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Buzzards Bay Coalition receives $75,000 grant for water monitoring
Standard-Times Staff
NEW BEDFORD Local nonprofit Buzzards Bay Coalition received a $75,000 grant to support testing a faster way to monitor its nitrogen-reducing septic systems.
The pilot project will occur in West Falmouth where the coalition has installed 30 of these systems over the last four years.
“The impact of what we learn in this study will go well beyond West Falmouth,” said Maureen Thomas, water resources specialist for the coalition, in a written statement. “The information that we collect will be directly transferable throughout the Buzzards Bay watershed and to other coastal communities working on tackling the nitrogen pollution problem by implementing nitrogen-reducing septic systems.”
Lewes Deputy Mayor Bonnie Osler will not seek another term on city council.
Osler, who is nearing the end of her fourth term, said it is time to step aside.
“If people are thinking about running or even wondering if there’s going to be an open seat, I kind of owe it to them to give them a heads-up,” Osler said.
Osler was first elected to council in 2012, shortly after moving to Lewes following a career with the federal government.
Osler is stepping down, in part, because she believes in term limits. She and her spouse Brook Hedge also recently purchased a second home in New Hampshire, where they will spend more time.
Lewes Deputy Mayor Bonnie Osler will not seek another term on city council.
Osler, who is nearing the end of her fourth term, said it is time to step aside.
“If people are thinking about running or even wondering if there’s going to be an open seat, I kind of owe it to them to give them a heads-up,” Osler said.
Osler was first elected to council in 2012, shortly after moving to Lewes following a career with the federal government.
Osler is stepping down, in part, because she believes in term limits. She and her spouse Brook Hedge also recently purchased a second home in New Hampshire, where they will spend more time.