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Treatment plant needs discussed with
council
By Terah Shear, Guard Staff
Writer
News
| Published on Wednesday July 11, 2007
Jeff
Dehnhardt and Jim Ulmer from McGoodwin Williams and Yates engineering firm of
Fayetteville presented the City of
Batesville with an Inflow
and Infiltration study and flow monitoring report for the utility department at
Tuesday’s council meeting.
“There are
three issues regarding your system that we have to deal with. No. 1 is that the
plant is hydraulically overloaded. The lift station capacity is in question and
we know that the collection system experiences overflows,” Ulmer
said.
He said
there are two main things that cause those problems: Infiltration and Inflow.
Infiltration is water that enters the sewer system through cracks and pipe
joints via groundwater and inflow is the rapid entry of storm water through
structural problems with direct access to the
surface.
The problem
is not only on the municipal side but also on the public side, Ulmer
said.
The company did a flow monitoring study in dry and wet
weather with 14 flow monitors installed system-wide that measured the velocity
and depth of flow and calculated the sewer system flow, and four rain gauges
were installed.During the dry weather, flow from April 3-9 varied from 2.6
million gallons a day (MGD) to 5.5 MGD. During wet weather flow the peak was
11.5 MGD during a 1.3 inch rainfall. Ulmer said that the lift stations were
maxed out in storm conditions and they could possibly, in a severe weather
event, be dysfunctional. On June 24 Batesville received a five-inch rain in a
short time span, and the city received another five-inch rainfall from June 30
to July 1; again, the flow system was maximized.
Ulmer
recommended that with rehabilitation Batesville’s treatment plant flow rates
could be improved by 30 percent.
“If you go
into rehabilitation of your system, and you’ve been working on that over the
years... You have a crew of people who are dedicated to finding the leaks and
inspecting the manholes, closed circuit television, smoke testing, you have all
the capabilities already on your staff,” Ulmer told the council. He said the
rehabilitation could be a five-year effort.
Ulmer said
there is a relationship between the White River
and the water system and Poke Bayou and the water system. When either of those
bodies of water flood, it results in inflow into the
system.
Mayor Rick
Elumbaugh agreed in saying that improvements need to be made on the city side
and the public side. Elumbaugh also said the general public needs to be educated
about the storm drains.
“There are
people who drain their swimming pools into the storm drains,” he
said.
Alderman
R.L. Carpenter asked if the city had the authority to call a citizen and tell
them to repair a sewer line problem, and the council agreed that there was a
sewer use ordinance.
Alderman
Doug Matthews also said that a trip with the new engineer, Damon Johnson, and
wastewater treatment plant manager Eugene Townsley was canceled due to the
flooding in Texas, but it will be
rescheduled.
Matthews
said they are scheduled to look at four systems.