Massachusetts Water Resources Authority PRESS RELEASE - For Immediate Release |
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DATE: |
March 16, 2006 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
CONTACT: | Ria Convery, Communications Director (617) 788-1105, <ria.convery@mwra.state.ma.us> |
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The approval by EPA and DEP of a Comprehensive CSO Agreement marks the culmination of the MWRA’s long-term plan to reduce combined sewer overflows (CSOs) to Boston Harbor and its tributaries, including the Charles River. Since 1987, MWRA has been at the forefront nationally in the planning, design and implementation of CSO control. The CSO plan is the final phase of the clean-up of Boston Harbor under the federal court order. A joint motion (PDF) asking for approval of the plan was filed yesterday with Judge Richard G. Stearns. The goal of the program is to protect swimming beaches, shell fishing beds and other sensitive waters from overflows due to heavy rains. For example, the Charles River has been one of the greatest beneficiaries of the program to date, with a reduction in CSO discharges of over 90% in a typical year. Improvements added in the new Agreement will increase that to 99%. Another major component is the $250 million storage tunnel project along the popular South Boston beaches, which will make these among the most highly protected urban beaches in the country. By 2015, MWRA is projected to spend over $850 million on CSO control projects, in addition to the $3.8 billion already spent on the Boston Harbor Clean-up that have dramatically improved the health of the harbor and brought people back to Boston’s waterfront. MWRA also filed its Annual CSO Progress Report (5MB PDF) for 2005 with the Court. ### Some files on this site require Adobe Acrobat Reader®. To download a free copy, please click here.
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