DEP Accepting Applications For Spring Highway Cleanup Volunteers

The Department of Environmental Protection is accepting volunteers for the state’s spring highway cleanup later this month.

The Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) is accepting volunteers for the state’s spring highway cleanup later this month.

The Adopt-A-Highway litter cleanup program is scheduled for April 29. It’s open to individuals and families, as well as churches, businesses, schools and civic organizations.

It’s organized by the DEP’s Rehabilitation and Environmental Action Plan (REAP) to “save taxpayers money by increasing public awareness and to serve as an educational tool by focusing on the consequences which result when littering is allowed to continue unchecked,” according to the program’s web page.

Volunteers can sign up to help pick up trash on any state-maintained road, back road or main route. The program will provide garbage bags, work gloves and safety vests and will dispose of all trash collected by volunteers. 

Last year, 2,700 individual volunteers signed up for the spring cleanup, with 68,350 pounds of litter removed from state roads.

Groups can register by calling 1-800-322-5530 or emailing dep.aah@wv.gov by April 21. If a voicemail is reached, REAP tells volunteers to leave their name, phone number, group name, date of cleanup, number of participants and the county in which the road is located. 

Individuals must be 12 years old or older to volunteer.

Ohio River Sweep Being Held In Smaller Groups Due To COVID

The Ohio River Sweep annual volunteer cleanup is changing this year as a result of the continuing COVID-19 pandemic.

Large numbers of volunteers usually participate in the event, so organizers have introduced “Mini-Sweeps.”

Participants in West Virginia choose the date and location, and the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection’s Rehabilitation Environmental Action Plan and the Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission will provide support and supplies for a socially distanced cleanup event, officials said.

Events can be held between Aug. 1 and Oct. 31 in small groups to allow for social distancing, the Department of Environmental Protection said in a news release.

ORSANCO has partnered with environmental protection agencies in West Virginia, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky and Pennsylvania since 1989 on the Ohio River Sweep. The effort extends the entire length of the river with volunteers from the six states bordering the river removing litter.

Volunteers who want to participate can email DEPwvmis@wv.gov or call (800) 322-5530 to plan their cleanup and arrange for supplies, the release said.

EPA Selects W.Va. for $1M in Brownfields Grants

Federal environmental regulators have picked five West Virginia projects to receive $1 million in brownfields grants.

 The Environmental Protection Agency program helps communities conduct environmental assessments of properties, review cleanup options, and start cleanup at contaminated sites.
 
The recipients include the Wayne County Economic Development Authority, city of Morgantown, city of Thomas and Wyoming County Economic Development Authority.
 
The state Department of Environmental Protection also received one grant for Nicholas, Fayette, and Raleigh counties.
 
The Wyoming project covers the Barkers Creek Industrial Park, which has been abandoned since 2000.
 
The five grants were $200,000 each. Most grants cover assessment of eight to 15 possible sites.
 
Overall, 171 communities in 44 states are receiving 264 EPA brownfields grants. EPA announced $67 million in nationwide brownfields funding Wednesday.

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