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Trash Traps to Be Installed in St. Louis Streams
(Photo: EPA)
EPA Region 7’s Trash-Free Waters program, along with Wichita State University’s Environmental Finance Center and the Missouri Confluence Waterkeeper organization, are working with local community groups on a project to install and maintain three trash traps in St. Louis area streams. A stream trash trap is a mechanical system that includes a floating boom and net that funnel and gather floating debris near embankments, canals, or stormwater outfalls before it can reach primary waterways like streams, rivers, lakes, and oceans. Three different types of trash traps are being installed at the following locations: “Trash Trout” at Deer Creek in Maplewood, Missouri; “B2B Beaver” at Mackenzie Creek in St. Louis; and, “Litter Gitter” at River Des Peres in University City, Missouri.
EPA And Partners Installing Three Trash Traps In St. Louis Streams
The Trash-Free St. Louis Project will show how solving marine debris starts inland
EPA Region 7’s Trash-Free Waters program, along with Wichita State University’s Environmental Finance Center and the Missouri Confluence Waterkeeper organization, are working with local community groups on a project to install and maintain three trash traps in St. Louis area streams.
A stream trash trap is a mechanical system that includes a floating boom and net that funnel and gather floating debris near embankments, canals, or stormwater outfalls before it can reach primary waterways like streams, rivers, lakes and oceans.
More than $2.7 billion has been pumped into projects to clean up old pollution and improve habitat. 8:00 am, Dec. 10, 2020 ×
A crane operator unloads sand from a barge onto Interstate Island in April while heavy equipment operators move the sand around the island as part of a $1.4 million project part of the Great Lakes Restoration Initiaive to raise the tiny island and protect nesting terns. (Steve Kuchera / skuchera@duluthnews.com)
Federal, state and local officials on Wednesday celebrated the 10-year anniversary of the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative that’s been pumping billions of dollars into cleaning up toxic hotspots and restoring habitat along the region’s most degraded waterways.