EPA Awards $200K in Beach Water Quality Monitoring Grants to RI

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EPA Awards $200K in Beach Water Quality Monitoring Grants to RI

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) awarded $200,000 in beach water quality monitoring grants to Rhode Island.

“Clean and healthy beaches are vital to the prosperity of numerous communities in Rhode Island and are critical to supporting local economies and ecosystems. EPA’s beach grants give our state partners across New England important resources to monitor water quality and provide information to the public,” said EPA New England acting Regional Administrator Deb Szaro.

The funding is part of $1,078,000 that they EPA expects to award to five New England states including Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode Island in order to fund beach programs.

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The Grants

Under the Beaches Environmental Assessment and Coastal Health (BEACH) Act, EPA awards grants to eligible state, territorial and tribal applicants to help them and their local government partners monitor water quality at coastal and Great Lakes beaches.

Since 2002, state and local governments, territories and tribes have used nearly $167 million in EPA BEACH Act grants to monitor beaches for fecal indicator bacteria, maintain and operate public notification systems, identify local pollution sources, and report results of monitoring and notification activities to EPA.

When bacteria levels are too high for safe swimming, these agencies notify the public by posting beach warnings or closing the beach.

Recently, the EPA issued recommendations for water quality criteria and swimming advisory values for two cyanotoxins.

Algal blooms caused by cyanobacteria sometimes produce cyanotoxins that can be harmful to people recreating in or on the water when present above certain concentrations.


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