016  (in Warren)

 Table of Contents of a Review of this SG  Interlocal Agreement. by Togue Brawn et al Full pdf

Chapter 1 reviews the purposes and methods of the study. 

Chapter 2  Clam biology & the principles of soft-shell clam management. 

Chapters 3 and 4 History and background of clam harvesting and mgmt in Maine. 

Chapter 5  The Georges River Program, its development and  details of its organization and scope.

 Chapter 6 Literature review on fisheries economics, rational choice theory, externality theory, collective action theory and co-management

Chapter 7 State of Maine landings data obtained from the Department of Marine Resources. It compares catch per unit of effort figures between the Georges River estuary and the state as a whole both prior to and post management. 

Chapter 8 discusses how the theories and facts discussed in the previous chapters are relevant to the Georges River Program. In particular, it examines the relevance of co-management theory versus economic theory. It also discusses the program's potential for long-term success, and what lessons can be learned from the program and applied to fisheries management theory in general

End

PART 2 THE SEWAGE TREATMENT PLANTS

Useful part of the 2003 Thomaston sewer permit

"The applicant has applied for a renewal of Waste Discharge License (WDL) #W002643-46-B-R, which was issued on August 26, 1996 and expired on August 26, 2001. 

"The WDL authorized the disposal of treated sanitary waste water by discharge to the St. George River in Thomaston, Maine and for disposal via a surface waste water disposal system (hereafter referred to as spray irrigation). 

"The previous [1996] license authorized the discharge of 0.46 million gallons per day (MGD) of treated sanitary waste water to the St. George River until the completion of the new treatment lagoons but no later than March 31, 1998. 

After completion of the new treatment lagoons or after March 31, 1998 whichever came first, Thomaston was authorized to discharge 0.9 MGD of treated waste water to the St. George River during the months of January, February, and March of each year and to spray irrigate 0.65 MGD of waste water on land during the period April 15 through October 31 each year. 

Useful part of the 2018 Thomaston Sewage Permit

 Permit #ME0100668, (permit hereinafter) that was issued by the Department on April 10, 2013, for a five-year term. The MEPDES Permit/ WDL authorized the operation of an aerated facultative sanitary wastewater treatment lagoon system with two wastewater disposal options. From January I through March 31 each year, the permittee was authorized to discharge up to a monthly average flow of 0.9 million gallons per day (MGD) of treated sanitary wastewater to the St. George River, a Class SB water in Thomaston, Maine. 

From April 1 through November 30 each year, the petmittee was authorized to spray irrigate treated waste via a surface wastewater disposal system onto land in Thomaston, Maine

On June 6, 2017, the permit was modified authorizing the permittee to operate the surface waste water disposal system to dispose of 30 million gallons of treated effluent via creating ice piles between December 1 and March 31. 


Oct 11, 2022

Defenders of the Prokaryotic Empire!

When considering what has first priority for Earth/Sea defenders and conservers, ask yourself: Of all that biomass that we  respire along with, what bits  or broad expanses of it  are most At Risk? What  is Wildest? Or Eldest. Rarest.  Keystonedest?  All of the above?


My pick: Wild bacteria are at risk,  things are getting worse,  and we megafauna die without them.

Teach online class 


 specifically their abilities to  create and biochemcally respond to   

Wild Biofilms are natural  structures built by bacteria, inhabited by other microbes from diatoms to amoebas. By collectively releasing multiple signal molecules, they become landing strips for all the planktonic larvae of mussels,  that settle   They make life possible for we of that  junior life branch: the Eukaryotes.

Read about 
(1) the importance of wild biofilms.
(2) Climate Change's impacts to biofilms
(3) Impacts of antibiofilm strategies in medicine, public health, fishing & agriculture.




Biofilms: The Microbial “Protective Clothing” in Extreme Environments

WILD BIOFILMS &THEIR IMPORTANCE

We Are One: multispecies metabolism & strategies of a Biofilm Jan 2021

Love at First Taste: Induction of Larval Settlement by Marine Microbes Feb 2020

Second skin: ecological role of epibiotic biofilms on marine organisms August 2012

Significance of biofilms to human, animal, plant and ecosystem health Oct 2021



CLIMATE IMPACTS ON MICROBIAL BIOFILMING SUCCESS

Thermal Acclimation and Adaptation in Marine Protozooplankton and Mixoplankton



THREATS TO  BIOFILMS

Quorum disrupting pollutants 2015 

Quorum quenching: its role in nature and applied developments



RESPONSE TO  BIOFILM THREATS 

Trans-kingdom interactions in mixed biofilm communities May 2022


12/16/22

The role of containerships as transfer mechanisms of marine biofouling species 2009


Fouling in your own nest:  vessel noise increases biofouling 2014







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Biofouling    2022 Oct;3 8(9):940-951. 2022 Dec 13.

Published: 11 August 2016
Biofilms: an emergent form of bacterial life






























Oct 8, 2022

ME Water Use Commission mtg: 2 Presentrations by UMaine Law School Prof Anthony Moffa on Maine water rights & water regulation

 On October 6, 2022 The Commission To Study the Role of Water as a Resource in the State of Maine met  in Room 127 of the Statehouse and livestreamed online.   Listen to the two presentations by Professor Anthony Moffa of the UMaine School of Law. The first on theWater Rights of Mainers; the second on the regulation of Maine Waters

Speakers

Introduction 2min42sec

Prof Tony Moffa UME Law  Presentation One Mainers' water rights 14min 30sec  

Q&A1 8min 40sec 1

Prof Moffa Presentation Two. Regulating Water 10min 48sec

Pro Moffa Q&A 2 11min12sec

AGENDA  10/6/22

12:00 p.m. Welcome and introductions 

12:05 p.m. Presentation on Maine water rights/ownership and other state approaches Anthony Moffa, Associate Professor of Law, University of Maine School of Law 

12:45 p.m. Presentation on state approaches to regulation of natural resource extraction Anthony Moffa, Associate Professor of Law, University of Maine School of Law 

1:30 p.m. Presentation on oversight/regulation of water resources by Department of Environmental Protection Marybeth Richardson, Acting Director, Bureau of Land Resources, Department of Evironmental Protection

 1:50 p.m. Presentation on oversight/regulation of water resources by Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Drinking Water Program Amy Lachance, Drinking Water Program Manager (DHHS/Maine CDC) 2:10 p.m. Break 2:20 p.m. Presentation on oversight/regulation of water resources by Maine Geological Survey (DACF) Ryan Gordon, Hydrogeologist, Maine Geological Survey (DACF) 2:40 p.m. Presentation on Water Resources Planning Committee Ryan Gordon, Hydrogeologist, Maine Geological Survey (DACF) 3:00 p.m. Presentation on climate change and water resources Sean Birkel, Maine State Climatologist, Climate Change Institute, University of Maine Cooperative Extension 3:20 p.m. Commission member discussion 3:50 p.m. Next steps 4:00 p.m. Adjourn 

Oct 4, 2022

Legislature's ENR committee 10/3/22 got updates on new ME law from LD 1639 passage ending imports of demolition & construction debris. Audio MP3s

On October 3, 2022  the  Maine Legislature's Environment & Natural Resources Committee (ENR)  questioned and got updates by  Maine DEP chief of  Waste Management Suzanne Miller,  NRCM's Sarah Nichols,  Resource Lewiston's Greg Leahy, and Burnstein Shur atty James Codys  (audio mp3) regarding implementation of  LD 1639  An Act To Protect the Health and Welfare of Maine Communities and Reduce Harmful Solid Waste   The bill was approved by Governor Mills  and is now Public Law 1639 .  

AUDIO of the October 3, 2022 briefing .

Introduction 1. Committee members and staff    2min21sec 

Introduction 2. Committee cochair  Ralph Tucker's plan for this as a briefing, not a public hearing 4min23sec.

GOVT

DEP Susanne Miller, chief, Bureau of Remediation & Waste Mgmt  29min30sec

INDUSTRY

James Cody, Bernstein Shur & Greg Leahy, Resources Lewiston. 6min17sec 

Cody & Leahy QA1 25min

Cody & Leahy QA2  13min12sec

CONSERVATION

Sarah Nichols NRCM present and QA_43min

Backstory Maine's publicly owned Juniper Ridge Landfill  was acquired by the state as a public resource for the exclusive deposition of Maine-generated waste.  But a loophole was sneaked onto the enabling bill that allowed out of state waste to continue to be dumped on JRL, provided it has been minimally  "processed" by a Maine recycling facility.  The new public law corrects this.