http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/slideshows/081607/191784516/slide2.shtml
Last modified
8/15/2007 - 11:53 pm
Originally created 081607
2
lawsuits target JEA on Clean Water Act
Environmental groups
cite discharges of raw sewage, ask the utility to
improve sewage collection systems and wastewater
treatment facilities
By BETH KORMANIK, The
Times-Union
Two environmental
groups sued JEA this week, accusing the
Jacksonville-owned utility of violating the Clean
Water Act by discharging millions of gallons of raw
sewage into the city's waterways.
The St. Johns Riverkeeper filed a lawsuit Monday,
and the Public Trust Environmental Law Institute of
Florida filed its on Wednesday, both in federal
court.
Both lawsuits ask JEA
to develop a plan to improve sewage collection
systems and wastewater treatment facilities.
 |
 |
BOB SELF/The
Times-Union
"We want JEA as a member of this community
to operate facilities in a legal way so they
do not continue to pollute waterways in this
community," St. Johns Riverkeeper Neil
Armingeon said. He's shown here on the banks
of Pottsburg Creek near Beach Boulevard. |
Times-Union
file
Effluent from JEA's Buckman wastewater
treatment facility on Talleyrand Avenue was
cited in a list of spills compiled by the
St. Johns Riverkeeper and the Public Trust
Environmental Law Institute of Florida. JEA
spokesman Phil Mattox said the utility has
spent $800 million on improvements to the
wastewater system and plans on spending
another $200 million. |
JEA has 20 days after
being served with the lawsuits to respond.
JEA representatives
declined to answer questions about the lawsuits.
Instead, spokesman Phil Mattox issued a statement
that says the utility has spent $800 million in
improvements to the wastewater system and plans on
spending another $200 million as part of the River
Accord, a 10-year effort to improve the health of
the St. Johns River's lower basin.
"JEA is committed to
continually improving the environmental performance
of our facilities and operations," the statement
says.
At a news conference
Wednesday, the law institute and the Riverkeeper
released a list of more than 200 spills from the
utility's Buckman and Arlington East wastewater
treatment facilities, resulting in 8.3 million
gallons of sewage and poorly treated wastewater
flowing into area waterways. The information was
collected from self-reports of spills by JEA.
Those facilities have
a disproportionate number of spills because they are
older and need the most infrastructure work,
according to Riverkeeper attorney Michael Howle.
Howle said the
organization first notified JEA of its intent to sue
in December 2005 and again in December 2006 but has
had no response about resolving the issues.
Riverkeeper Neil
Armingeon said the litigation is a last resort to
force JEA into compliance with the law.
"We want JEA as a
member of this community to operate facilities in a
legal way so they do not continue to pollute
waterways in this community," he said.
Both environmental
groups also fault the Florida Department of
Environmental Protection with not enforcing the
Clean Water Act.
A DEP spokeswoman,
Jill Johnson, said the agency stands by its
enforcement record. The DEP meets with JEA quarterly
to review all spills and levies fines and orders
corrective action based on what it finds, Johnson
said.
Johnson said she was
unable to compare the amount and type of violations
in Northeast Florida to other regions, but spills
happen all over Florida.
The lawsuits come two
months after the groups used DEP records to document
about 300 clean-water violations across Northeast
Florida between January 2005 and August 2006.
Armingeon said that further research has pushed that
number closer to 400 violations.
beth.kormanik@jacksonville.com
(904) 359-4619