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03/22/2017

DEEP Announces 1.267 Million Gallons of Recreational Vessel Boat Sewage Removed in 2016 and $1 Million in Grants Awarded for Marine Sewage Disposal Facilities for the 2017 Boating Season

Connecticut’s Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) today announced that during the 2016 boating season, pumpout facilities and pumpout vessel programs removed a record level of more 1.267 million gallons of recreational marine sewage from vessels in Long Island Sound and Candlewood Lake.
“With the support of Connecticut boaters and pumpout facility operators, we have once again exceeded our previous volume of waste removal, and increased by eight percent the amount of recreational boat waste removed,” said DEEP Commissioner Robert Klee. “The goal is to keep building on this successful program to keep our waters clean and healthy, and to continue to provide excellent water-based recreational opportunities in Connecticut.”
Gallons of sewage pumped 2010 - 2016
For the 2017 boating season, 47 marine facilities will receive $1,228,600.73 in funding under the DEEP’s annual Federal Clean Vessel Act (CVA) program.  In an effort to improve water quality in navigable waterways within Connecticut, this program, which is managed through the DEEP’s Boating Division, provides federally funded matching grants for qualifying projects that provide boat sewage disposal facilities, more commonly known as pumpouts.  Nine of the 47 grant recipients will receive funding for the construction of new or replacement pumpouts.  The remaining projects fund operation and maintenance of land based pumpouts and mobile pumpout boats.
Funding for this program, known as the  Clean Vessel Act (CVA) program, comes from the Sport Fishing and Boating Trust Fund, which is supported by excise taxes on certain fishing and boating equipment and boat fuels.  DEEP partners with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and issues grants to marine facilities and programs through the CVA Grant Program.  This program helps keep coastal waters clean and safe for recreation by safely disposing of millions of gallons of boaters’ sewage annually. The marine facilities provide 25% of the cost of each project.  The Connecticut CVA program serves as a good example to many other States and has been the recipient of numerous awards for its excellence. 
For more information about this program, visit the DEEP Boating webpage at www.ct.gov/deep/boating or contact Kate Hughes Brown, BIG/CVA Program Coordinator, at (860) 447-4340 or by email at kate.brown@ct.gov.
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