Thursday, October 30, 2014
Commissioner Brumfield on Artificial Turf
This is the one I was waiting for. Thank you, Mr. Turfstein. NBC should see this. Coach Amy Griffin should see this. Every parent in Mt. Lebanon needs to see this.
Labels:
Albert Turfstein,
artificial turf,
Dave Brumfield,
NBC,
toxic turf
Commissioner Linfante- Zinc is not harmful to humans
I received a link to a YouTube video from a man by the name of Albert Turfstein. It is a clip of Commission President Kristen Linfante claiming that zinc is not harmful to humans.
According to the CDC:
The commissioners have "done all the research." Artificial turf is safe. Zinc is not harmful to humans. The link to the video is above. Additionally, I am adding it to this post. Feel free to share with family and friends. Send it to government agencies. I hope it goes viral.
Link to the YouTube video
According to the CDC:
Taking too much zinc into the body through food, water, or dietary supplements can also affect health. The levels of zinc that produce adverse health effects are much higher than the Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDAs) for zinc of 11 mg/day for men and 8 mg/day for women. If large doses of zinc (10-15 times higher than the RDA) are taken by mouth even for a short time, stomach cramps, nausea, and vomiting may occur. Ingesting high levels of zinc for several months may cause anemia, damage the pancreas, and decrease levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol.
Eating food containing very large amounts of zinc (1,000 times higher than the RDA) for several months caused many health effects in rats, mice, and ferrets, including anemia and injury to the pancreas and kidney. Rats that ate very large amounts of zinc became infertile. Rats that ate very large amounts of zinc after becoming pregnant had smaller babies. Putting low levels of certain zinc compounds, such as zinc acetate and zinc chloride, on the skin of rabbits, guinea pigs, and mice caused skin irritation. Skin irritation from exposure to these chemicals would probably occur in humans. EPA has determined that because of lack of information, zinc is not classifiable as to its human carcinogenicity.
- Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
4770 Buford Hwy NE
Atlanta, GA 30341 - 800-CDC-INFO
(800-232-4636)
TTY: (888) 232-6348 - New Hours of Operation
8am-8pm ET/Monday-Friday
Closed Holidays
Contact CDC-INFO
Mr. Turfstein, I am looking forward to a video of Dave Brumfield next. Thank you for sharing this.
Link to the YouTube video
Labels:
Albert Turfstein,
artificial turf,
CDC,
Kristen Linfante,
toxic turf,
zinc
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
There's talk of a massive protest
Mt. Lebanon resident and Lebo Citizens reader, Charlotte Stephenson asked me to post this email.
Please be advised that opposition to the initiative of the Mt. Lebanon Commission majority to install tire crumb-based artificial turf in our main park is growing daily. Our residents, myself included, believe that this project potentially jeopardizes the health and safety of our children, the residents living within close proximity to the park, and the watershed that involves other surrounding communities. In addition to the unknown long term impact this may have on small developing children due to the lack of studies, the economic impact of this plan will be crippling for generations to come. These are only a few of the salient problems associated with this plan, but there are others.
Why is it that we seem to have trouble finding $5,000.00 to maintain our Veterans Memorial in a respectable condition, (as a Veterans Committee member our recent discussion was about a need for fundraising to maintain this), while it is perfectly acceptable to the Commission majority to spend the lion's share of our unassigned fund balance (some $750,000.00+) to turn our beautiful historic grass park into a toxic waste dump?
There has been a deliberate effort on the part of the Mt. Lebanon Commission and Public Information Office to suppress public awareness of the concerns that expert environmental toxicologists dealing with risk assessment have regarding this product. Such information was withheld during a public "forum" about this, even though the forum was originally intended to make factual information available to our residents. References to the artificial turf project became a "field enhancement" project as an attempt to reduce the stigma associated with the project. There has also been a deliberate effort on the part of the Commission to keep several relevant volunteer boards and authorities out of the process, our Environmental Sustainability Board and our Parks Advisory Board to name a few.
I contacted Congressman Murphy regarding this issue and have not heard back yet. Representative Miller's position is that this is a local issue and so he will not take any position regarding this, however he contacted the DEP as a favor to Commissioner Brumfield regarding the permit application status. I would like to hear from Senator Smith regarding his stance on the project, especially since I have copied him on numerous e-mails.
All you elected officials cannot turn a blind eye to what is brewing among your constituents. There is now talk of a massive protest in the near future so this growing opposition is not going away. Additionally, a community watchdog group has formed to direct any potential legal claims to appropriate resources in the event that injuries or illness occur with the children or fetuses of the pregnant mothers who will be exposed to the turf toxins and hard surface. Please be advised that all eyes and ears will be on this for the time to come. The roll call vote for this project will personally legally target the Commissioners who voted for this.
There are other options to improve the park area so children can enjoy playing sports. It's is up to all of you to represent all of us to the best of your ability. It's time for you to devise a better solution for our community. I look forward to hearing from you as to what alternative action you are willing to take.
Thank You,
Charlotte M. Stephenson
Mt. Lebanon
Dear Mt. Lebanon Commissioners, Gateway Project Engineer Daniel Deiseroth, State Representative Miller, State Senator Smith and Congressman Murphy,From: Charlotte StephensonDate: October 29, 2014 3:35:05 PM EDTTo: Commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>, "Daniel S. Deiseroth" <ddeiseroth@gatewayengineers.com>, Daniel Miller <danielmillerpa@gmail.com>, senatorsmith@pasenate.com, Congressman Murphy <murphy@mail.house.gov>Cc: Matthew Santoni <msantoni@tribweb.com>, Jon Delano <jon.delano@verizon.net>, tjohnson@thealmanac.net, agoldstein@post-gazette.com, nicholaslewandowski@gmail.comSubject: Mt. Lebanon Community Governance and Artificial Turf Issue
Please be advised that opposition to the initiative of the Mt. Lebanon Commission majority to install tire crumb-based artificial turf in our main park is growing daily. Our residents, myself included, believe that this project potentially jeopardizes the health and safety of our children, the residents living within close proximity to the park, and the watershed that involves other surrounding communities. In addition to the unknown long term impact this may have on small developing children due to the lack of studies, the economic impact of this plan will be crippling for generations to come. These are only a few of the salient problems associated with this plan, but there are others.
Why is it that we seem to have trouble finding $5,000.00 to maintain our Veterans Memorial in a respectable condition, (as a Veterans Committee member our recent discussion was about a need for fundraising to maintain this), while it is perfectly acceptable to the Commission majority to spend the lion's share of our unassigned fund balance (some $750,000.00+) to turn our beautiful historic grass park into a toxic waste dump?
There has been a deliberate effort on the part of the Mt. Lebanon Commission and Public Information Office to suppress public awareness of the concerns that expert environmental toxicologists dealing with risk assessment have regarding this product. Such information was withheld during a public "forum" about this, even though the forum was originally intended to make factual information available to our residents. References to the artificial turf project became a "field enhancement" project as an attempt to reduce the stigma associated with the project. There has also been a deliberate effort on the part of the Commission to keep several relevant volunteer boards and authorities out of the process, our Environmental Sustainability Board and our Parks Advisory Board to name a few.
I contacted Congressman Murphy regarding this issue and have not heard back yet. Representative Miller's position is that this is a local issue and so he will not take any position regarding this, however he contacted the DEP as a favor to Commissioner Brumfield regarding the permit application status. I would like to hear from Senator Smith regarding his stance on the project, especially since I have copied him on numerous e-mails.
All you elected officials cannot turn a blind eye to what is brewing among your constituents. There is now talk of a massive protest in the near future so this growing opposition is not going away. Additionally, a community watchdog group has formed to direct any potential legal claims to appropriate resources in the event that injuries or illness occur with the children or fetuses of the pregnant mothers who will be exposed to the turf toxins and hard surface. Please be advised that all eyes and ears will be on this for the time to come. The roll call vote for this project will personally legally target the Commissioners who voted for this.
There are other options to improve the park area so children can enjoy playing sports. It's is up to all of you to represent all of us to the best of your ability. It's time for you to devise a better solution for our community. I look forward to hearing from you as to what alternative action you are willing to take.
Thank You,
Charlotte M. Stephenson
Mt. Lebanon
Labels:
Artificial Turf Protest,
Charlotte Stephenson,
Congressman Tim Murphy,
Dan Deiseroth,
State Rep. Dan Miller,
State Senator Matt Smith,
toxic turf
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
Packed house tonight UPDATED
Since I missed the commission meetings tonight, I am counting on you all to send in comments and tell me all about it.
What I heard so far is that Kristen is unhappy because because sharpshooting is off the table. YAY! WPXI was at the meeting. I missed the 11:00 news on WPXI because I was watching WTAE. I couldn't watch the 6:00 news, but WTAE aired their story at 6. If readers can find the reports online, please send them in.
I am really looking forward to watching the videos tomorrow. Until then, tell us what you know!
Update October 28, 2014 1:24 PM The videos for the two commission meetings are now available for viewing.
October 27, 2014 Commission Discussion Session
October 27, 2014 Commission Meeting
Update October 28, 2014 2:09 PM I want to share a voice mail that was left on my home phone on 09.10.13 from the Pittsburgh Food Bank. I had left a voice mail asking about the Food Bank's requirements for accepting deer meat (venison). Unfortunately, he thought I was considering making a private donation. Kristen, you were caught in another lie. Do you know what is the truth anymore, oh fearless leader? See the 41:18 time stamp of the commission meeting.
What I heard so far is that Kristen is unhappy because because sharpshooting is off the table. YAY! WPXI was at the meeting. I missed the 11:00 news on WPXI because I was watching WTAE. I couldn't watch the 6:00 news, but WTAE aired their story at 6. If readers can find the reports online, please send them in.
I am really looking forward to watching the videos tomorrow. Until then, tell us what you know!
Update October 28, 2014 1:24 PM The videos for the two commission meetings are now available for viewing.
October 27, 2014 Commission Discussion Session
October 27, 2014 Commission Meeting
Update October 28, 2014 2:09 PM I want to share a voice mail that was left on my home phone on 09.10.13 from the Pittsburgh Food Bank. I had left a voice mail asking about the Food Bank's requirements for accepting deer meat (venison). Unfortunately, he thought I was considering making a private donation. Kristen, you were caught in another lie. Do you know what is the truth anymore, oh fearless leader? See the 41:18 time stamp of the commission meeting.
Monday, October 27, 2014
This counts as an incident? UPDATED
Our Public Information Office has removed the Deer Incident Report dated 7/31/14, which showed a decline in numbers from a year ago. It has been replaced by this report by the Mt. Lebanon Police:
I am listed as reporting a deer with a broken leg and its fawns on 8/20/14. I DID NOT REPORT THAT!!!!!!!!! What happened was, there was a guy from animal control in the upper parking lot of Rockwood Park. He said that he was looking for a deer with a broken leg. I said that she is a mom and gets around just fine. He confirmed that after he saw her. Mt. Lebanon is counting it as an incident!
Forgive me. I am bleary-eyed from reading and watching all the news about the turf rally, so I may have missed it, but where is the incident which our blood-thirsty dictator reported at a recent commission meeting? Kristen claimed to have had the police shoot and kill an injured "baby deer" right in front of her house on Roycroft. I'm not seeing it. Does she EVER tell the truth? While fact checking, please check to see how many deaths have occurred from deer/vehicular accidents. The totals are not listed.
Deer management is on the agenda for tonight's commission meeting. Kristen has listed $68,000 for deer "management." Deer is our biggest concern here in Mt. Lebanon. Not toxic turf. Not pedestrian safety. Deer.
Update October 27, 2014 3:46 PM I emailed the commission this post since I am unable to attend tonight's meeting.
From: egillen476 <egillen476@aol.com>
To: klinfante <klinfante@mtlebanon.org>; cmcdonough <cmcdonough@mtlebanon.org>; sfeller <sfeller@mtlebanon.org>
Cc: commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>
Sent: Mon, Oct 27, 2014 2:40 pm
Subject: Re: deer incident report
Kristen, you are missing the point of my email. I DID NOT REPORT ANYTHING to the police or anyone else in the municipality. Why is that on the report? How many other incidents have been fabricated by the municipality?
As far as the doe, I have no idea what happened to her. She may have burned her hoof on the hot, rubber pavers in Rockwood Park, for all I know. Perhaps your deer expert will shed some light tonight on the various ways a deer can injure itself.
Elaine Gillen
-----Original Message-----
From: Kristen Linfante <klinfante@mtlebanon.org>
To: egillen476 <egillen476@aol.com>; Coleman McDonough <cmcdonough@mtlebanon.org>; Stephen Feller <sfeller@mtlebanon.org>
Cc: Commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>
Sent: Mon, Oct 27, 2014 2:26 pm
Subject: Re: deer incident report
How strange. I wonder how the deer's leg was broken. Perhaps it was a rough game of soccer in Rockwood Park. Surely it couldn't have been hit by a car.
With regards to the incident of the baby deer being shot in front of my house, I don't recall the exact date, but it was clearly before 2011 if it does not appear on this report.
All best regards,
Kristen Linfante
Commissioner, Ward 3
Kristen Linfante
Commissioner, Ward 3
(412)561-2790
https://lebotools.mtlebanon.org/dit/public_incident_report.php The report shows that there are a total of 701 incidents in this report. Incidents are entered into this system on a monthly basis.
I am listed as reporting a deer with a broken leg and its fawns on 8/20/14. I DID NOT REPORT THAT!!!!!!!!! What happened was, there was a guy from animal control in the upper parking lot of Rockwood Park. He said that he was looking for a deer with a broken leg. I said that she is a mom and gets around just fine. He confirmed that after he saw her. Mt. Lebanon is counting it as an incident!
Forgive me. I am bleary-eyed from reading and watching all the news about the turf rally, so I may have missed it, but where is the incident which our blood-thirsty dictator reported at a recent commission meeting? Kristen claimed to have had the police shoot and kill an injured "baby deer" right in front of her house on Roycroft. I'm not seeing it. Does she EVER tell the truth? While fact checking, please check to see how many deaths have occurred from deer/vehicular accidents. The totals are not listed.
Deer management is on the agenda for tonight's commission meeting. Kristen has listed $68,000 for deer "management." Deer is our biggest concern here in Mt. Lebanon. Not toxic turf. Not pedestrian safety. Deer.
Update October 27, 2014 3:46 PM I emailed the commission this post since I am unable to attend tonight's meeting.
From: egillen476 <egillen476@aol.com>
To: klinfante <klinfante@mtlebanon.org>; cmcdonough <cmcdonough@mtlebanon.org>; sfeller <sfeller@mtlebanon.org>
Cc: commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>
Sent: Mon, Oct 27, 2014 2:40 pm
Subject: Re: deer incident report
Kristen, you are missing the point of my email. I DID NOT REPORT ANYTHING to the police or anyone else in the municipality. Why is that on the report? How many other incidents have been fabricated by the municipality?
As far as the doe, I have no idea what happened to her. She may have burned her hoof on the hot, rubber pavers in Rockwood Park, for all I know. Perhaps your deer expert will shed some light tonight on the various ways a deer can injure itself.
Elaine Gillen
-----Original Message-----
From: Kristen Linfante <klinfante@mtlebanon.org>
To: egillen476 <egillen476@aol.com>; Coleman McDonough <cmcdonough@mtlebanon.org>; Stephen Feller <sfeller@mtlebanon.org>
Cc: Commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>
Sent: Mon, Oct 27, 2014 2:26 pm
Subject: Re: deer incident report
How strange. I wonder how the deer's leg was broken. Perhaps it was a rough game of soccer in Rockwood Park. Surely it couldn't have been hit by a car.
With regards to the incident of the baby deer being shot in front of my house, I don't recall the exact date, but it was clearly before 2011 if it does not appear on this report.
All best regards,
Kristen Linfante
Commissioner, Ward 3
Kristen Linfante
Commissioner, Ward 3
(412)561-2790
Comm. Prez @KristenLinfante aghast others opp'd sharpshooters: "He's the expert & we're going against him...we're going w/ our imaginations"
— Matthew Santoni (@msantoni) October 27, 2014
Mt. Lebanon residents rally against artificial turf UPDATED
Mt. Lebanon residents rally against artificial turf
By Nick Lewandowski
For The Almanac
writer@thealmanac.net
Flanked by heavy construction equipment and mounds of earth, several dozen Mt. Lebanon residents gathered on Oct. 26 to rally against the installation of artificial turf at Middle and Wildcat fields, in the municipality’s main park. Members of the crowd displayed signs and punctuated speakers’ comments with enthusiastic rounds of applause.
Mt. Lebanon’s turf project has progressed quickly since its proposal in November 2013, despite vocal opposition from a number of residents. Opponents see artificial turf as a pet project of commissioners and sports groups, which are determined to complete it as quickly as possible despite significant cost and safety concerns.
“This process should have been open and inclusive,” resident Jeff Heiskell said. “The commission has ignored our concerns, and instead relied upon obscure studies from other countries and sales material from turf manufacturers for information. Our Public Information Office has assumed the role of spin doctor, referring to ‘field enhancements’ rather than ‘artificial turf.’”
Artificial turf of the type Mt. Lebanon is installing uses infill manufactured from recycled tires. The tire crumbs are known to contain toxic chemicals, including lead and black carbon. Turf manufacturers insist chemicals remain well within acceptable levels set by the Environmental Protection Agency, and that there are no studies proving a link between crumb rubber infill and diseases such as cancer.
The body of research on crumb rubber infill is fragmented and inconclusive, however. While there is no research proving crumb rubber causes cancer, there are no independent studies proving it is completely safe, either. Many studies feature limited samples sizes and differences in methodology that hamper comparability.
Most importantly, turf opponents say, there are no studies involving young children similar to those who will be playing on Mt. Lebanon’s fields. Young children are inherently vulnerable to chemical exposures due to their physiology.
A recent NBC News report added further fuel to the fire after noting a number of young soccer goalies playing on artificial turf have been diagnosed with blood cancers such as lymphoma. It sparked a call from New Jersey Congressman Frank Pallone for an official study of artificial turf’s impact on athletes.
Commissioner Kelly Fraasch, the only Mt. Lebanon commissioner to vote against the turf project, echoed those concerns when she addressed the crowd. She accused the commission and municipal staff of moving forward without proper due diligence.
“I asked for a materials safety data sheet for both the turf bid we accepted, and for all the bids,” she said. “Ultimately our staff decided not to provide all the MSDS sheets because they didn’t feel it was relevant. I asked about flame retardants and static applications. When I asked questions, the response I received over and over was ‘I don’t know, I’m not a turf expert.’”
Fraasch said she asked for a roll call vote on the project so commissioners would have to “own” their decision. “I was not going to let them bully me into a yes vote,” she said, to an enthusiastic round of applause.
Fraasch urged rally attendees to get involved in the political process to shut the project down.
“Contact your county council person, your congressman. We need to stand firm on this issue as leaders, not followers. There is nothing wrong with saying ‘I might be wrong, let’s go back and make sure we’re right.’”
By Nick Lewandowski
For The Almanac
writer@thealmanac.net
Flanked by heavy construction equipment and mounds of earth, several dozen Mt. Lebanon residents gathered on Oct. 26 to rally against the installation of artificial turf at Middle and Wildcat fields, in the municipality’s main park. Members of the crowd displayed signs and punctuated speakers’ comments with enthusiastic rounds of applause.
Mt. Lebanon’s turf project has progressed quickly since its proposal in November 2013, despite vocal opposition from a number of residents. Opponents see artificial turf as a pet project of commissioners and sports groups, which are determined to complete it as quickly as possible despite significant cost and safety concerns.
“This process should have been open and inclusive,” resident Jeff Heiskell said. “The commission has ignored our concerns, and instead relied upon obscure studies from other countries and sales material from turf manufacturers for information. Our Public Information Office has assumed the role of spin doctor, referring to ‘field enhancements’ rather than ‘artificial turf.’”
Artificial turf of the type Mt. Lebanon is installing uses infill manufactured from recycled tires. The tire crumbs are known to contain toxic chemicals, including lead and black carbon. Turf manufacturers insist chemicals remain well within acceptable levels set by the Environmental Protection Agency, and that there are no studies proving a link between crumb rubber infill and diseases such as cancer.
The body of research on crumb rubber infill is fragmented and inconclusive, however. While there is no research proving crumb rubber causes cancer, there are no independent studies proving it is completely safe, either. Many studies feature limited samples sizes and differences in methodology that hamper comparability.
Most importantly, turf opponents say, there are no studies involving young children similar to those who will be playing on Mt. Lebanon’s fields. Young children are inherently vulnerable to chemical exposures due to their physiology.
A recent NBC News report added further fuel to the fire after noting a number of young soccer goalies playing on artificial turf have been diagnosed with blood cancers such as lymphoma. It sparked a call from New Jersey Congressman Frank Pallone for an official study of artificial turf’s impact on athletes.
Commissioner Kelly Fraasch, the only Mt. Lebanon commissioner to vote against the turf project, echoed those concerns when she addressed the crowd. She accused the commission and municipal staff of moving forward without proper due diligence.
“I asked for a materials safety data sheet for both the turf bid we accepted, and for all the bids,” she said. “Ultimately our staff decided not to provide all the MSDS sheets because they didn’t feel it was relevant. I asked about flame retardants and static applications. When I asked questions, the response I received over and over was ‘I don’t know, I’m not a turf expert.’”
Fraasch said she asked for a roll call vote on the project so commissioners would have to “own” their decision. “I was not going to let them bully me into a yes vote,” she said, to an enthusiastic round of applause.
Fraasch urged rally attendees to get involved in the political process to shut the project down.
“Contact your county council person, your congressman. We need to stand firm on this issue as leaders, not followers. There is nothing wrong with saying ‘I might be wrong, let’s go back and make sure we’re right.’”
**************
I did a phone interview today for CBS Radio. Here is what we got from our Public Information Office.
From: LeboALERT <noreply@mtlebanon.org>To: EGillen476 <EGillen476@aol.com>Sent: Mon, Oct 27, 2014 1:03 pmSubject: LeboALERT: The Nov. issue of Mt...
This is an important notice from LeboALERT.
The Nov. issue of Mt. Lebanon Magazine is available at www.lebomag.com. ReadUpdate October 27, 2014 5:15 PM My Lebo Citizens camera man sent me this video. Looks like they are having trouble digging down more than 6".
about dog parks, Fire Department inspections, RED gifts & being a freshman.
Labels:
Artificial Turf Protest,
Kelly Fraasch,
Mt. Lebanon public information office,
Rally for Lebo Kids' Health,
The Almanac
Sunday, October 26, 2014
"Recede and Reseed" UPDATED
Gorgeous day for a rally. KDKA, WPXI, and WTAE cameras were there. The Post-Gazette and The Almanac had reporters present. I counted 75 people in attendance, including the two sports guys.
Thanks goes to the organizers, the speakers, ALL of the people who showed up, the media, and especially to the only commissioner who attended, Commissioner Kelly Fraasch.
Update October 27, 2014 7:09 AM Mt. Lebanon residents, commissioners dig into turf war
Update October 27, 2014 3:27 PM Lots of publicity! Thanks!
Not a little late; the municipality started a little early. They were supposed to wait three weeks after the permit was issued. The permit was issued on Thursday and construction started the following Monday.
Update October 27, 2014 7:09 AM Mt. Lebanon residents, commissioners dig into turf war
But David Brumfield, Mt. Lebanon Ward 4 commissioner, said the NBC report used anecdotal evidence from what some soccer players may have thought caused their cancer in place of actual scientific evidence. He also said that football players spend more time than anyone on turf, and there have been no complaints about the artificial turf used at the Mt. Lebanon High School football field. He said the artificial turf will increase the number of events and time of year the field can be used.
Update October 27, 2014 3:27 PM Lots of publicity! Thanks!
Not a little late; the municipality started a little early. They were supposed to wait three weeks after the permit was issued. The permit was issued on Thursday and construction started the following Monday.
Labels:
artificial turf,
Coach Amy Griffin,
Dave Brumfield,
KDKA,
Kelly Fraasch,
Middle and Wildcat Fields,
Post Gazette,
Rally for Lebo Kids' Health,
toxic turf,
University of Washington,
WPXI,
WTAE
Friday, October 24, 2014
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Report linking field surface to cancer elicits Mt. Lebanon protest UPDATED
Report linking field surface to cancer elicits Mt. Lebanon protest
The grass on the baseball fields along Cedar Blvd. in Mount Lebanon is removed for the installation of artificial turf on Thursday, Oct. 23, 2014.
Google+ Staff Reporter
Thursday, Oct. 23, 2014, 10:25 p.m.Updated 30 minutes ago
Construction on Mt. Lebanon's controversial $1.05 million artificial turf project began Thursday, but residents concerned about possible health and environmental effects are not giving up.
Contractors started to tear up grass on a pair of overlapping baseball diamonds in Mt. Lebanon's Main Park soon after the state Department of Environmental Protection and Allegheny County Conservation District granted the municipality a storm water discharge permit.
Mt. Lebanon Manager Steve Feller said Massillon, Ohio-based Vasco Sports Contractors could finish the project before winter sets in, despite delays of more than two months from the planned Aug. 1 start date.
A residents' group known as Mt. Lebanon Advocates for Child Health has scheduled a protest at 11 a.m. Sunday in the park, and hopes to get the municipal commission to delay or change the project.
“I'm against the turf because of the health risks,” said resident Susy Tybl, who plans to attend the protest. “The materials... contain a lot of toxins, including known carcinogens. I just wish Mt. Lebanon would wait until more is known.”
An NBC News report this month highlighted more than 30 soccer players, mostly goalies, who contracted cancer after playing extensively on artificial turf, leading them to question whether there was a link.
The report highlighted the back and forth over the topic: Environmental groups point to toxins such as benzene, lead or zinc in ground-up tire rubber used to cushion and fill in fields, while turf advocates produce studies that say those materials are locked in or aren't released in high enough quantities to affect health.
“Now with the NBC news about goalies, I'm more convinced than ever that Lebo needs to hold off on artificial turf,” said resident Dean Spahr, who originally opposed the project because he preferred grass, but became more concerned about health questions.
Jeff Heiskell, who lives near the field, said he and his wife were reconsidering having children because of their proximity to the field and their worry over whether it could affect her pregnancy.
Commission President Kristen Linfante said she and the commission knew about the goalie issue, from prior news reports, before awarding the contract in July, but felt it was outweighed by studies that said turf was safe.
“Each of us did our due diligence, and the overwhelming evidence of safety has made us feel more than confident with the decision we've made,” she said, noting artificial turf is at the high school stadium and similar material is used in local playgrounds.
Proposals for the Main Park fields included an alternative, organic infill made from ground coconut shells and cork, but contractors' bids for that option came back too high.
Dave Franklin, a coach and member of the sports advisory board that pushed for the project, said the board made its recommendation to move ahead with turf based on “the totality of the circumstances.” The board compared studies, and weighed them against the desire to create a more durable field to squeeze in more playing time and whether other institutions were choosing turf or natural grass for their fields.
“I certainly respect (the opponents') position,” he said. “Parents weigh risks for their kids every day: I don't let my kids play on trampolines; I don't let my kids swim in a pool without a lifeguard.”
In approving the storm water permit, the DEP echoed the commission majority and the EPA when it wrote that studies couldn't conclusively point to health risks from turf, though the EPA and other state and federal agencies also have said more research was needed to draw broad conclusions.
DEP approval, spokesman John Poister said, was based on whether the application met the state's regulations for runoff, which it did after Gateway Engineers modified plans for the drainage system. No one had appealed DEP's decision to the state's environmental hearing board as of this week, he said.
“The whole process was very disappointing to me,” said Elaine Gillen, who runs the Lebo Citizens blog, and said she thought government agencies would “do the right thing.”
Matthew Santoni is a staff writer for Trib Total Media. He can be reached at 412-380-5625 or msantoni@tribweb.com.
Update October 25, 2014 11:27 AM Two additional and very disturbing articles were sent to me this morning.
Is Synthetic Turf Giving Athletes Cancer?
ARTIFICIAL TURF COULD BE CAUSING CANCER AMONG FORMER PHILLIES/MLB PLAYERS
Stephanie Strasburg | Trib Total Media |
Report linking field surface to cancer elicits Mt. Lebanon protest
By Matthew SantoniGoogle+ Staff Reporter
Thursday, Oct. 23, 2014, 10:25 p.m.Updated 30 minutes ago
Construction on Mt. Lebanon's controversial $1.05 million artificial turf project began Thursday, but residents concerned about possible health and environmental effects are not giving up.
Contractors started to tear up grass on a pair of overlapping baseball diamonds in Mt. Lebanon's Main Park soon after the state Department of Environmental Protection and Allegheny County Conservation District granted the municipality a storm water discharge permit.
Mt. Lebanon Manager Steve Feller said Massillon, Ohio-based Vasco Sports Contractors could finish the project before winter sets in, despite delays of more than two months from the planned Aug. 1 start date.
A residents' group known as Mt. Lebanon Advocates for Child Health has scheduled a protest at 11 a.m. Sunday in the park, and hopes to get the municipal commission to delay or change the project.
“I'm against the turf because of the health risks,” said resident Susy Tybl, who plans to attend the protest. “The materials... contain a lot of toxins, including known carcinogens. I just wish Mt. Lebanon would wait until more is known.”
An NBC News report this month highlighted more than 30 soccer players, mostly goalies, who contracted cancer after playing extensively on artificial turf, leading them to question whether there was a link.
The report highlighted the back and forth over the topic: Environmental groups point to toxins such as benzene, lead or zinc in ground-up tire rubber used to cushion and fill in fields, while turf advocates produce studies that say those materials are locked in or aren't released in high enough quantities to affect health.
“Now with the NBC news about goalies, I'm more convinced than ever that Lebo needs to hold off on artificial turf,” said resident Dean Spahr, who originally opposed the project because he preferred grass, but became more concerned about health questions.
Jeff Heiskell, who lives near the field, said he and his wife were reconsidering having children because of their proximity to the field and their worry over whether it could affect her pregnancy.
Commission President Kristen Linfante said she and the commission knew about the goalie issue, from prior news reports, before awarding the contract in July, but felt it was outweighed by studies that said turf was safe.
“Each of us did our due diligence, and the overwhelming evidence of safety has made us feel more than confident with the decision we've made,” she said, noting artificial turf is at the high school stadium and similar material is used in local playgrounds.
Proposals for the Main Park fields included an alternative, organic infill made from ground coconut shells and cork, but contractors' bids for that option came back too high.
Dave Franklin, a coach and member of the sports advisory board that pushed for the project, said the board made its recommendation to move ahead with turf based on “the totality of the circumstances.” The board compared studies, and weighed them against the desire to create a more durable field to squeeze in more playing time and whether other institutions were choosing turf or natural grass for their fields.
“I certainly respect (the opponents') position,” he said. “Parents weigh risks for their kids every day: I don't let my kids play on trampolines; I don't let my kids swim in a pool without a lifeguard.”
In approving the storm water permit, the DEP echoed the commission majority and the EPA when it wrote that studies couldn't conclusively point to health risks from turf, though the EPA and other state and federal agencies also have said more research was needed to draw broad conclusions.
DEP approval, spokesman John Poister said, was based on whether the application met the state's regulations for runoff, which it did after Gateway Engineers modified plans for the drainage system. No one had appealed DEP's decision to the state's environmental hearing board as of this week, he said.
“The whole process was very disappointing to me,” said Elaine Gillen, who runs the Lebo Citizens blog, and said she thought government agencies would “do the right thing.”
Matthew Santoni is a staff writer for Trib Total Media. He can be reached at 412-380-5625 or msantoni@tribweb.com.
Update October 25, 2014 11:27 AM Two additional and very disturbing articles were sent to me this morning.
Is Synthetic Turf Giving Athletes Cancer?
ANOTHER NBC Nightly News Story on Artificial Turf
A followup story on NBC Nightly News tonight concerning artificial turf. High School Changes Plans for Artificial Turf Field
The school’s change of heart came after an NBC News investigation featuring University of Washington soccer coach Amy Griffin, who has compiled a list of 38 American soccer players -- 34 of them goalies -– who have been diagnosed with cancer, most commonly blood cancers like lymphoma and leukemia.Both parents and players were concerned. Just like they are here. I received a note from a high school student today asking about the negative effects the artificial turf may have on the community.
I am going to include my response to the student here, which may help parents understand how we got to this point in Mt. Lebanon.
Hi XXXXXXXX,
Thank you for contacting me. I am delighted that you are taking an interest in this topic. I know that high school students appreciate the truth and are willing to listen. I also know that high school students understand abuse of power.
What I would like to share with you are links to various resources and let you draw your own conclusions.
Since you emailed me, you must be know about my blog, lebocitizens.blogspot.com. I have linked documents and reports that illustrate the negative effects on the community.
CBS News: School replaces artificial turf over cancer concerns
Groups Giving Second Thoughts To Those Little Black Crumbs On Playing Fields
http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/10/nightly-news-on-nbc-at-630-pm.html
http://www.nbcnews.com/news/investigations/how-safe-artificial-turf-your-child-plays-n220166
http://www.today.com/video/today/56202605
Morning Joe on MSNBC
Forbes Magazine: Buyers Remorse Surfacing Over Artificial Turf Fields
VOTERS REJECT ARTIFICIAL TURF IN THREE STATES
http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/09/commissioners-and-school-board-members.html
http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/02/artificial-turf-fields-troubling.html
These are just some of the negative effects on the community. There is the lack of transparency on behalf of the municipality discussing these potentially harmful effects.
http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/10/no-leboalert-because-it-is-political.html
http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/10/kids-health-safety-fair-is-not-correct.html
The use of excess tax dollars to fund the project, without a referendum, and the abuse of power when commissioners email constituents saying that they have three votes and that it will pass.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B9r_1biKte_bLUp0dHU0bTE5eUk/view?usp=sharingWhat Mt. Lebanon residents don't know is what the DEP shared with a concerned resident. The new storm water plan will be more expensive. A lot more more expensive. Our commissioners have not disclosed that to us. Perhaps they never thought to ask. Or Gateway engineering forgot to tell them.
Where a commissioner lied about the ESB's stand on artificial turf. http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/03/mother-of-all-rtks.html
http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/02/audio-montage-of-nov-25-and-feb-11.html
In the audio montage above, Recreation Director David Donnellan is heard saying that there is a representative from the Parks Advisory Board on the Sports Advisory Board. Dave Franklin, Parks Advisory Board liaison, shares his perspective here. http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/03/appeasing-select-few.htmlIt wasn't until Mr. Franklin was absent from a meeting, when we learned about the Parks Advisory Board push back here. http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/05/finally-board-pushes-back.html
Then there is the post which shows flooding on Cedar Blvd. http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/04/i-dont-know-where-to-begin.html
and the video clip of the same from August. http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/08/cedar-blvd-closed-due-to-flooding.html Notice how the first comment accuses me of lying.
Sadly, the school board directors will be putting in artificial turf on the high school's Rock Pile." http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/02/more-artificial-turf-coming-to-high.html and http://www.thealmanac.net/article/20141021/NEWS/141029978
Finally, XXXXXXX, there will be a rally on Sunday morning at 11:00 AM down at the fields. http://lebocitizens.blogspot.com/2014/10/rally-for-lebo-kids-health_22.html I would like to invite some students to SPEAK at the rally against the turf project, if they are interested in representing the student point of view. Someone will be. There is nothing more powerful than hearing from your point of view. I hope you can make it on Sunday. If you do, please introduce yourself to me. I would love to meet another citizen exercising his First Amendment rights.
Thank you for contacting me...
Elaine Gillen.
Don't forget:
"Rally for Lebo Kids' Health"
Sunday, October 26, 2014 11:00 AM
Middle and Wildcat Fields on Cedar Blvd.
Labels:
Advocates for Lebo Kids',
artificial turf,
NBC,
Nightly News,
Nike Grind,
organic artificial turf
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Rally for Lebo Kids' Health
"Rally for Lebo Kids' Health"
October 26, 2014 11:00 AM
Who: Advocates for Lebo Kids’ Health
Where: Middle and Wildcat Fields located on Cedar Blvd.
What: Rally for Lebo Kids’ Health
When: Sunday, October 26, 2014 11:00 AM
Why: The Mt. Lebanon Commissioners have chosen to disregard warnings about the dangers of artificial turf aired on NBC and CBS. Construction has started to turf Middle and Wildcat Fields with crumb rubber infill made with shredded tires.
**********
NBC Nightly News’ investigation “How Safe is the Artificial Turf on Your Child's Sports Field?” aired an interview with University of Washington Assistant Soccer Coach Amy Griffin. Coach Griffin found a horrible coincidence where 38 soccer players, 34 of them soccer goal keepers, developed cancer. One young woman died at the age of 25.
We continue to learn about communities not willing to risk children's health with toxic turf. Mt. Lebanon is willing to take that risk with your child.
A notice from the school district:
"We have been notified by the municipality that Dixon Parking Lot (on Cedar Boulevard) will be closed beginning October 27, until further notice due to an upcoming turf installation project on Wildcat and Middle Fields."
Map of Vehicle Traffic Patterns and Pedestrian Access
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
No LeboALERT because it is political
From: egillen476 <egillen476@aol.com>
To: klinfante <klinfante@mtlebanon.org>
Cc: sfeller <sfeller@mtlebanon.org>; cmcdonough <cmcdonough@mtlebanon.org>; nsohyda <nsohyda@mtlebanon.org>; commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>; repmiller <repmiller@pahouse.net>; smorgans <smorgans@mtlebanon.org>Sent: Tue, Oct 21, 2014 10:06 AM
Subject: Re: Kids Health & Safety Fair
To: klinfante <klinfante@mtlebanon.org>
Cc: sfeller <sfeller@mtlebanon.org>; cmcdonough <cmcdonough@mtlebanon.org>; nsohyda <nsohyda@mtlebanon.org>; commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>; repmiller <repmiller@pahouse.net>; smorgans <smorgans@mtlebanon.org>Sent: Tue, Oct 21, 2014 10:06 AM
Subject: Re: Kids Health & Safety Fair
I see. It is unfortunate that you consider anything about kids' safety as political. I am not surprised.
Since the purpose of the June 12 presentation was "NOT to discuss the potential harmful effect of artificial turf" as Susan Morgans wrote in her May 23, 2014 email to Andrew McNitt, I was hoping that you would take this opportunity to let others "discuss the potential harmful effects of artificial turf."
I hope you are able to attend Sunday's rally, Commissioners.
Elaine Gillen
Since the purpose of the June 12 presentation was "NOT to discuss the potential harmful effect of artificial turf" as Susan Morgans wrote in her May 23, 2014 email to Andrew McNitt, I was hoping that you would take this opportunity to let others "discuss the potential harmful effects of artificial turf."
I hope you are able to attend Sunday's rally, Commissioners.
Elaine Gillen
-----Original Message-----
From: Kristen Linfante <klinfante@mtlebanon.org>
To: egillen476 <egillen476@aol.com>
Cc: Stephen Feller <sfeller@mtlebanon.org>; Coleman McDonough <cmcdonough@mtlebanon.org>; Nicholas Sohyda <nsohyda@mtlebanon.org>; Commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>; Rep. Dan Miller <repmiller@pahouse.net>Sent: Tue, Oct 21, 2014 8:52 am
Subject: Re: Kids Health & Safety Fair
Ms. Gillen,
For clarification, w e send out LeboALERTs only for municipal events/issues or in response to requests from formally organized groups or 501C3s. For instance, we will send out a once-a-year-alert for YMCA Indian Princess/Guide Registration or for youth soccer registration or for a membership meeting for the Mt. Lebanon Junior Women's Club. In the spirit of neutrality, we do not send out anything political in nature and have repeatedly denied requests from both the democratic and republican committees to publicize their party events. We will send out an alert for something that an elected official is sponsoring that is open to the public—for instance Dan Miller's recent fair for young people seeking jobs (although we generally don't even do that prior to an election.)
I hope this helps to clarify the stance of the municipality.
Regards,
Kristen Linfante
Commissioner, Ward 3
Kristen Linfante
From: Kristen Linfante <klinfante@mtlebanon.org>
To: egillen476 <egillen476@aol.com>
Cc: Stephen Feller <sfeller@mtlebanon.org>; Coleman McDonough <cmcdonough@mtlebanon.org>; Nicholas Sohyda <nsohyda@mtlebanon.org>; Commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>; Rep. Dan Miller <repmiller@pahouse.net>Sent: Tue, Oct 21, 2014 8:52 am
Subject: Re: Kids Health & Safety Fair
Ms. Gillen,
For clarification, w e send out LeboALERTs only for municipal events/issues or in response to requests from formally organized groups or 501C3s. For instance, we will send out a once-a-year-alert for YMCA Indian Princess/Guide Registration or for youth soccer registration or for a membership meeting for the Mt. Lebanon Junior Women's Club. In the spirit of neutrality, we do not send out anything political in nature and have repeatedly denied requests from both the democratic and republican committees to publicize their party events. We will send out an alert for something that an elected official is sponsoring that is open to the public—for instance Dan Miller's recent fair for young people seeking jobs (although we generally don't even do that prior to an election.)
I hope this helps to clarify the stance of the municipality.
Regards,
Kristen Linfante
Commissioner, Ward 3
Kristen Linfante
Commissioner, Ward 3
(412)561-2790
(412)561-2790
On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 7:48 AM, ' egillen476@aol.com' via Commission <commission@mtlebanon.org> wrote:
Steve,
I would think that a "Kids Health & Safety Fair" is the correct forum for any group concerned about kids' health.
Nothing was mentioned about my request for a LeboALERT to be sent out on Friday concerning Sunday's Rally. I had copied Susan Morgans, but as usual, I got no response from her. In fact I received ZERO responses from anyone and it wasn't until you talked with "Rep. Miller's office about this issue" did I get a response at all.
Mr. Feller, the customer service level within the Municipality is subpar. This is Brewfest Poster Request Redux.
Elaine Gillen
Steve,
I would think that a "Kids Health & Safety Fair" is the correct forum for any group concerned about kids' health.
Nothing was mentioned about my request for a LeboALERT to be sent out on Friday concerning Sunday's Rally. I had copied Susan Morgans, but as usual, I got no response from her. In fact I received ZERO responses from anyone and it wasn't until you talked with "Rep. Miller's office about this issue" did I get a response at all.
Mr. Feller, the customer service level within the Municipality is subpar. This is Brewfest Poster Request Redux.
Elaine Gillen
Monday, October 20, 2014
Kids Health & Safety Fair is not the correct forum to discuss children's safety and artificial turf UPDATED
What a day! I started out this morning with an email to our police chief and fire chief asking about getting a table for the advocates' group.
From: egillen476 <egillen476@aol.com>No response. So I sent this email:
To: cmcdonough <cmcdonough@mtlebanon.org>; nsohyda <nsohyda@mtlebanon.org>
Cc: commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>; smorgans <smorgans@mtlebanon.org>
Sent: Mon, Oct 20, 2014 9:14 am
Subject: Kids Health & Safety Fair
According to the Halloween Parade information on the Mt. Lebanon website:
After the Parade,
visit the
Kids Health & Safety Fair
Mt. Lebanon
Public Safety Center
555 Washington Road
Noon – 1:30 p.m.
Kids Activities
Information from
Mt. Lebanon Police
and Fire Department,
local organizations,
county and state
departments, and more
Health, nutrition,
wellness, and safety
information for kids
and parents
Trick or Treat in the
Safety Center for
additional candy
Concerned parents are interested in having a space concerning the health and safety of kids' health in regard to the artificial turf at the Kids Health & Safety Fair. Who should they contact?
Elaine Gillen
From: egillen476 <egillen476@aol.com>Lo and behold, I received the following email from Steve Feller denying the parents' request for having a space concerning the health and safety of kids' health in regard to the artificial turf at the Kids Health & Safety Fair.
To: cmcdonough <cmcdonough@mtlebanon.org>; nsohyda <nsohyda@mtlebanon.org>; commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>
Cc: sfeller <sfeller@mtlebanon.org>; smorgans <smorgans@mtlebanon.org>; repmiller <repmiller@pahouse.net>; msantoni <msantoni@tribweb.com>; hfunk1213 <hfunk1213@yahoo.com>; jon.delano <jon.delano@verizon.net>; nicholaslewandowski <nicholaslewandowski@gmail.com>
Sent: Mon, Oct 20, 2014 12:27 pm
Subject: You're invited
I emailed most of you earlier this morning, requesting some space for the Kids Health and Safety Fair, but I fear it will be ignored as my Brewfest Poster request was.
Anyway, you are all invited to a rally on Sunday, October 26, 2014. Invitation is attached. I have been asked to invite you all, and I will be posting it on my blog, Lebo Citizens. Would the Public Information Office issue a LeboALERT announcing Sunday's rally on Friday?
Thanks for your consideration.
Elaine Gillen
From: Stephen Feller <sfeller@mtlebanon.org>Since when is children's health political?
To: E.T. Gillen <egillen476@aol.com>
Cc: Coleman J. McDonough <cmcdonough@mtlebanon.org>; Nick Sohyda <nsohyda@mtlebanon.org>; Commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>
Sent: Mon, Oct 20, 2014 5:04 pm
Subject: Re: Kids Health & Safety Fair
Elaine:
Today I talked with both Chiefs and also Rep. Miller's office about this issue. From the first day that this event was proposed by then County Councilmember Gastgeb, the Municipality has indicated that we would support the event in the Safety Center provided that: 1) the event needs to be focused on having service providers give information to kids on safety issues 2) no political campaigning would be permitted in the safety center, 3) all of Mt. Lebanon's current sitting elected officials, but certainly the Congressman, state senator and state rep. for Mt. Lebanon, and county councilmembers representing the community should be invited in order to distribute information about agency services 4) other service providers including county departments, MRTSA, and Outreach should be invited and 5) it should be a small, informal event that avoids politics and focuses on service providers. Therefore, I am going to need to deny the request to have space for those who want to provide information on the safety of artificial turf. This is not the correct forum for that type of activity. Of course, anyone can exercise their first amendment rights and distribute information on the public sidewalks along the parade route. Please call me if you need further clarification. Thank you.
Steve
What IS the correct forum for "that type of activity?"
I guess the Public Safety Building is not public.
What a crock.
Don't forget the Rally for Lebo Kids' Health on Sunday morning at 11:00 AM on Cedar Blvd.
If anyone is interested in printing their own T-shirt, this mirrored image should be used with iron-on transfers.
Update October 23, 2014 7:36 AM I was told that this is Chief McDonough's and Chief Sohyda's event.
From: egillen476 <egillen476@aol.com>
To: repmiller <repmiller@pahouse.net>; sfeller <sfeller@mtlebanon.org>
Cc: commission <commission@mtlebanon.org>
Sent: Wed, Oct 22, 2014 6:00 pm
Subject: I'm confused.
http://www.pasenate.com/2013/10/14/smith-miller-harris-host-kids-health-and-safety-fair-oct-26/
Does anyone know what is going on? If this is Miller's event too, then the Advocates can have a table, right?
Elaine Gillen
Media, are you getting all of this? Another Mt. Lebanon move "NOT to discuss the potential harmful effects of artificial turf."
"Rally for Lebo Kids' Health" UPDATED
Updated flyer for the Rally for Lebo Kids' Health
I have been asked to post this on Lebo Citizens.
Who: Advocates for Lebo Kids’ Health
Where: Middle and Wildcat Fields located on Cedar Blvd.
What: Rally for Lebo Kids’ Health
When: Sunday, October 26, 2014 11:00 AM
Why: The Mt. Lebanon Commissioners have chosen to disregard warnings about the dangers of artificial turf aired on NBC and CBS.
I have been asked to post this on Lebo Citizens.
"Rally for Lebo Kids' Health"
Sunday, October 26, 2014* 11:00 AM
*new date and time
Who: Advocates for Lebo Kids’ Health
Where: Middle and Wildcat Fields located on Cedar Blvd.
What: Rally for Lebo Kids’ Health
When: Sunday, October 26, 2014 11:00 AM
Why: The Mt. Lebanon Commissioners have chosen to disregard warnings about the dangers of artificial turf aired on NBC and CBS.
After the Pumpkin Patch Parade on Saturday, October 25, visit the Kids Health & Safety Fair:
Advocates for Lebo Kids’ Health will be on hand to answer questions concerning the artificial turf project and the dangers of artificial turf.
Mt. Lebanon Public Safety Center
555 Washington Road
Noon - 1:30 PM
DENIED
Learn more about the tire crumb infill which will be used at Middle and Wildcat Fields.
Read the Department of Environmental Protection’s response included with the NPDES Permit issued to the Municipality of Mt. Lebanon
Watch the investigation reports on NBC Nightly and CBS
Grab iron on transfers for Sunday’s rally. Put them on Tshirts, tote bags or print out the sign here.
DENIED
Sunday, October 19, 2014
"We were days away from the infill process....We said regardless, stop everything."
CBS News: School replaces artificial turf over cancer concerns
Groups Giving Second Thoughts To Those Little Black Crumbs On Playing Fields
Shame on all you media people who read this blog and don't want to cover this issue.
Groups Giving Second Thoughts To Those Little Black Crumbs On Playing Fields
Shame on all you media people who read this blog and don't want to cover this issue.
Friday, October 17, 2014
They added the parking lot!!!!!!
A Lebo Citizens reader emailed me these photos, along with this note.
Here is a copy of the Notice of Intent (NOI) also known as the NPDES permit application.
Also, a copy of the Post Construction Stormwater Management Plan (PCSM) is here.
Thought you might be interested to know someone sneakily dropped an envelope off at my doorstep within the past hour containing the below 2 page document. Notice the project area now includes the parking lot.
Here is a copy of the Notice of Intent (NOI) also known as the NPDES permit application.
Also, a copy of the Post Construction Stormwater Management Plan (PCSM) is here.
Thursday, October 16, 2014
OK, they got the permit. UPDATED
I am sure that there will be dancing in the streets today. The NPDES permit has been granted.
Update October 17, 2014 4:11 PM Wildcat Middle Construction Begins Monday!
Update October 17, 2014 4:11 PM Wildcat Middle Construction Begins Monday!
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
I look like a chump.
What does it take to get Lebo Citizens involved? Toxic turf reports are being aired on television all over the country. A five day old baby was shot in the head while in his father's arms, in the safety of their own home. I have provided links here. I have spoken at commission meetings for over two years about the dangers of artificial turf. Since 2006, I have been going to commission meetings with concerns over guns being fired in our neighborhoods. I didn't go to last night's meeting and I heard that ONE person spoke against turf and TWO people spoke against deer culling. I look like a chump.
At one time, Chip called us "spineless bloggers." He's right. We are. When the ONE person who spoke against the artificial turf asked for an update on the turf project, John Bendel said that they are ready to start construction as soon as the permit is issued. Coaches are delivering the same message to parents. The sports cabal is breathing easier today. Parents like to use the excuse that they have small children and can't go to meetings. Guess what? Hire a babysitter for an hour. When your kids are old enough, they will be playing on these toxic fields. Have YOU done enough to stop it?
Last night, the pro-kill folks had their "Eat More Venison" signs. They stood up in unison during fellow citizens' comments to show their solidarity. They said that thousands of pounds of meat were donated to local food banks during the earlier culls. News flash. Not one pound of deer meat was donated to local food banks from the culls. Not. One. Pound. A five day old baby was shot in the head from a hunter more than three hundred yards away. That equates to EIGHTEEN houses away from my home. EIGHTEEN. Yet, TWO people spoke against the deer culling. Where is everybody? God forbid someone gets hurt or killed when these yahoos are firing guns in Mt. Lebanon. Will we all be standing around the water cooler, looking appropriately sorrowful when someone gets hurt or killed by a bullet? YOU are letting it happen.
I look like a chump.
At one time, Chip called us "spineless bloggers." He's right. We are. When the ONE person who spoke against the artificial turf asked for an update on the turf project, John Bendel said that they are ready to start construction as soon as the permit is issued. Coaches are delivering the same message to parents. The sports cabal is breathing easier today. Parents like to use the excuse that they have small children and can't go to meetings. Guess what? Hire a babysitter for an hour. When your kids are old enough, they will be playing on these toxic fields. Have YOU done enough to stop it?
Last night, the pro-kill folks had their "Eat More Venison" signs. They stood up in unison during fellow citizens' comments to show their solidarity. They said that thousands of pounds of meat were donated to local food banks during the earlier culls. News flash. Not one pound of deer meat was donated to local food banks from the culls. Not. One. Pound. A five day old baby was shot in the head from a hunter more than three hundred yards away. That equates to EIGHTEEN houses away from my home. EIGHTEEN. Yet, TWO people spoke against the deer culling. Where is everybody? God forbid someone gets hurt or killed when these yahoos are firing guns in Mt. Lebanon. Will we all be standing around the water cooler, looking appropriately sorrowful when someone gets hurt or killed by a bullet? YOU are letting it happen.
I look like a chump.
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
Worried about the safety of artificial turf?
My post, Nightly News on NBC at 6:30 PM proved to be a very popular story on Lebo Citizens. We're all concerned about the eerie coincidence which University of Washington women's soccer coach Amy Griffin noticed with young people who play on artificial turf and the increase of cancer.
There is a Commission Meeting tonight at the Municipal Building (across from Sesame Inn) at 8:00 PM in the Commission Chamber. President Kristen Linfante will not be attending tonight's meeting, so if you would like to take five minutes and express your concerns to the remaining commissioners, manager, and solicitor, you should not be harassed, insulted, or interrupted.
I have sent emails to the commissioners and school board members about the report on NBC, as well as the original article published a month before the NBC report, and only heard from Commissioner Fraasch. I did not get any response from the remaining commissioners, school board members, solicitors, manager or superintendent.
Please make time to either write to the commission (commission@mtlebanon.org) or come to tonight's meeting and voice your concerns about artificial turf. Please.
There is a Commission Meeting tonight at the Municipal Building (across from Sesame Inn) at 8:00 PM in the Commission Chamber. President Kristen Linfante will not be attending tonight's meeting, so if you would like to take five minutes and express your concerns to the remaining commissioners, manager, and solicitor, you should not be harassed, insulted, or interrupted.
I have sent emails to the commissioners and school board members about the report on NBC, as well as the original article published a month before the NBC report, and only heard from Commissioner Fraasch. I did not get any response from the remaining commissioners, school board members, solicitors, manager or superintendent.
Please make time to either write to the commission (commission@mtlebanon.org) or come to tonight's meeting and voice your concerns about artificial turf. Please.
Labels:
Kristen Linfante,
NBC,
Nightly News,
toxic turf
Allegheny Co. tax appeal deadlines are unfair
On October 20, 2014, our school board will be voting to approve tax refunds for 70 Mt. Lebanon taxpayers.
Lebo Citizens reader and former manager of Allegheny County’s Office of Property Assessments, Mike Suley wrote this opinion piece in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
Allegheny Co. tax appeal deadlines are unfair
List of Tax Refunds
– The list of tax refunds totals $80,364.27 for 70 refunds. The list has been reviewed by the solicitor’s office and is recommended for approval. The Superintendent recommends approval of this list.
Lebo Citizens reader and former manager of Allegheny County’s Office of Property Assessments, Mike Suley wrote this opinion piece in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
Allegheny Co. tax appeal deadlines are unfair
No other county in Pennsylvania forces you to pay taxes before your tax assessment appeal is resolved
October 14, 2014 12:00 AM
Allegheny County is the only county in Pennsylvania that forces you to pay taxes before your tax assessment appeal is resolved. For example, the appeal deadline in Allegheny County is March 31, 2015, for the 2015 tax year, yet 2015 county, Pittsburgh and city school district bills will be mailed out before the appeals deadline. It’s not fair to pay first and appeal later. There are city residents still waiting on retroactive appeal decisions for this tax year.
Under home rule, the appeal deadline has been changed at least 20 times. In 2013 the county changed the deadline again to give property owners and taxing bodies a “second chance” to appeal for the same tax year because a prior county ordinance permitted appeals before the tax bills went out. This was done even though tens of thousands of the previous appeals were unresolved and awaiting disposition going into the 2013 tax year.
Allegheny County politicians have complained for years that the county’s citizens should be on a level playing field with other counties. We’re not. It’s time to have an appeals deadline with resolution before the tax bills go out.
MIKE SULEY
Mt. Lebanon
The writer, an assessment consultant, is former manager of Allegheny County’s Office of Property Assessments.
Allegheny County is the only county in Pennsylvania that forces you to pay taxes before your tax assessment appeal is resolved. For example, the appeal deadline in Allegheny County is March 31, 2015, for the 2015 tax year, yet 2015 county, Pittsburgh and city school district bills will be mailed out before the appeals deadline. It’s not fair to pay first and appeal later. There are city residents still waiting on retroactive appeal decisions for this tax year.
Under home rule, the appeal deadline has been changed at least 20 times. In 2013 the county changed the deadline again to give property owners and taxing bodies a “second chance” to appeal for the same tax year because a prior county ordinance permitted appeals before the tax bills went out. This was done even though tens of thousands of the previous appeals were unresolved and awaiting disposition going into the 2013 tax year.
Allegheny County politicians have complained for years that the county’s citizens should be on a level playing field with other counties. We’re not. It’s time to have an appeals deadline with resolution before the tax bills go out.
MIKE SULEY
Mt. Lebanon
The writer, an assessment consultant, is former manager of Allegheny County’s Office of Property Assessments.
Monday, October 13, 2014
$109 Million Liability on the books
Amy Lewis, from Maher Duessel, spoke at tonight's school board meeting. As written on the Agenda, Approval of Fiscal Audit for the 2013-14 Fiscal Year,
Our school board directors, however, like to blame Tom Corbett.
– Annually, the Board reviews the audit by Maher Duessel, CPAs of the fiscal records for the prior fiscal year. This year’s audit will be reviewed by Amy Lewis, CPA and Dave Duessel, CPA and will be presented in final form for approval at the October 20 meeting.Ms. Lewis reported that there has been a change in auditing and our PSERS obligation must be on the books this year. It is approximately three times our covered payroll.
Our school board directors, however, like to blame Tom Corbett.
Sunday, October 12, 2014
Still time for Plein Air 2014
Have you seen the artwork this year? There is still time!
Today's schedule:
ARTISTS' MARKET - OVER 60 ARTISTS, FOOD TRUCK ROUNDUP + MORE!
10:00 AM- 5 PM
Today's schedule:
ARTISTS' MARKET - OVER 60 ARTISTS, FOOD TRUCK ROUNDUP + MORE!
10:00 AM- 5 PM
Academy Parking Lot - Located directly behind PNC Bank (Academy Avenue)
Gallery Open - Over 200 original Plein Air paintings will be available for purchase. Come meet the artists and see the beautiful scenery of western Pennsylvania captured on canvas.
10:00 AM- 2:00 PM
Mt. Lebanon Municipal Building - 710 Washington Road Mt. Lebanon PA 15228
Tour de Mt. Lebanon - Take a challenging bike tour of historic Mt. Lebanon! There are two ride options ~ 23 mile loop or a 12 mile loop. Both involve numerous steep hills, brick streets and each mile is on roads shared with cars. Tickets are $25. Shirt provided morning of event.
Gallery Open - Over 200 original Plein Air paintings will be available for purchase. Come meet the artists and see the beautiful scenery of western Pennsylvania captured on canvas.
10:00 AM- 2:00 PM
Mt. Lebanon Municipal Building - 710 Washington Road Mt. Lebanon PA 15228
Tour de Mt. Lebanon - Take a challenging bike tour of historic Mt. Lebanon! There are two ride options ~ 23 mile loop or a 12 mile loop. Both involve numerous steep hills, brick streets and each mile is on roads shared with cars. Tickets are $25. Shirt provided morning of event.
7:00 AM (Registration)
8:00 AM Ride Begins
12:00 PM
Mt. Lebanon at Large
12:00 PM
Mt. Lebanon at Large
The map man has a plan for stormwater solutions UPDATED
The Municipality of Mt. Lebanon should hire this man!
The map man has a plan for stormwater solutions
The region faces a $3 billion project to clean up the sewer systems. Matt Graham of Landbase Systems is the go-to guy to pinpoint how the water flows.
The map man has a plan for stormwater solutions
The region faces a $3 billion project to clean up the sewer systems. Matt Graham of Landbase Systems is the go-to guy to pinpoint how the water flows.
Larry Roberts/Post-Gazette
|
October 12, 2014 12:00 AM
By Diana Nelson Jones / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
One recent morning, Matt Graham parked on Swan Way in Morningside and noted a small backyard that was unusually green. The lawn meets the alley at a trough in the pavement — rain diversion at its most rudimentary.
“Let’s see how much rain drains to the [municipal] inlets here,” he said, tapping his laptop to summon a map. He found the location and drew a box around it. Tap, tap. Click. The result: 478,000 gallons a year.
In a typical year, precipitation that overtakes combined water and sewer pipes sends 9 billion gallons of sewage into the region’s waterways, said Jeanne Clark, spokeswoman for Alcosan (the Allegheny County Sanitary Authority).
Because of this, Alcosan and the 83 municipalities it serves are under consent agreements to comply with county health and state and federal clean water mandates by 2026. The costs of updating the systems range from $2 billion to $3 billion.
Ms. Clark said half the water Alcosan treats is rain or groundwater leaks. If rain is diverted from those pipes by “green infrastructure” — rain gardens, swales, water sculpture and underground systems — it can infiltrate into the ground like it’s supposed to, preventing sewage overflows and sparing every Alcosan rate payer unnecessary treatment costs. The more traditional form of construction — underground storage tunnels and bigger collection pipes — is known as “gray” infrastructure.
With growing demand for green infrastructure as part of the big fix, Mr. Graham’s stormwater data and mapping service, the GOAL Process, has brought precision to the task of compliance, showing how soil composition, terrain, elevation and the built environment affect where raindrops go after they hit the ground.
It has shown that green infrastructure, indeed, has a place in the big fix — and it can pinpoint the optimal places.
Mr. Graham identified drainage routes to 40,000 inlets where combined water and sewer lines are still used. Dropping virtual raindrops, he asked the system to rank the inlets by gallons of flow. The result was startling and exciting in the potential for big-impact projects: nearly 12 percent of inlets took more than 50 percent of the flow.
If the region is looking at a $2 billion to $3 billion fix, Mr. Graham said, why wouldn’t we install green infrastructure where it can divert the most gallons per dollar spent?
That question has already guided storm water diversion projects in high-yield sites from Etna to the East End’s Project 15206 to the South Side’s 21st Street. Mr. Graham has become a go-to resource on 300 site designs and has helped municipalities update their maps.
A landscape architect with engineering experience, Mr. Graham developed geographic information software in the 1990s that secured him a lucrative contract with Sprint. In 1996, he and his longtime friend Richard Thorne founded Landbase Systems, for which Mr. Thorne’s expertise in high-speed cloud based solutions has made “all things possible” in Mr. Graham’s pursuit of green solutions for storm water.
He designed the GOAL Process to show millions of calculations graphically. It can trace surface water above an inlet. Mr. Graham can click on “surface trace” to see the area of the flow. He can prompt the data to show him where water is flowing. Color coding shows variations in elevation. The computer does all the work except what the eye needs to see, he said during a drive around the city, “then you have to go out and look.” Go out and look — that’s what GOAL stands for.
He uses the system to show him what is happening in real time. During one particularly heavy rain, he checked it to see where water was gushing. He drove to 48th and Harrison Streets in Lawrenceville, where rain was swelling along one portion of 48th.
“I calculated that 1 million gallons a year could be captured there. This is low hanging fruit,” he said, noting the number of large warehouses whose downspouts could be redirected. “The best solution would be infiltration through subsurface storage on the edges of the road.
“Every time you have to dig into the streets,” he said, “there should be a plan for how green infrastructure could be installed.”
On the recent drive around the city, he noted sites where tens of millions of gallons could be diverted each year: the Port Authority parking lot on Washington Boulevard in Larimer, the Shop ’n Save parking lot on Butler Street in Lawrenceville, Bartlett Street in Squirrel Hill and several streets in Homewood.
One of those streets, Wheeler Street, is a cascade of rain that misses inlets all the way from Penn Hills, he said. “Interception points in a stepped-down design could help Nine Mile Run and reduce flow to Negley Run.”
Brenda Smith, executive director of the Nine Mile Run Watershed Association, has been working with Mr. Graham to identify opportunities to reduce run-off into into that stream, whose watershed is 6.5 square miles through Squirrel Hill, Point Breeze, Homewood, Wilkinsburg, Edgewood and Swissvale.
One site of great potential is a combined sewer overflow near the Wilkinsburg busway.
“It empties into an underground tributary of Nine Mile Run,” Ms. Smith said. “Twenty-five million gallons of storm and sewage overflow into Nine Mile Run every year” from there.
In Etna, green infrastructure at 23 sites will keep 16.1 million gallons out of the borough’s and Alcosan’s systems each year, said borough manager Mary Ellen Ramage. For a one-time cost of $6.1 million, Etna’s green infrastructure — including a parking lot rain garden to a collection system under sidewalk grates — will sequester and naturally infiltrate close to 20 percent of the rain Etna would otherwise contribute to the system.
John Schombert, executive director of Three Rivers Wet Weather, said 20 percent is the best expectation of green infrastructure’s role in the regional fix. “It would be difficult to make it more than that because of development and private property” constraints, he said.
“I think we can do more than that,” said Mr. Graham, noting that most run-off is on city streets and most opportunities are in public rights of way. “In places that are flat, I’d agree with 20 percent, but in Pittsburgh we have a bigger opportunity because of the geography. I think it could be 40 to 50 percent.”
Notably, the GOAL Process has been used in Project 15206, named for the ZIP code in Highland Park and Morningside. It is a multisite effort to intercept storm water in Heth’s and Negley Runs with a variety of green infrastructure, from bioswales to babbling brooks to water amenities people could play in.
Storm water has been the source of chronic flooding on nearby Washington Boulevard, where four people died in a storm surge in August 2011. Every year, between 700 and 800 million gallons of storm water in the Negley Run watershed end up in one overflow near the Highland Park Bridge.
Ms. Clark at Alcosan said that is the single largest overflow site in the service area.
The Penn State Center is managing Project 15206, an initiative of state Sen. Jim Ferlo, D-Highland Park. It is in the design phase, with commitments from the city’s Department of Public Works to build the Negley Run projects, said Lisa Vavro, sustainable environments manager for the Penn State Center.
”I don’t think we could do Project 15206 without Matt’s analysis,“ she said. ”It is so detailed and more out of the box than you would find in normal engineering scenarios.“
Heth’s Run lies in a gorge below Morningside. Chislett Street, a few blocks from Swan Way, lies along the rim.
At Chislett and Vetter, Mr. Graham stood beside an intake drain with his laptop. He asked the same question he had asked on Swan Way: How many gallons drain to nearby intakes? Tap tap tap. Box. Click: 730,000 a year. A perfect spot for a storage system under the sidewalk with a slow-release feature that would link to the Heth’s Run project.
“The biggest opportunities are the natural infrastructure of parks,” he said later, stopping in Lawrenceville, along the 40th Street side of Arsenal Park. “When 40th Street sends water down in sheets, curb inserts could intercept it and filter pollutants out then release the water slowly into the park.“
As planning begins on a renovation of the park, Mr. Graham is consulting on its green infrastructure. He said it could become ”a spectacular example of a water amenity“ instead of water down the drain.
In Squirrel Hill, Mr. Graham turned onto Bartlett Street. ”Water blows right by inlets in this street and goes into inlets at the entrance to Schenley Park. By my calculations, 14 million gallons could be captured here and slow-released into the park.
“If you take water into a system that slows it, filters it and infiltrates it, any natural stream can handle that,” Mr. Graham said. Instead of paying Alcosan to treat it, he said, microbes and wetland creatures will do it for free. “That’s a double win.”
Update October 13, 2014 11:32 AM Dormont hires firm to develop rainwater runoff fee system
Western Pa. towns eye fees to control stormwater runoff
By Diana Nelson Jones / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
One recent morning, Matt Graham parked on Swan Way in Morningside and noted a small backyard that was unusually green. The lawn meets the alley at a trough in the pavement — rain diversion at its most rudimentary.
“Let’s see how much rain drains to the [municipal] inlets here,” he said, tapping his laptop to summon a map. He found the location and drew a box around it. Tap, tap. Click. The result: 478,000 gallons a year.
In a typical year, precipitation that overtakes combined water and sewer pipes sends 9 billion gallons of sewage into the region’s waterways, said Jeanne Clark, spokeswoman for Alcosan (the Allegheny County Sanitary Authority).
Because of this, Alcosan and the 83 municipalities it serves are under consent agreements to comply with county health and state and federal clean water mandates by 2026. The costs of updating the systems range from $2 billion to $3 billion.
Ms. Clark said half the water Alcosan treats is rain or groundwater leaks. If rain is diverted from those pipes by “green infrastructure” — rain gardens, swales, water sculpture and underground systems — it can infiltrate into the ground like it’s supposed to, preventing sewage overflows and sparing every Alcosan rate payer unnecessary treatment costs. The more traditional form of construction — underground storage tunnels and bigger collection pipes — is known as “gray” infrastructure.
Larry Roberts/Post-Gazette
|
It has shown that green infrastructure, indeed, has a place in the big fix — and it can pinpoint the optimal places.
Mr. Graham identified drainage routes to 40,000 inlets where combined water and sewer lines are still used. Dropping virtual raindrops, he asked the system to rank the inlets by gallons of flow. The result was startling and exciting in the potential for big-impact projects: nearly 12 percent of inlets took more than 50 percent of the flow.
If the region is looking at a $2 billion to $3 billion fix, Mr. Graham said, why wouldn’t we install green infrastructure where it can divert the most gallons per dollar spent?
That question has already guided storm water diversion projects in high-yield sites from Etna to the East End’s Project 15206 to the South Side’s 21st Street. Mr. Graham has become a go-to resource on 300 site designs and has helped municipalities update their maps.
A landscape architect with engineering experience, Mr. Graham developed geographic information software in the 1990s that secured him a lucrative contract with Sprint. In 1996, he and his longtime friend Richard Thorne founded Landbase Systems, for which Mr. Thorne’s expertise in high-speed cloud based solutions has made “all things possible” in Mr. Graham’s pursuit of green solutions for storm water.
He designed the GOAL Process to show millions of calculations graphically. It can trace surface water above an inlet. Mr. Graham can click on “surface trace” to see the area of the flow. He can prompt the data to show him where water is flowing. Color coding shows variations in elevation. The computer does all the work except what the eye needs to see, he said during a drive around the city, “then you have to go out and look.” Go out and look — that’s what GOAL stands for.
He uses the system to show him what is happening in real time. During one particularly heavy rain, he checked it to see where water was gushing. He drove to 48th and Harrison Streets in Lawrenceville, where rain was swelling along one portion of 48th.
“I calculated that 1 million gallons a year could be captured there. This is low hanging fruit,” he said, noting the number of large warehouses whose downspouts could be redirected. “The best solution would be infiltration through subsurface storage on the edges of the road.
“Every time you have to dig into the streets,” he said, “there should be a plan for how green infrastructure could be installed.”
On the recent drive around the city, he noted sites where tens of millions of gallons could be diverted each year: the Port Authority parking lot on Washington Boulevard in Larimer, the Shop ’n Save parking lot on Butler Street in Lawrenceville, Bartlett Street in Squirrel Hill and several streets in Homewood.
One of those streets, Wheeler Street, is a cascade of rain that misses inlets all the way from Penn Hills, he said. “Interception points in a stepped-down design could help Nine Mile Run and reduce flow to Negley Run.”
Brenda Smith, executive director of the Nine Mile Run Watershed Association, has been working with Mr. Graham to identify opportunities to reduce run-off into into that stream, whose watershed is 6.5 square miles through Squirrel Hill, Point Breeze, Homewood, Wilkinsburg, Edgewood and Swissvale.
One site of great potential is a combined sewer overflow near the Wilkinsburg busway.
“It empties into an underground tributary of Nine Mile Run,” Ms. Smith said. “Twenty-five million gallons of storm and sewage overflow into Nine Mile Run every year” from there.
In Etna, green infrastructure at 23 sites will keep 16.1 million gallons out of the borough’s and Alcosan’s systems each year, said borough manager Mary Ellen Ramage. For a one-time cost of $6.1 million, Etna’s green infrastructure — including a parking lot rain garden to a collection system under sidewalk grates — will sequester and naturally infiltrate close to 20 percent of the rain Etna would otherwise contribute to the system.
John Schombert, executive director of Three Rivers Wet Weather, said 20 percent is the best expectation of green infrastructure’s role in the regional fix. “It would be difficult to make it more than that because of development and private property” constraints, he said.
“I think we can do more than that,” said Mr. Graham, noting that most run-off is on city streets and most opportunities are in public rights of way. “In places that are flat, I’d agree with 20 percent, but in Pittsburgh we have a bigger opportunity because of the geography. I think it could be 40 to 50 percent.”
Notably, the GOAL Process has been used in Project 15206, named for the ZIP code in Highland Park and Morningside. It is a multisite effort to intercept storm water in Heth’s and Negley Runs with a variety of green infrastructure, from bioswales to babbling brooks to water amenities people could play in.
Storm water has been the source of chronic flooding on nearby Washington Boulevard, where four people died in a storm surge in August 2011. Every year, between 700 and 800 million gallons of storm water in the Negley Run watershed end up in one overflow near the Highland Park Bridge.
Ms. Clark at Alcosan said that is the single largest overflow site in the service area.
The Penn State Center is managing Project 15206, an initiative of state Sen. Jim Ferlo, D-Highland Park. It is in the design phase, with commitments from the city’s Department of Public Works to build the Negley Run projects, said Lisa Vavro, sustainable environments manager for the Penn State Center.
”I don’t think we could do Project 15206 without Matt’s analysis,“ she said. ”It is so detailed and more out of the box than you would find in normal engineering scenarios.“
Heth’s Run lies in a gorge below Morningside. Chislett Street, a few blocks from Swan Way, lies along the rim.
At Chislett and Vetter, Mr. Graham stood beside an intake drain with his laptop. He asked the same question he had asked on Swan Way: How many gallons drain to nearby intakes? Tap tap tap. Box. Click: 730,000 a year. A perfect spot for a storage system under the sidewalk with a slow-release feature that would link to the Heth’s Run project.
“The biggest opportunities are the natural infrastructure of parks,” he said later, stopping in Lawrenceville, along the 40th Street side of Arsenal Park. “When 40th Street sends water down in sheets, curb inserts could intercept it and filter pollutants out then release the water slowly into the park.“
As planning begins on a renovation of the park, Mr. Graham is consulting on its green infrastructure. He said it could become ”a spectacular example of a water amenity“ instead of water down the drain.
In Squirrel Hill, Mr. Graham turned onto Bartlett Street. ”Water blows right by inlets in this street and goes into inlets at the entrance to Schenley Park. By my calculations, 14 million gallons could be captured here and slow-released into the park.
“If you take water into a system that slows it, filters it and infiltrates it, any natural stream can handle that,” Mr. Graham said. Instead of paying Alcosan to treat it, he said, microbes and wetland creatures will do it for free. “That’s a double win.”
Update October 13, 2014 11:32 AM Dormont hires firm to develop rainwater runoff fee system
Western Pa. towns eye fees to control stormwater runoff
“During the past two years, I have been asked to speak at three different professional conferences on this subject and Mt. Lebanon's program,” said Mt. Lebanon municipal Manager Steve Feller. “Because of the stormwater fee, Mt. Lebanon has had the resources to initiate numerous projects to maintain and enhance the existing system and also expand the system to areas deficient of storm sewer infrastructure.”And
Since Mt. Lebanon adopted the program, which raises about $1 million a year, Dormont, Whitehall and Scott have weighed potential fees, Feller said.
Whitehall is working with Gateway Engineers to develop a fee system, though it will be weeks before a proposal is ready and next year before any billing would happen. The borough is repairing its sanitary sewers and may reduce its dedicated sewer fee if it starts a storm sewer fee, said Councilman Robert McKown.Don't do it, Dormont and Whitehall.
Labels:
Landbase Systems,
Matt Graham,
Post Gazette,
stormwater
Friday, October 10, 2014
Change Orders for October 2014
Change Orders for High School Renovation Project – This month’s list of change orders totals $69,696 for the construction projects, $1,322 for reimbursable changes, $2,232 from the Capital Projects Fund, and $11,581 from soft costs. The change orders are as follows:
a. GC-106-247 to Nello for $35,008 for walls, fencing, bulkheads and sidewalk excavation,
b. EL-67-248 to Farfield for $20,239 for power, data, lighting, fire alarms and safety work,
c. PL-34-249 to Vrabel for $14,449 for piping and hydrant work,
d. IN-07-09 to Nello for $727 to repair glazing,
e. IN-08-10 to Vrabel for $595 for pipe repairs,
a. GC-106-247 to Nello for $35,008 for walls, fencing, bulkheads and sidewalk excavation,
b. EL-67-248 to Farfield for $20,239 for power, data, lighting, fire alarms and safety work,
c. PL-34-249 to Vrabel for $14,449 for piping and hydrant work,
d. IN-07-09 to Nello for $727 to repair glazing,
e. IN-08-10 to Vrabel for $595 for pipe repairs,
f. EL-68-250 to Farfield for $2,232 for PA repairs, and
g. EL-69-251 to Farfield for $11,581 for technology changes.
The Superintendent recommends approval of these change orders.
g. EL-69-251 to Farfield for $11,581 for technology changes.
The Superintendent recommends approval of these change orders.
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