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JOHN VLASTELICIA 

 areas. Surveys were noade to determine waste characteris- 

 tics of certain industries other than pulp and paper mills, 

 and of municipal waste discharges. 



Now, so far this morning we have summarized 

 the general work and findings of the Washington State 

 Enforcement Project. Let's now consider the specific 

 pollutional effects in each of the four study areas and the 

 requirements to abate those effects. 



AREA EVALUATIONS AND ABATE MENT 

 RECOMMENDATIONS 



In preview, as we go from area to area and 

 from mill to mill, much of the following part of today's 

 presentation will seem quite repetitious, but this will 

 serve two purposes. First for you and for the Conference 

 record it will outline specifically just what the findings 

 are for each area and for each mill. And secondly, it 

 should illustrate, I think, the universality, if I can say 

 that, of the pollutional effects of pulp and paper mill 

 wastes in this area and in the abatement requirements. 



We will first consider the Bellingham study 

 area. 



BELLINGHAM 



The Georgia-Pacific Corporation's pulp, 



board, and paper mill located on Whatcom Waterway is the 



