celebrating our success david k. paylor, director environment virginia april 2013

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Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

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Page 1: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

Celebrating Our SuccessDavid K. Paylor, Director

Environment VirginiaApril 2013

Page 2: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

Virginia’s population growth

-

2

4

6

8

Million

s

1970 2010

Page 3: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

More rules from EPA

Page 4: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

600

700

800

900

2008 2012

DEQ employees

Page 5: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

1. Promote pollution prevention2. Reduce levels of pollutants3. Timely, consistent & quality permits4. Improve public understanding &

participation5. Perform comprehensive planning &

analysis6. Effective and efficient use of agency

resources

Goals for the merger

Page 6: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

Air is cleaner

Page 7: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

0.050

0.070

0.090

0.110

0.130

Fairfax Co.

Henrico Co.

Suffolk

Part

s p

er

million

National 8-hour standard: .075 PPM

National 1-hour standard: .120 PPM

1979 2009

Ozone levels are declining

Page 8: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

0

15

30

45

60

75

90

105

120

PPB

SO2

2011 WLA 21.4 million pounds

1980 2009

SO2 emissions trend

NAAQS 75 PPB (national standard)

Page 9: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

8.0

9.0

10.0

11.0

12.0

13.0

14.0

15.0

16.0

Arlington Co.Chesterfield Co.Bristol Norfolk

3-y

ear

Desi

gn V

alu

e,

Mic

rogra

ms

per

Cubic

Mete

r

PM2.5 NAAQS (national standard)

2000 2010

PM2.5 (fine particles) trends

Page 10: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

0

100,000

200,000

300,000

400,000

500,000

600,000

NOXVOCSO2PM25

Ton

s p

er

Year

1980 2010

Major air pollutant emissions are down 40%

Page 11: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

Waterways are cleaner

Page 12: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

$2.67 Billion Clean Water Revolving Loan Fund

$753 Million Water Quality Improvement Fund

municipal wastewater treatment plantssanitary sewers

storm water sewersfailing septic systems,

pit privies and “straight-line” discharges animal waste structures

Investments in clean water

Page 13: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

Million

Pou

nd

s

2011 WLA 21.4 million pounds

Nitrogen into CB from point sources is down

1995 2011

Page 14: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

Pollution from bacteria is down

Page 15: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013
Page 16: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

29 streams designated as “Exceptional Waters”

Streams are preserved

Page 17: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

• First comprehensive planning legislation

• 100% compliance with submission deadlines

• 97% participating in regional plan

• First Drought Assessment & Response Plan

Water supplies are protected

Page 18: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

3,535 A saved

2,090 A lost

Wetlands are protected & conserved

Page 19: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

Land is preserved

2,870 acres acquired through DEQ & partners

Page 20: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

Land is cleaner

Page 21: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

Fewer leaking petroleum tanks

• 1993– 1,342 reported annually

• 2011– 163 reported annually

>30,000 total sites cleaned

Page 22: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

0

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

3000

3500

4000

Acr

es

1996 2012

~3,400 acres at 275 sites cleaned through Voluntary Remediation Program

Page 23: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

Environmental Indicators for Corrective Action Sites

Human Health Exposures Controlled Groundwater Migration Controlled

Envir

onm

enta

l In

dic

ato

rs C

om

ple

ted

1999 2011

>100 hazardous waste site cleanups

Page 24: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

• Due to recycling, reuse, and reductions

• Under 20% in 1991• Over 43 % in 2012

More waste diverted from landfills

Page 25: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

Less than 200 piles remain; (only 1.7 million tires)

1998 2011

>23 million tires removed

0

300

600

900

1200

1500

Tire Piles

Page 26: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

• More access to public lands• Improved shoreline management• Globally important habitat saved • Ecology & economy of Eastern Shore

Coastal resources preserved

Page 27: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

$6,577,705

$2,354,579

$7,084,144

$131,699

FY04-FY11

AirWasteWaterMultimedia

Consistent enforcement>$16M in penalties collected and $3M is SEPS

Page 28: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

>1,350 businesses involved

Page 29: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

Grown to 609 facilities since its inception in 2001

In 2011, cost savings of $32 million from recycling and conservation. –99% less hazardous waste disposed–30% less hazardous materials used –19% more recycled water used

More voluntarily reducing their footprint

Page 30: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013

Strong permitsMonitoring and enforcementConsistent policies Improved tools and technologyDedicated staff

Success from

Page 31: Celebrating Our Success David K. Paylor, Director Environment Virginia April 2013