Notice of Commission Meeting and Public Hearing, 51217-51219 [E7-17611]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 172 / Thursday, September 6, 2007 / Notices
Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps and
Coast Guard).
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE
SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES OF USERS AND
THE PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
In addition to those disclosures
generally permitted under 5 U.S.C.
552(b) of the Privacy Act, these records
or information contained therein may
specifically be disclosed outside the
DoD as a routine use pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 552a(b)(3) as follows:
To the Department of Labor, the
Federal Aviation Agency, the National
Transportation Safety Board, and to
Federal, State, and local agencies, and
applicable civilian organizations, such
as the National Safety Council, for use
in a combined effort of accident
prevention.
In some cases, data must also be
disclosed to an employee’s
representative under the provisions of
29 CFR 1960.29.
The DoD ‘‘Blanket Routine Uses’’ set
forth at the beginning of the Army’s
compilation of systems of records
notices also apply to this system.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORING,
RETRIEVING, ACCESSING, RETAINING, AND
DISPOSING OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
STORAGE:
Paper records in file folders and
electronic storage media.
Individual’s name and Social Security
Number (SSN).
SAFEGUARDS:
Paper records and computer stored
records are maintained in locked file
cabinets behind security doors.
Information is accessible only by
authorized personnel with appropriate
clearance/access in the performance of
their duties. Remote terminal accessible
only by authorized personnel.
At United States Army Corps of
Engineers and United States Army
Center for Health Promotion and
Preventive Medicine the computer
stored records are secured behind
security doors, accessible only by
authorized personnel provided
password access.
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RETENTION AND DISPOSAL:
Accident and incident case records
and aviation accident and incident case
records are maintained for 5 years then
destroy, except for: USACRC and
USACE maintain for 30 years in current
file area then destroy; Office of Corps of
Engineers records created prior to 1
January 1982 maintain for 30 years then
destroy. Environmental restoration
reports are maintained for 50 years then
18:25 Sep 05, 2007
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SYSTEM MANAGER(S) AND ADDRESS:
Commander, U.S. Army Combat
Readiness Center, 4905 5th Avenue,
Fort Rucker, AL 36362–5363.
Commander, U.S. Army Center for
Health Promotion and Preventive
Medicine, 5158 Blackhawk Road,
Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD 21010–
5403.
Chief, Safety and Occupational Health
Office, Headquarters, U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers, 441 G Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20314–1000.
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURE:
Individuals seeking to determine
whether information about them is
contained in this system should address
written inquiries to the appropriate
system manager.
Request should contain individual’s
full name, Social Security Number
(SSN), current address, telephone
number, when and where the accident
occurred, type of equipment involved in
the accident, and signature.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
RETRIEVABILITY:
VerDate Aug<31>2005
destroyed (5 years in current file area
then transferred to records holding
area). Reports of artillery mis-firings or
accidents and harmful chemical,
biological and radiological exposures
accumulated in combat or combat
support elements are permanent.
Individuals seeking access to
information about them contained in
this system should address written
inquiries to the appropriate system
manager.
Request should contain individual’s
full name, Social Security Number
(SSN), current address, telephone
number, when and where the accident
occurred, type of equipment involved in
the accident, and signature.
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
The Army’s rules for accessing
records, and for contesting contents and
appealing initial agency determinations
are contained in Army Regulation 340–
21; 32 CFR part 505; or may be obtained
from the system manager.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
Records and reports of accident,
injury, fire, morbidity, law enforcement,
traffic accident investigations, vehicle
accident reports, and marine accident/
casualty reports, individual sick clips,
and military aviation records/reports.
EXEMPTIONS CLAIMED FOR THE SYSTEM:
None.
[FR Doc. 07–4343 Filed 9–05–07; 8:45 am]
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51217
DELAWARE RIVER BASIN
COMMISSION
Notice of Commission Meeting and
Public Hearing
Notice is hereby given that the
Delaware River Basin Commission will
hold an informal conference followed
by a public hearing on Wednesday,
September 26, 2007. The hearing will be
part of the Commission’s regular
business meeting. Both the conference
session and business meeting are open
to the public and will be held at the
Commission’s office building, located at
25 State Police Drive in West Trenton,
New Jersey.
The conference among the
commissioners and staff will begin at
10:15 a.m. Topics of discussion will
include a status report by staff of the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE)
and DRBC on the study entitled ‘‘MultiJurisdictional Use and Management of
Water Resources for the Delaware River
Basin’’; a report on the status of Basin
Plan implementation; a presentation by
staff of the USACE on a groundwater
model for northern Delaware; a
presentation on a proposal for
permanent designation of the Lower
Delaware River as Special Protection
Waters; and a report on the status of the
proposal for a Flexible Flow
Management Program.
The subjects of the public hearing to
be held during the 1:30 p.m. business
meeting include the dockets listed
below:
1. Forest Park Water (North Penn and
North Wales Water Authorities) D–65–
76 CP–10. An application for the
renewal of a project to continue to
discharge up to 2 million gallons per
day (mgd) of treated backwash water
from the potable water treatment plant
to Pine Run, a tributary of North Branch
Neshaminy Creek. No expansion of the
water treatment process or the
wastewater treatment plant (WWTP)
backwash is proposed. The project will
continue to serve portions of Bucks and
Montgomery Counties, both in
Pennsylvania. The project is located in
the non-tidal portion of the Neshaminy
Creek Watershed in Chalfont Borough,
Bucks County, Pennsylvania and is
located in the Southeastern
Pennsylvania Ground Water Protected
Area.
2. Abington Township D–73–191 CP–
2. An application for approval of an
upgrade of the Abington Township
WWTP. The application is for the
addition of biological nutrient removal,
the addition of a 750,000 gallon
equalization tank and associated
upgrades for wet-weather flow
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51218
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 172 / Thursday, September 6, 2007 / Notices
conditions. The WWTP will continue to
discharge 3.91 mgd as an annual average
flow to the Wissahickon Creek, a
tributary to the Schuylkill River. The
project is located in Upper Dublin
Township, Montgomery County,
Pennsylvania.
3. Pennsgrove Water Supply Company
D–93–77 CP–3. An application to
replace the withdrawal of water from
Well No. 11 in the applicant’s water
supply system with no increase in the
total withdrawal. The existing Well No.
11 has become an unreliable source of
supply. The total withdrawal from
replacement Well No. 11A and all other
wells will remain limited to 70.4
million gallons per thirty days (mg/30
days). The project is located in the
Potomac-Raritan-Magothy Formation in
the Delaware River Watershed in
Pennsgrove Borough, Salem County,
New Jersey.
4. Westwood Golf Club, D–96–3–2. An
application for the renewal of a ground
water withdrawal project to continue
withdrawal of 5 mg/30 days to supply
the applicant’s golf course from existing
Wells Nos. 2 and 3 in the Englishtown
Aquifer. The project is located in the
Lower Delaware Watershed in West
Deptford Township, Gloucester County,
New Jersey, in New Jersey Critical Water
Supply Area 2.
5. William Henry Apartments D–68–
92–2. An application for approval of
upgrades of the existing William Henry
Apartments WWTP to remedy
operational issues. The WWTP will be
modified to treat domestic wastewater at
the hydraulic design of the facility,
which is 69,000 gallons per day (gpd).
The applicant’s WWTP serves the
William Henry Apartment complex and
will continue to discharge to the
headwaters of Ridley Creek. The project
is located in East Whiteland Township,
Chester County, Pennsylvania.
6. Aqua Pennsylvania, Inc. D–75–78
CP–2. An application for the renewal of
a ground water withdrawal project to
increase withdrawal from 3.6 mg/30
days to 8.3 mg/30 days to supply the
applicant’s public water supply
distribution system from existing Wells
Nos. 2, 3 and 4 and one spring in the
Duncannon, Polar Gap and Packerton
members of the Catskill Formation. The
increased allocation is requested in
order to meet projected increases in
service area demand. The project is
located in the Van Auken Creek
Watershed in Waymart Borough, Wayne
County, Pennsylvania, within the
drainage area to the section of the nontidal Delaware River known as the
Upper Delaware, which is designated as
Special Protection Waters.
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7. Kiamesha Artesian Spring Water
Company, Inc. D–90–68 CP–3. An
application for the renewal of a ground
water withdrawal project and to
increase withdrawal from 9.8 mg/30
days to 27.78 mg/30 days to supply the
applicant’s public water supply
distribution system from the existing
Filtration Plant Well and Fraser Road
Well and two existing but heretofore
undocketed intakes in Kiamesha Lake.
The increased allocation is requested in
order to meet projected increases in
service area demand. The project is
located in the Kiamesha Creek
Watershed in the Town of Thompson,
Sullivan County, New York, within the
drainage area to the section of the nontidal Delaware River known as the
Upper Delaware, which is designated as
Special Protection Waters.
8. Upper Gwynedd Township D–91–88
CP–3. An application for the approval of
the rerate of the Upper Gwynedd
Township WWTP from 4.5 mgd to 5.7
mgd as an annual average flow. The
docket holder has also requested a 6.5
mgd value for a maximum monthly flow
and a hydraulic design capacity. The
WWTP will continue to discharge to the
Wissahickon Creek, a tributary to the
Schuylkill River. The project is located
in Upper Gwynedd Township,
Montgomery County, Pennsylvania.
9. Lehigh County Authority D–2001–
20 CP–2. An application for approval of
a groundwater withdrawal project to
supply up to 30.94 mg/30 days of water
to the applicant’s public water supply
distribution from new Wells A and B
and to increase the existing withdrawal
from all wells from 226 mg/30 days to
256.24 mg/30 days. The increased
allocation is requested in order to meet
projected increases in service area
demand. The project is located in the
Allentown, Jacksonburg and
Beekmantown formations in the
Schaefer Run, Little Lehigh Creek, Cedar
Creek and Iron Run watersheds in
Upper Macungie Township, Lehigh
County, Pennsylvania, within the
drainage area to the section of the nontidal Delaware River known as the
Lower Delaware, which is designated as
Special Protection Waters.
10. Coolbaugh Township D–2006–23
CP–2. An application for approval to
upgrade and expand an existing WWTP
from 0.052 mgd to 0.1 mgd by the
addition of membrane filters to the
existing membrane bioreactor. The
addition of the membrane filters will
improve treatment quality and detention
time, so that no new tanks are required.
The project is located in Coolbaugh
Township, Monroe County,
Pennsylvania. The plant discharges to
the Tobyhanna Creek in the Lehigh
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River Watershed, which is in the
drainage area of the Lower Delaware
River portion of the DRBC Special
Protection Waters. The WWTP will
continue to serve a portion of Coolbaugh
Township only and will continue to
discharge through the existing outfall,
which is upstream from Francis E.
Walter Dam and Pocono Lake.
Coolbaugh Township is currently
pursuing the beneficial reuse of the
WWTP effluent for irrigation of a nearby
golf course during the summer months.
11. River Road Utilities, Inc. D–2006–
38–1. An application to approve the
reconstruction and expansion of the
existing Tuscarora WWTP. The
discharge is proposed to increase from
49,000 gpd to 66,000 gpd and will
continue to be to the Delaware River.
The project is located in Upper Mount
Bethel Township, Northampton County,
Pennsylvania and discharges to the
section of the non-tidal Delaware River
known as the Lower Delaware, which is
designated as Special Protection Waters.
12. Wallace Township Municipal
Authority D–2006–39 CP–1. An
application for approval of a
groundwater withdrawal project to
supply up to 8.1 mg/30 days of water to
the applicant’s public water supply
distribution system from new Wells
Nos. PW–4, PW–6, PW–7 and PW–8.
The project is located in the Granitic
Gneiss Formation in the East
Brandywine Creek Watershed in
Wallace Township, Chester County,
Pennsylvania.
13. East Brandywine Township
Municipal Authority D–2007–2 CP–1.
An application for approval of a WWTP
project to serve proposed residential
development in East Brandywine
Township, Chester County,
Pennsylvania. The proposed facility is
designed to provide treatment of 0.3
mgd via sequencing batch reactor and
tertiary filtration processes. The project
is located at the intersection of East
Reeceville and Bollinger Roads in East
Brandywine Township. Following
ultraviolet light disinfection, WWTP
effluent will be discharged to a spray
irrigation system of the proposed golf
course and driving range, and, when
necessary to a drip irrigation field.
14. Forest Glen Estates, LLC D–2007–
8–1. An application for approval to
discharge up to 33,750 gallons per day
to a holding pond and subsequently
through a spray irrigation system to
irrigate 14.5 acres of woodlands.
Wastewater will be generated from the
applicant’s proposed 134 one-acre
single-family residential lots and an 18acre existing homestead on a 313-acre
tract. The project is located in the
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 172 / Thursday, September 6, 2007 / Notices
Dingmans Creek Watershed in Delaware
Township, Pike County, Pennsylvania.
15. Vogel Farm and Broad Mountain
Spring Water Companies D–2007–10–1.
An application for approval of a
groundwater withdrawal project to
supply up to 6.26 mg/30 days of water
to the applicant’s bottled water truck
loading facilities from new Wells
VFPW1, VFPW2 and BMPW1. The
project is located in the Mauch Chunk
Formation in the Quakake Creek
Watershed in Packer Township, Carbon
County, Pennsylvania within the
drainage area to the section of the nontidal Delaware River known as the
Lower Delaware, which is designated as
Special Protection Waters.
16. Hamlet of Bloomville—
Community Wastewater Management
Program D–2007–11 CP–1. An
application for approval to construct a
centralized wastewater treatment system
to serve the Hamlet of Bloomville,
which is currently served by on-lot
septic systems. Two 0.03 mgd septic
tanks will be provided, but each will be
typically operated at an average flow of
0.015 mgd, so that maintenance can be
performed periodically without a
disruption of service. The septic tank
effluent will be pumped to sand filters
prior to subsurface discharge to cut-andfill adsorption leach beds. The project is
located in the Wright Brook and West
Branch Delaware River watersheds
upstream from Cannonsville Reservoir
in the Town of Kortright, Delaware
County, New York, which is in the
drainage area of the Upper Delaware
River portion of the DRBC Special
Protection Waters.
17. Hamlet of Hamden—Community
Wastewater Management Program D–
2007–12 CP–1. An application for
approval to construct a centralized
wastewater treatment system to serve
the Hamlet of Hamden, which is
currently served by on-lot septic
systems. Two 0.026 mgd septic tanks
will be provided, but each will be
typically operated at an average flow of
0.013 mgd, so that maintenance can be
performed periodically without a
disruption of service. The septic tank
effluent will be pumped to sand filters
prior to subsurface discharge to cut-andfill adsorption leach beds. The project is
located in the Launt Hollow Creek and
the West Branch Delaware River
watersheds upstream from Cannonsville
Reservoir in the Town of Hamden,
Delaware County, New York, which is
in the drainage area of the Upper
Delaware River portion of the DRBC
Special Protection Waters.
18. Wallace Township Municipal
Authority D–2007–17 CP–1. An
application for approval to construct a
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0.185 mgd WWTP to serve the proposed
Hamilton development, located
predominantly in Wallace Township,
Chester County, Pennsylvania. A small
portion of the 636-acre site extends into
West Nantmeal Township, also in
Chester County. Approximately 688
residential dwellings and supporting
commercial buildings will be served.
Following advanced treatment in
parallel sequencing batch reactors, the
effluent will be filtered and disinfected
by ultra-violet light prior to land
application via drip irrigation. The
proposed WWTP and drip irrigation
fields are located north of the
intersection of Fairview and Creek
Roads in the East Brandywine Creek
Watershed in Wallace Township. No
discharge to surface waters is proposed.
19. Dragon Springs Buddhist, Inc. D–
2007–21–1. An application for approval
to construct an 11,000 gpd WWTP and
discharge the effluent to an unnamed
tributary of the Basker Kill, a tributary
of the Neversink River. The discharge is
located in the drainage area of the
Middle Delaware Special Protection
Waters. The project is located in the
Town of Deerpark, Orange County, New
York. The project WWTP will treat
wastewater from a proposed multipurpose building, which will be
constructed on 4.4 acres of forested
land. The existing temple complex is
served by septic systems that process
less than 10,000 gallons per day (gpd).
Several of these mound-type systems
will continue to be used due to their
remote location on the property and
their efficient operation.
20. Diamond Sand and Gravel, Inc.
D–2007–27–1. An application for
approval of a groundwater withdrawal
project to supply less than 3.1 mg/30
days of water to the applicant’s sand
and gravel plant from new Wells Nos. 1
and 2A. The project is located in the
Leithsville Formation in the Paulins Kill
Watershed in Sparta Township, Sussex
County, New Jersey, within the drainage
area to the section of the non-tidal
Delaware River known as the Lower
Delaware, which is designated as
Special Protection Waters.
In addition, the Commission’s 1:30
p.m. business meeting will include
public hearings on: a resolution to
approve an interim reservoir operating
plan for the New York City Delaware
Basin Reservoirs pending completion of
rulemaking on Water Code amendments
to implement the Flexible Flow
Management Program (FFMP); a
resolution to extend temporary
designation of the Lower Delaware River
as Special Protection Waters pending
completion of a rulemaking on
permanent designation; and a resolution
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51219
to restore text inadvertently omitted
from the project review fee schedule
approved by Resolution No. 2005–1.
The Commission also will consider a
resolution concerning a Pennsylvania
Coastal Zone Management Program
grant to develop a pilot special area
management plan for the Upper
Wissahickon Watershed; and
resolutions to authorize participation by
DRBC staff in the State of New Jersey
Long-Term Care Insurance Program.
The meeting will also include
adoption of the Minutes of the
Commission’s July 18, 2007 business
meeting; announcements of upcoming
advisory committee meetings and other
events; a report by the Executive
Director; a report by the Commission’s
General Counsel; and an opportunity for
public dialogue.
Draft dockets scheduled for public
hearing on September 26, 2007 will be
posted on the Commission’s Web site,
https://www.drbc.net, where they can be
accessed through the Notice of
Commission Meeting and Public
Hearing. Additional documents relating
to the dockets and other items may be
examined at the Commission’s offices.
Please contact William Muszynski at
609–883–9500, extension 221, with any
docket-related questions.
Individuals in need of an
accommodation as provided for in the
Americans with Disabilities Act who
wish to attend the informational
meeting, conference session or hearings
should contact the commission
secretary directly at 609–883–9500 ext.
203 or through the Telecommunications
Relay Services (TRS) at 711, to discuss
how the Commission can accommodate
your needs.
Dated: August 30, 2007.
Pamela M. Bush,
Commission Secretary.
[FR Doc. E7–17611 Filed 9–5–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6360–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket Nos. OR07–20–000; IS07–229–000
(Not Consolidated)]
BP West Coast Products LLC
Complainant, v. SFPP, L.P.
Respondent. SFPP, L.P.; Notice of
Complaint
August 28, 2007.
Take notice that on August 22, 2007,
BP West Coast Products LLC (BP)
tendered for filing a Complaint against
SFPP, L.P. (SFPP) challenging SFPP’s
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 172 (Thursday, September 6, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 51217-51219]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-17611]
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DELAWARE RIVER BASIN COMMISSION
Notice of Commission Meeting and Public Hearing
Notice is hereby given that the Delaware River Basin Commission
will hold an informal conference followed by a public hearing on
Wednesday, September 26, 2007. The hearing will be part of the
Commission's regular business meeting. Both the conference session and
business meeting are open to the public and will be held at the
Commission's office building, located at 25 State Police Drive in West
Trenton, New Jersey.
The conference among the commissioners and staff will begin at
10:15 a.m. Topics of discussion will include a status report by staff
of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) and DRBC on the study
entitled ``Multi-Jurisdictional Use and Management of Water Resources
for the Delaware River Basin''; a report on the status of Basin Plan
implementation; a presentation by staff of the USACE on a groundwater
model for northern Delaware; a presentation on a proposal for permanent
designation of the Lower Delaware River as Special Protection Waters;
and a report on the status of the proposal for a Flexible Flow
Management Program.
The subjects of the public hearing to be held during the 1:30 p.m.
business meeting include the dockets listed below:
1. Forest Park Water (North Penn and North Wales Water Authorities)
D-65-76 CP-10. An application for the renewal of a project to continue
to discharge up to 2 million gallons per day (mgd) of treated backwash
water from the potable water treatment plant to Pine Run, a tributary
of North Branch Neshaminy Creek. No expansion of the water treatment
process or the wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) backwash is proposed.
The project will continue to serve portions of Bucks and Montgomery
Counties, both in Pennsylvania. The project is located in the non-tidal
portion of the Neshaminy Creek Watershed in Chalfont Borough, Bucks
County, Pennsylvania and is located in the Southeastern Pennsylvania
Ground Water Protected Area.
2. Abington Township D-73-191 CP-2. An application for approval of
an upgrade of the Abington Township WWTP. The application is for the
addition of biological nutrient removal, the addition of a 750,000
gallon equalization tank and associated upgrades for wet-weather flow
[[Page 51218]]
conditions. The WWTP will continue to discharge 3.91 mgd as an annual
average flow to the Wissahickon Creek, a tributary to the Schuylkill
River. The project is located in Upper Dublin Township, Montgomery
County, Pennsylvania.
3. Pennsgrove Water Supply Company D-93-77 CP-3. An application to
replace the withdrawal of water from Well No. 11 in the applicant's
water supply system with no increase in the total withdrawal. The
existing Well No. 11 has become an unreliable source of supply. The
total withdrawal from replacement Well No. 11A and all other wells will
remain limited to 70.4 million gallons per thirty days (mg/30 days).
The project is located in the Potomac-Raritan-Magothy Formation in the
Delaware River Watershed in Pennsgrove Borough, Salem County, New
Jersey.
4. Westwood Golf Club, D-96-3-2. An application for the renewal of
a ground water withdrawal project to continue withdrawal of 5 mg/30
days to supply the applicant's golf course from existing Wells Nos. 2
and 3 in the Englishtown Aquifer. The project is located in the Lower
Delaware Watershed in West Deptford Township, Gloucester County, New
Jersey, in New Jersey Critical Water Supply Area 2.
5. William Henry Apartments D-68-92-2. An application for approval
of upgrades of the existing William Henry Apartments WWTP to remedy
operational issues. The WWTP will be modified to treat domestic
wastewater at the hydraulic design of the facility, which is 69,000
gallons per day (gpd). The applicant's WWTP serves the William Henry
Apartment complex and will continue to discharge to the headwaters of
Ridley Creek. The project is located in East Whiteland Township,
Chester County, Pennsylvania.
6. Aqua Pennsylvania, Inc. D-75-78 CP-2. An application for the
renewal of a ground water withdrawal project to increase withdrawal
from 3.6 mg/30 days to 8.3 mg/30 days to supply the applicant's public
water supply distribution system from existing Wells Nos. 2, 3 and 4
and one spring in the Duncannon, Polar Gap and Packerton members of the
Catskill Formation. The increased allocation is requested in order to
meet projected increases in service area demand. The project is located
in the Van Auken Creek Watershed in Waymart Borough, Wayne County,
Pennsylvania, within the drainage area to the section of the non-tidal
Delaware River known as the Upper Delaware, which is designated as
Special Protection Waters.
7. Kiamesha Artesian Spring Water Company, Inc. D-90-68 CP-3. An
application for the renewal of a ground water withdrawal project and to
increase withdrawal from 9.8 mg/30 days to 27.78 mg/30 days to supply
the applicant's public water supply distribution system from the
existing Filtration Plant Well and Fraser Road Well and two existing
but heretofore undocketed intakes in Kiamesha Lake. The increased
allocation is requested in order to meet projected increases in service
area demand. The project is located in the Kiamesha Creek Watershed in
the Town of Thompson, Sullivan County, New York, within the drainage
area to the section of the non-tidal Delaware River known as the Upper
Delaware, which is designated as Special Protection Waters.
8. Upper Gwynedd Township D-91-88 CP-3. An application for the
approval of the rerate of the Upper Gwynedd Township WWTP from 4.5 mgd
to 5.7 mgd as an annual average flow. The docket holder has also
requested a 6.5 mgd value for a maximum monthly flow and a hydraulic
design capacity. The WWTP will continue to discharge to the Wissahickon
Creek, a tributary to the Schuylkill River. The project is located in
Upper Gwynedd Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania.
9. Lehigh County Authority D-2001-20 CP-2. An application for
approval of a groundwater withdrawal project to supply up to 30.94 mg/
30 days of water to the applicant's public water supply distribution
from new Wells A and B and to increase the existing withdrawal from all
wells from 226 mg/30 days to 256.24 mg/30 days. The increased
allocation is requested in order to meet projected increases in service
area demand. The project is located in the Allentown, Jacksonburg and
Beekmantown formations in the Schaefer Run, Little Lehigh Creek, Cedar
Creek and Iron Run watersheds in Upper Macungie Township, Lehigh
County, Pennsylvania, within the drainage area to the section of the
non-tidal Delaware River known as the Lower Delaware, which is
designated as Special Protection Waters.
10. Coolbaugh Township D-2006-23 CP-2. An application for approval
to upgrade and expand an existing WWTP from 0.052 mgd to 0.1 mgd by the
addition of membrane filters to the existing membrane bioreactor. The
addition of the membrane filters will improve treatment quality and
detention time, so that no new tanks are required. The project is
located in Coolbaugh Township, Monroe County, Pennsylvania. The plant
discharges to the Tobyhanna Creek in the Lehigh River Watershed, which
is in the drainage area of the Lower Delaware River portion of the DRBC
Special Protection Waters. The WWTP will continue to serve a portion of
Coolbaugh Township only and will continue to discharge through the
existing outfall, which is upstream from Francis E. Walter Dam and
Pocono Lake. Coolbaugh Township is currently pursuing the beneficial
reuse of the WWTP effluent for irrigation of a nearby golf course
during the summer months.
11. River Road Utilities, Inc. D-2006-38-1. An application to
approve the reconstruction and expansion of the existing Tuscarora
WWTP. The discharge is proposed to increase from 49,000 gpd to 66,000
gpd and will continue to be to the Delaware River. The project is
located in Upper Mount Bethel Township, Northampton County,
Pennsylvania and discharges to the section of the non-tidal Delaware
River known as the Lower Delaware, which is designated as Special
Protection Waters.
12. Wallace Township Municipal Authority D-2006-39 CP-1. An
application for approval of a groundwater withdrawal project to supply
up to 8.1 mg/30 days of water to the applicant's public water supply
distribution system from new Wells Nos. PW-4, PW-6, PW-7 and PW-8. The
project is located in the Granitic Gneiss Formation in the East
Brandywine Creek Watershed in Wallace Township, Chester County,
Pennsylvania.
13. East Brandywine Township Municipal Authority D-2007-2 CP-1. An
application for approval of a WWTP project to serve proposed
residential development in East Brandywine Township, Chester County,
Pennsylvania. The proposed facility is designed to provide treatment of
0.3 mgd via sequencing batch reactor and tertiary filtration processes.
The project is located at the intersection of East Reeceville and
Bollinger Roads in East Brandywine Township. Following ultraviolet
light disinfection, WWTP effluent will be discharged to a spray
irrigation system of the proposed golf course and driving range, and,
when necessary to a drip irrigation field.
14. Forest Glen Estates, LLC D-2007-8-1. An application for
approval to discharge up to 33,750 gallons per day to a holding pond
and subsequently through a spray irrigation system to irrigate 14.5
acres of woodlands. Wastewater will be generated from the applicant's
proposed 134 one-acre single-family residential lots and an 18-acre
existing homestead on a 313-acre tract. The project is located in the
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Dingmans Creek Watershed in Delaware Township, Pike County,
Pennsylvania.
15. Vogel Farm and Broad Mountain Spring Water Companies D-2007-10-
1. An application for approval of a groundwater withdrawal project to
supply up to 6.26 mg/30 days of water to the applicant's bottled water
truck loading facilities from new Wells VFPW1, VFPW2 and BMPW1. The
project is located in the Mauch Chunk Formation in the Quakake Creek
Watershed in Packer Township, Carbon County, Pennsylvania within the
drainage area to the section of the non-tidal Delaware River known as
the Lower Delaware, which is designated as Special Protection Waters.
16. Hamlet of Bloomville--Community Wastewater Management Program
D-2007-11 CP-1. An application for approval to construct a centralized
wastewater treatment system to serve the Hamlet of Bloomville, which is
currently served by on-lot septic systems. Two 0.03 mgd septic tanks
will be provided, but each will be typically operated at an average
flow of 0.015 mgd, so that maintenance can be performed periodically
without a disruption of service. The septic tank effluent will be
pumped to sand filters prior to subsurface discharge to cut-and-fill
adsorption leach beds. The project is located in the Wright Brook and
West Branch Delaware River watersheds upstream from Cannonsville
Reservoir in the Town of Kortright, Delaware County, New York, which is
in the drainage area of the Upper Delaware River portion of the DRBC
Special Protection Waters.
17. Hamlet of Hamden--Community Wastewater Management Program D-
2007-12 CP-1. An application for approval to construct a centralized
wastewater treatment system to serve the Hamlet of Hamden, which is
currently served by on-lot septic systems. Two 0.026 mgd septic tanks
will be provided, but each will be typically operated at an average
flow of 0.013 mgd, so that maintenance can be performed periodically
without a disruption of service. The septic tank effluent will be
pumped to sand filters prior to subsurface discharge to cut-and-fill
adsorption leach beds. The project is located in the Launt Hollow Creek
and the West Branch Delaware River watersheds upstream from
Cannonsville Reservoir in the Town of Hamden, Delaware County, New
York, which is in the drainage area of the Upper Delaware River portion
of the DRBC Special Protection Waters.
18. Wallace Township Municipal Authority D-2007-17 CP-1. An
application for approval to construct a 0.185 mgd WWTP to serve the
proposed Hamilton development, located predominantly in Wallace
Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania. A small portion of the 636-acre
site extends into West Nantmeal Township, also in Chester County.
Approximately 688 residential dwellings and supporting commercial
buildings will be served. Following advanced treatment in parallel
sequencing batch reactors, the effluent will be filtered and
disinfected by ultra-violet light prior to land application via drip
irrigation. The proposed WWTP and drip irrigation fields are located
north of the intersection of Fairview and Creek Roads in the East
Brandywine Creek Watershed in Wallace Township. No discharge to surface
waters is proposed.
19. Dragon Springs Buddhist, Inc. D-2007-21-1. An application for
approval to construct an 11,000 gpd WWTP and discharge the effluent to
an unnamed tributary of the Basker Kill, a tributary of the Neversink
River. The discharge is located in the drainage area of the Middle
Delaware Special Protection Waters. The project is located in the Town
of Deerpark, Orange County, New York. The project WWTP will treat
wastewater from a proposed multi-purpose building, which will be
constructed on 4.4 acres of forested land. The existing temple complex
is served by septic systems that process less than 10,000 gallons per
day (gpd). Several of these mound-type systems will continue to be used
due to their remote location on the property and their efficient
operation.
20. Diamond Sand and Gravel, Inc. D-2007-27-1. An application for
approval of a groundwater withdrawal project to supply less than 3.1
mg/30 days of water to the applicant's sand and gravel plant from new
Wells Nos. 1 and 2A. The project is located in the Leithsville
Formation in the Paulins Kill Watershed in Sparta Township, Sussex
County, New Jersey, within the drainage area to the section of the non-
tidal Delaware River known as the Lower Delaware, which is designated
as Special Protection Waters.
In addition, the Commission's 1:30 p.m. business meeting will
include public hearings on: a resolution to approve an interim
reservoir operating plan for the New York City Delaware Basin
Reservoirs pending completion of rulemaking on Water Code amendments to
implement the Flexible Flow Management Program (FFMP); a resolution to
extend temporary designation of the Lower Delaware River as Special
Protection Waters pending completion of a rulemaking on permanent
designation; and a resolution to restore text inadvertently omitted
from the project review fee schedule approved by Resolution No. 2005-1.
The Commission also will consider a resolution concerning a
Pennsylvania Coastal Zone Management Program grant to develop a pilot
special area management plan for the Upper Wissahickon Watershed; and
resolutions to authorize participation by DRBC staff in the State of
New Jersey Long-Term Care Insurance Program.
The meeting will also include adoption of the Minutes of the
Commission's July 18, 2007 business meeting; announcements of upcoming
advisory committee meetings and other events; a report by the Executive
Director; a report by the Commission's General Counsel; and an
opportunity for public dialogue.
Draft dockets scheduled for public hearing on September 26, 2007
will be posted on the Commission's Web site, https://www.drbc.net, where
they can be accessed through the Notice of Commission Meeting and
Public Hearing. Additional documents relating to the dockets and other
items may be examined at the Commission's offices. Please contact
William Muszynski at 609-883-9500, extension 221, with any docket-
related questions.
Individuals in need of an accommodation as provided for in the
Americans with Disabilities Act who wish to attend the informational
meeting, conference session or hearings should contact the commission
secretary directly at 609-883-9500 ext. 203 or through the
Telecommunications Relay Services (TRS) at 711, to discuss how the
Commission can accommodate your needs.
Dated: August 30, 2007.
Pamela M. Bush,
Commission Secretary.
[FR Doc. E7-17611 Filed 9-5-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6360-01-P