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#2008-14: May 15, 2008
Clean Drinking Water Coalition Releases First Annual DEP Report Card:
"Making the Grade: Analysis of NYC’s Drinking Water Protection Programs"
DOWNLOAD THE ENTIRE REPORT BY CLICKING HERE (59Kb pdf will open in new browser window)
The Clean Drinking Water Coalition (CDWC) today announced the first annual release of their
DEP Report Card: "Making the Grade: New York City Department of Environmental Protection’s
Drinking Water Protection Programs." The CDWC is a partnership of The Catskill Center for
Conservation and Development, NYPIRG, and Riverkeeper, all signatories to the landmark 1997
Watershed Memorandum of Agreement (MOA). The DEP Report Card grades, analyzes, and provides
recommendations for thirty-three of DEP’s watershed protection programs as specified in the MOA and
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (USEPA) filtration avoidance determinations.
"We are pleased to report that New York City’s drinking water continues to remain high quality,
and overall DEP gets a good grade for protecting our water supplies; however, we also found some areas
that need improvement," said Cathleen Breen, NYPIRG’s Watershed Protection Coordinator.
In determining the grades for each program, the CDWC relied on their own experience as
watershed watchdogs, interviewed 23 NYC Watershed partners, stakeholders, and regulators including
representatives of DEP, USEPA, NYS Department of Health, the Catskill Watershed Corporation and
watershed town representatives, as well as analyzed DEP’s federally mandated progress reports.
"The Report Card highlights the need for New York City to provide DEP with additional funding
to protect the city’s greatest natural resource. Clean, affordable drinking water must be a basic human
right," said Alex Matthiessen, Riverkeeper President and Hudson Riverkeeper. "It also helps
demonstrate the evolution of different watershed programs."
"This Report Card clearly shows the value of the partnership that was created by the signatories
to the MOA of protecting NYC’s drinking water, and the need to strengthen support for these critical
partnership programs that protect water quality and promote stakeholder involvement" said Deborah
Meyer DeWan, Interim Executive Director of The Catskill Center for Conservation and Development.
The report can be found on www.riverkeeper.org, www.nypirg.org, and www.catskillcenter.org.
The CDWC will present its DEP Report Card at a New York Academy of Sciences event assessing the
1997 MOA. The event is at 6:00 pm, May 15, 2008, New York University, The Kimmel Center for
Student Life, 8th floor. Media and the public are invited to attend.
DOWNLOAD THE ENTIRE REPORT BY CLICKING HERE (59Kb pdf will open in new browser window)
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