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Written by Doug Dorn
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Friday, 20 June 2008 13:59 |
A message from the Law Enforcement Network
For those of you who like to grill it up during the summer, here's a safety announcement you should be aware of. Please put this information out to ALL personnel. For those of you who exchange your propane tanks, this is something you definitely need to be aware of, especially in light of the recent news of 'Meth-labs' in our area. Meth cooks are getting propane tanks from exchanges at Wal-Mart, Kroger, etc. and emptying them of the propane. Then, they are filling them with anhydrous ammonia (which they now have a recipe for by the way). After they are finished with them, they return them to the store. They are then refilled with propane and sent back for you and me to buy. Anhydrous ammonia is very corrosive and weakens the structure of the tank. It can be very dangerous when mixed with propane and hooked up to our grills, etc. You should inspect the propane tank for any blue or greenish residue around the valve areas. If it is present, refuse to purchase that tank. Check out the following website for more details. They also have pictures.
Robert S. Hasenyager, M.S., R.S.
Director, Environmental Health Division
Summit County Health District
1100 Graham Road Circle
Office: 330.926.5632
Fax: 330.923.6436
Cell: 330.313.4950
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
www.schd.org
Stow, OH 44224
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Last Updated on Thursday, 03 July 2008 00:54 |
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Planned Wells Fuel Water Concerns |
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Written by JSonline.com
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Saturday, 03 May 2008 12:37 |
Loss of supply, effect on lakes feared
By DARRYL ENRIQUEZ Posted: June 14, 2006
http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=436100
Excerpts:
Water supply issues triggered by development have officials in two communities
on the edge of the metropolitan area on edge themselves.
Chenequa officials have decided to spend about $25,000 to determine if a high
capacity well proposed for Delafield would influence the ability of underground
springs to replenish posh Pine Lake.
Meanwhile, about 30 miles south, residents of pristine Lake Beulah worry
about East Troy's progress in drilling a controversial well within a stone's
throw of their shoreline.
The two communities are bound by a need to satiate the thirst of new
commercial and residential growth fueled by the communities' easy access to
freeways - I-43 and I-94, respectively.
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Last Updated on Saturday, 03 May 2008 12:40 |
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Suit Over Well Could be Precedential |
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Written by Ron Seely
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Saturday, 03 May 2008 12:31 |
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from Wisconsin State Journal
By Ron Seely
http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/local/282363
Excerpts:
The state Department of Natural Resources and the village of East Troy in
Walworth County are the subjects of a potentially precedent-setting lawsuit
filed last week by several individuals and two lake management districts over
potential damage to a spring-fed lake and nearby wetlands by a proposed
municipal high-capacity well.
The well could pump 1.4 million gallons of water a day, more water than
Perrier sought in the late 1990s to use for its ill-fated and highly
controversial water bottling plant in Adams County. The lawsuit, filed in Dane
County Circuit Court, argues that the East Troy well would damage 840-acre Lake
Beulah in Southeast Wisconsin, a source of the Mukwonago River, as well as
adjacent wetlands and springs.
The lawsuit targets the ineffectiveness of a much-touted state groundwater
law that was passed in the wake of the Perrier fight but which critics say falls
short of truly protecting underground drinking water supplies as well as
important surface waters such as springs and wetlands. It may also force an
important legal determination regarding the extent and power of the public trust
doctrine, a part of the Wisconsin constitution under which the state is required
to protect all navigable waterways. Whether that protection extends to
groundwater has been open to interpretation, according to Daniel Bach, a lawyer
with Lawton & Cates, the Madison law firm that filed the suit on
Tuesday.
"It 's really a statewide issue, ' ' Bach said. "It 's not just about little
Lake Beulah and a bunch of local property owners."
The impacts of high capacity wells, such as municipal wells or wells used in
agriculture, have been a major issue in Wisconsin in the years since the Perrier
debate. Last summer in Central Wisconsin, for example, farm irrigation wells
were blamed for drying up lakes and trout streams. And a study of springs in the
state released last year by the Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey
showed dozens of springs dried up by high volume wells pumping the groundwater
upon which the springs depend.
The East Troy lawsuit argues that, even in the face of weaknesses in the
groundwater law, the DNR is required by the state constitution to protect water
resources such as those threatened by the well. Bach said the agency is bound by
the constitution 's public trust doctrine, which charges the state with
protecting all navigable waters.
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Last Updated on Saturday, 03 May 2008 12:40 |
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New Well Could Harm Lake Beulah, Suit Contends |
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Written by James Rowan
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Saturday, 03 May 2008 12:26 |
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The Political
Environment
by James Rowan
Excerpt:
The percolating objections to the drilling of a high-capacity near Lake Buelah
have led to a lawsuit, described in the news release reprinted below.
At
stake, beyond the threat to the lake and surrounding wetlands, rivers and
properties, is the process by which the Wisconsin Department of Natural
Resources awards such permits - - a huge deal particularly in water-hungry
sprawl areas of southeastern Wisconsin. |
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Last Updated on Saturday, 03 May 2008 12:40 |
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Lake Beulah Dispute Echoes Larger Battle |
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Written by JSonline.com
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Saturday, 03 May 2008 12:22 |
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By Darryl Enriquez Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Posted December 17, 2006
Excerpts:
Taking a page from the international move to protect the Great Lakes from
harmful water diversions, the tiny Lake Beulah Management District in Walworth
County has empowered itself to block the sinking of new wells within its
boundaries.
The new ordinance also says that water pumped out of the
basin, above or below ground, must be returned to the basin, a directive that
reflects a hotly debated issue in Waukesha's attempt to divert water from Lake
Michigan.
Lake residents fear that a high-volume well tapped into an aquifer that
replenishes the lake via underground springs will lead to a decline in lake
levels and ultimately harm the ecology of the basin.
The ordinance says that before a well is sunk, a permit must be obtained from
the district. Residential users are exempt, and the regulations apply only to
taking water from the shallow aquifer. Deep aquifers in bedrock are exempt from
the permit requirement.
The protracted legal battle between the district and the village is being
watched by other lake districts that fear thirsty communities will sink wells
near their shores, negatively affecting water levels and quality.
Residents of Upper Phantom Lake near Mukwonago have staved off attempts by
that village to install wells along its shores.
And residents of Pine and Beaver lakes in north-central Waukesha County are
concerned about the installation of shallow wells to quench the water needs of
expanding populations and developments of nearby communities.
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Last Updated on Saturday, 03 May 2008 12:40 |
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