Poly plans to clean up
By: Cassie Gaeto
Issue date: 3/1/07 Section: News
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"In this plan, in lieu of just paying that fine in cash and walking away, we will be able to benefit the community through the project," said Mark Shelton, associate dean of the College of Agriculture, Food and Environmental Sciences.
Cal Poly and The Land Conservancy of San Luis Obispo, a nonprofit environmental organization, will both be involved in rehabilitating half an acre of land along Stenner Creek. The plan is to spend the same amount of money on an environmental effort that the school would have had to pay in state water fines.
Cal Poly agriculture holds a waste discharge permit from the Regional Water Quality Control Board that allows them to release a certain amount of by-product into the animal waste lagoon, a storage structure for manure. The lagoons collect the waste and protect the surrounding areas from contamination.
The agriculture department also operates using some of the liquid waste for spray fields, crop fields fertilized by a mixture of liquids and manure solids.
"We got into trouble because of the sheer volume of rainfall last April; our dairy lagoons then filled with rainwater and were not able to properly store the dairy waste. Our spray fields became overly saturated and our levels of effluent were too high," Shelton said.
The agriculture department is currently working on several approaches to avoid any future problems with the waste from the livestock. They have petitioned to add additional spray fields to the area so that there will be a larger area over which to disperse the effluent, a term for the liquid sewage that has been treated through a septic tank or similar waste treatment process.
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