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- FAQs – Individual Combined Sewer Overflow (CSO) Permits
The CWA’s permitting scheme is designed to push dischargers to achieve ever-increasing efficiencies and improvements in pollution control The National CSO Policy requires CSO permittees to evaluate a range of control alternatives up to and including measures to eliminate CSOs entirely and to capture 100 percent of wet weather flows
- New Combined-Sewer Outfall Signs Available | New Jersey Future
Nearly 20 percent of New Jersey’s population resides in communities with combined-sewer outfalls (CSOs) These older urban communities are densely populated, job centers, and tourist destinations During heavy rainfall combined-sewer systems get overwhelmed and overflow a combination of sewage and stormwater into area waterways
- Water Infrastructure in New Water Infrastructure in - njfuture. org
This report provides a review of available information on urban water infrastructure It focuses on the 21 New Jersey municipalities that have combined sewer systems (CSS) that discharge through Combine Sewer Overflows (CSOs) in part or all of their area However, the report also examines issues regarding water supply capacity and wastewater capacity for these municipalities Table ES-1 lists
- CSOs | New Jersey Future
New Jersey Future submitted comments on the Selection and Implementation of Alternatives Reports (SIARs), the final report for the combined sewer overflow (CSO) Long Term Control Plans (LTCPs) Our comments focus on five plans covering the areas where New Jersey Future has been most active: the Passaic Valley Sewerage Commission, the cities of Bayonne, Paterson, and Perth Amboy, and the Jersey
- NJDEP Finalizes Water Infrastructure Investment Priorities for 2023
Our systems have been sorely neglected over the last 50 years, and, in addition to addressing CSOs, communities are required to replace lead service lines by 2031 and comply with ever increasing stormwater management requirements—a necessary, but often prohibitively costly step towards building more resilient water systems in communities
- New Jersey Future’s Comments on CSO Long Term Control Plans
Posted in Water and Sewer, Water Infrastructure Tags: Bayonne, CSOs, Jersey City Municipal Utilities Authority (JCMUA), Long Term Control PLans, LTCP, Paterson, Perth Amboy, the Passaic Valley Sewerage Commission (PVSC) Comments are closed
- Climate-Ready CSO Solutions Forum | New Jersey Future
New Jersey Future is a state leader in the area of wastewater infrastructure, including CSOs, as part of its mission to make smart investments in infrastructure to increase New Jersey’s competitiveness and support healthy communities where people want to live and work
- PVSC Permit Comments Draft - njfuture. org
Green infrastructure can be a strong educational tool to increase public awareness of water quality and flooding issues NJDEP should require that the permittees monitor and track the impact of green infrastructure projects implemented by the permittees on CSOs
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