LITTLE ROCK – The Arkansas Stormwater Education Program is bolstering its efforts to promote responsible stormwater management through the southeastern areas of the state with Super Sammy, the new face of stormwater awareness.
Sammy Andrews, an actor and athletic training in central Arkansas, was cast as “Super Sammy” in 2017 as part of educational outreach efforts by 4-H Arkansas and the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.
Kristin Higgins, public policy program associate for the Division of Agriculture, said Andrews’ “Super Sammy” character was developed in an effort to appeal to a broad range of Arkansans.
“Any time you have an educational program where you’re trying to reach both adults and kids, you’re going to want someone and something that will connect them to the central idea in effective ways,” Higgins said. “Sammy’s mission is to draw attention to water pollution, and the effect people can have on it — that they can contribute to the pollution, and that they can also help fix it.”
In a newly-released YouTube video, Super Sammy partners with the animated character Wayne Drop to emphasize the importance of keeping common waste such as grass clippings, motor oil, cigarette butts and more out of storm drains. The video can be seen on the Arkansas Stormwater Education Program’s web page at https://uaex.edu/environment-nature/water/stormwater/seastormwater/.
Independent reporting for Pine Bluff & Jefferson County since 1879.
“We have to tell people constantly that the storm drain doesn’t go to a treatment plant,” Higgins said. “That the water that goes down the storm drain goes straight to a local creek, and then to the river. It’s an uphill battle.”
The concept of “stormwater” focuses on water that flows off of buildings and artificial, impervious surfaces, such as asphalt parking lots, and ultimately flows into creeks, rivers and other natural waterways, often carrying pollutants with it. Higgins said that traditionally, federal regulations have focused on “point source pollution,” or polluted discharge direct from a specific source, such as what’s coming out the pipe from a treatment plant or a canning facility, for example. Over the past 30 years, however, the focus has turned to polluted runoff, the specific source of which may be difficult or impossible to identify.
A limited number of counties in Arkansas have population densities requiring that they adhere to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency stormwater management practices established under the Clean Water Act in the late 1990’s. Initially, only Little Rock was affected by the regulations, in 1999, but by 2003, as additional phases of the regulations were implemented, metropolitan areas including Pine Bluff, Fayetteville, Springdale and others were identified as stormwater-intense areas.
The Arkansas Stormwater Education Program is divided into two branches — the Northwest Arkansas Stormwater Program, which focuses on Benton and Washington counties, and the Southeast Arkansas Stormwater Education Program, which focuses of the cities of Pine Bluff and White Hall, Jefferson County and the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff.
Details: Visit www.uaex.edu.