New Grant Pays for Monitoring AMD Treatment Systems
Friday, February 16th, 2007by Jeffrey Gerard, AmeriCorps OSM/VISTA
A new grant program in Pennsylvania will provide chemical analyses to monitor passive abandoned mine drainage treatment systems. The FACTS Grant (”Funding AMD Chemistry in Treatment Systems”) will ease the financial burden on cash-strapped grassroots watershed organizations that have accepted the responsibility of maintaining passive treatment systems.
Pennsylvania has invested heavily in passive technologies to treat the largest water pollution problem in the Commonwealth: abandoned mine drainage (AMD). Regular water sampling and testing is crucial in diagnosing a treatment system’s wellbeing and success. The FACTS Grant puts satisfactory monitoring programs within the reach of the volunteer-based groups by covering the cost of laboratory analyses—hundreds of dollars annually for each system.
In addition to funding the analyses, the FACTS Program streamlines the transfer of test results from laboratories using an Internet repository for water sampling data, called Datashed. Laboratories upload analysis results to Datashed using unique Sample IDs that link each water sample to a specific date, treatment system, and sampling location. Datashed will store the complete history of a passive treatment system, helping to diagnose problems and allowing researchers to study and evaluate various AMD treatment technologies.
The FACTS grant is administered by the Western and Eastern Pennsylvania Coalitions for Abandoned Mine Reclamation. Nonprofit watershed groups, county conservation districts, local governments, and RC&D councils in Pennsylvania can apply to the FACTS Grant program on the Web at http://www.wpcamr.org/facts.