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County applies for up to $350,000 in state clean-water funds to cover nutrient-monitoring costs
Summary
Staff said the county will apply to the state clean-water revolving fund for up to $350,000 to continue nutrient-monitoring work at two treatment plants after a Puget Sound nutrient-reduction general permit was invalidated by a court; staff said monitoring costs are roughly $65,000 per year and would otherwise come from the general fund.
County staff told commissioners Tuesday that they will apply for state clean-water revolving funds to pay monitoring and testing costs related to nutrient‑reduction work at two wastewater treatment plants.
The presenter said Ecology rolled monitoring funding into the State Clean Water Revolving Fund (CWRF) process and that the application deadline was…
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