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The National Water Quality Monitoring Network for U.S. Coastal Waters and their Tributaries National Water Quality Monitoring Council October 31, 2006.

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Presentation on theme: "The National Water Quality Monitoring Network for U.S. Coastal Waters and their Tributaries National Water Quality Monitoring Council October 31, 2006."— Presentation transcript:

1 The National Water Quality Monitoring Network for U.S. Coastal Waters and their Tributaries National Water Quality Monitoring Council October 31, 2006

2 Charge from Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) and National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) in February, 2005 Design report presented to ACWI in January, 2006 ACWI requested two new recommendations – Small Interagency staff to coordinate next steps – One or more pilot studies to test concepts and further develop design ACWI formally accepted report in April, 2006 History

3 Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) – SWAQ (Subcommittee on Water Availability and Quality) – JSOST (Joint Subcommittee on Ocean Science and Technology) Subcommittee on Integrated Management of Ocean Resources (SIMOR) Network Presentations

4 GEO (U.S. Group on Earth Observations) ORRAP (Ocean Research and Resources Advisory Panel) ICOSRMI (Interagency Committee on Ocean Science and Resource Management Integration) Federal Agencies (EPA, NOAA, USGS, DOI) Network Presentations

5 National Water Quality Monitoring Conference – May 8-11, 2006 – Approximately 900 attendees from Federal and State agencies, Tribes, academia, private sector, volunteer monitoring community – Plenary presentations – 4 special sessions with open dialogue Network Presentations

6 Appoint Interagency Coordination Staff – OSTP, EPA, NOAA, and USGS Draft tasking statement – Describe context for pilots and how they will be selected – Describe how pilots and subsequent demonstrations serve as template – Coordinate preparation of technical specifications for some elements of Network design Current Interagency Coordination

7 A Review of the Design Features Clearly defined objectives that address management needs Linkage with IOOS Flexibility over time Includes – metadata, – quality assurance, and – data management system that provides accessible data Coordinated monitoring of resources in upland, coastal, and ocean areas

8 Structure of the Design Nine resource compartments Fixed station and probabilistic designs Core variables and sampling frequencies specified Provisions for data comparability, management & access A continuum of Observations Estuaries Nearshore Offshore and EEZ Great Lakes Coastal Beaches (BEACH Act) Wetlands With Flow and Flux from Rivers Atmosphere Groundwater

9 The Design Will Not: Provide data on all water resources  Small rivers  Lakes and Reservoirs  Local aquifers Replace State Clean Water Act use attainment monitoring  305 (b)  303 (d) Deal with compliance monitoring

10 Phase 1: Network design (completed) Phase 2: Develop and carry out pilot studies Underway to choose pilots & estimate costs Confirm acceptance in January, 2007 Then complete by January, 2008 Phase 3: Demonstration projects Phase 4: Nation-wide implementation Network Implementation: Overall Process

11 Pilot studies – Phase 2 – Conduct inventory of on-going monitoring – Specify all the needed monitoring – Compare to design and identify gaps – Undertake With existing resources During calendar year 2007 Demonstration projects – Phase 3 – New instrumentation and field work to fill gaps – New resources required – Calendar year 2008 and beyond Pilot studies & Demonstration projects

12 Two or more pilots to bracket implementation challenges [data rich and data poor, for example] Criteria to be developed by early November 2006 – Physical setting: upland, estuary, offshore – Partnerships in study areas very important – Coordinate with IOOS – Partners willingness to work within existing resources Pilot studies

13 Core variables to be monitored – Likely similar to the IOOS list Variables that have known methods and performance Includes other measures that are less certain Specific locations to be monitored in each resource component Specific organizations identified to conduct monitoring Specifications Expected From The Pilots

14 Announce our plans & timing to potential regional partners Select partners and confirm project timing, costs Seek ACWI and ICOSRMI approval of the plan in January, 2007 During Pilots, Interagency working group will – Coordinate its work with ACWI and its subgroups – Report every 4 months to JSOST, SIMOR, and SWAQ Present report with results of pilot studies in January 2008 Next Steps


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