Private Equity Fund Of Funds Testing of private wells in the Villas section has found a plume of pollution from volatile organic chemicals, and a public water line will probably have to be extended to the neighborhoods.
You sail by private boat to Villa Carlotta and Villa del Balbianello, two of the loveliest villas on the lake, with magnificent gardens.
Curve Equity Exposed Fund Township Manager Kathy McPherson said the water testing was done by the Cape May County Department of Health and the state Department of Environmental Protection, or DEP. The affected residential area is north of Pacific Avenue and Bayshore Road, west of Rutgers Street, south of Virginia Avenue, and east of Franklin Avenue. There are 161 properties in the area, but some are vacant lots. There are 143 wells in the area.
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Equity Income Funds All the wells in the area have not been tested, and tests done so far have found that some are not polluted. At least 13 wells in the Villas have tested above acceptable levels of volatile organics.
The Villa The Villa, adjacent to the Main Lodge, with its own private pool, consists of three modern and very comfortable rooms and one, larger junior suite.
Capital Casebook Equity The DEP is hosting a public meeting on the problem at 7 p.m. Feb. 26 at Township Hall. The DEP has issued a list of several solutions to the problem that include treatment systems, deeper wells and public-water lines. The agency is soliciting public comment on the proposal from Feb. 26 through March 26.
Private villas, or bures as they are called in Fiji, dot the shoreline and offer private courtyards, in addition to the rhythmic sound of lapping waves.
Private Investment In Public The preferred alternative, according to the state, is for the Lower Township Municipal Utilities Authority to extend water lines to the streets. Councilman Mike Beck said the state has agreed to pay most of the costs, expected to be about $1.5 million. The state may even pay the costs for individual property owners to hook up and to cap their private wells.
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Equity Mutual Funds "Thank God for the state. We can't afford these things," Beck said.
Birmingham Contact Equity The Villas has been suffering well-pollution problems for years, but most of this has been due to saltwater intrusion from the Delaware Bay. Mandatory hookups have been required each time a water line was extended to a neighborhood where wells had gone salty.
Private Equity Investment Firm "It makes no sense to run lines without mandatory hookups," Beck said.
Complying Deal Equity Funds Another option is digging deeper wells, but the problem with this solution is that the deeper aquifers tend to have high levels of salt, Beck said. The deepest aquifer, called the Kirkwood, may have clean water, but it would be too costly to drill individual wells to it for each home. Another possibility is treatment systems to clean the well water, but Beck said that would be more expensive than a public water line.
Equity Msn Private Wyoming "Whatever it takes to bring fresh water to our residents is our primary goal," Beck said.
American Equity Investment The main pollutants are methyl tertiary butyl ether, or MTBE; tetrachloroethene, or PCE; trichloroethene, or TCE; and styrene.
Equity Index Funds Beck said the source of the pollution is undetermined, although he noted the area is near a defunct factory, a former town dump, and that there once was a dry-cleaning business in the area. A gas station known to have polluted groundwater in the Villas has already been cleaned up.
Equity Private Team Wyoming Beck said the town is built on sand, so anything that hits the ground ends up in the water.
Equity Group Investment "The biggest problem we have is we don't know where the stuff is coming from. It might be multiple sources. There are a lot of suspects," Beck said.
Capital Development Equity McPherson said the DEP wants to cap the wells to make sure the pollutants do not spread.
Article Between Difference This is not the first time volatile organics have been found in Villas wells, but the latest testing extends the polluted area.
Contact Equity Private Wyoming The county has been running a water-testing program here for several years, and, to date, water from 218 wells has been analyzed. The highest level of MTBE is 277 parts per billion (ppb) while the maximum allowed is 70 parts. Only 1 ppb is allowed for TCE, and one sample registered 13.2 parts. The PCE standard is also 1 ppb, and a test came back at 9.12 parts. The styrene limit is 100 ppb, and the highest sample was 136 parts.
Agreement Equity Investment Some residents in the Villas have already connected to public water or installed a treatment system. A state report said there are at least 143 more that need to find a reliable source of water.
Business Equity Funds Cost estimates have already been done that include running a new water line, connecting it to individual homes, and capping the wells. The estimate is almost $1.5 million. An estimate for treatment systems is almost $1.7 million.
Private Equity Fund By Richard Degener
The Press of Atlantic City - 2/13/2004
Topic: Toxics
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