12:00 1:30 Lunch Invited Luncheon Speaker-John Mulliken ASR Issues in South Florida John Mulliken, Acting Director, Water Supply Department, SFWMD, West Palm Beach, FL Afternoon session moderator: Andrew Stone, Executive Director, American Ground Water Trust, Concord, NH 1:30 2:30 Thoughts from Beyond Florida Regulatory Issues and Solutions: The Wisconsin Story Richard Roth, UIC Program Director, Wisconsin Dept. of Natural Resources, Madison, WI From the Outside Looking in: Is ASR Right for Georgia? Bill McLemore, State Geologist, Georgia Geological Survey, Atlanta, GA The EPA Perspective on a Continually Developing and Needed Technology John Taylor, Senior Environmental Engineer, US EPA, Region V, Chicago, IL 2:30 2:40 Break 2:40 3:40 Discussion, Deliberation and Recommendation Session Management & Policy Session Leaders: Peter Dillon, CSIRO, Adelaide, Australia and Jon Arthur, Hydrogeology Program Supervisor, Florida Geol. Survey, Tallahassee, FL This session will include discussion among presenters and attendees. The objective will be to interactively generate (in electronic format) an ASR state-of-the-art summary with where-do-we-go-from-here (?) recommendations. Discussion topics are likely to include: E: Is there enough time for research to address the unknowns? E: Is the CERP ASR timeline in synch with regulatory requirements? E: Cycle-test durations how long is enough? E: What are regulatory interpretations of "point of compliance," and other terms? E: How can the permitting process be improved? E: Should Class I standards be applied to ASR? 3:40 4:00 Closing Statements from ASR IV Organizers 4:00 Adjourn [CEU sign-out] Disclaimer: The participation of speakers at this program from specific private sector companies, organizations or agencies, does not imply that the ASR IV sponsors or co-sponsors endorse or recommend particular companies, products or commercial applications of technology. The American Ground Water Trust held ASR I on September 10, 2001, in Orlando. This program provided exposure for the whole concept of Aquifer Storage Recovery and was a discussion opportunity for "environmental" and "engineering" perspectives of ASR as a water management strategy. ASR II took place on January 7, 2002 in Orlando and included sessions related to the treatment technology available for recharge water. In 2003, ASR III, also held in Orlando, served to provide a technical and policy update across the spectrum of Florida's ASR issues. This April 15-16 program in Tampa (ASR IV) is taking a different format. The Trust has teamed up with the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (Florida Geological Survey/ Hydrogeology Program) and the Hydrogeology Consortium. The two-day ASR IV program will review the status of current ASR science and technology on day one, and then relate the science to policy and management issues on day two. We hope attendees will be there for both days, but recognizing time and budget constraints, the organizers have framed each day as "stand-alone" to facilitate one day participation. ASR V will be held in Florida in 2005. Your comments on the evaluation sheets will be helpful in guiding the Trust to select content and format. The Tampa ASR IV Forum brings scientists, planners, water-resource managers, concerned citizens, etc... together to share up-to-date information regarding challenges and successes of ASR implementation. There will be