http://yosemite.epa.gov/opa/admpress.nsf/0/adac946ea950ff258525733300633a89?OpenDocument
Six Rhode Island Communities Ordered to Address Sewage
Overflows // EPA continues effort to improve water
quality in R.I. waters
Release date: 08/10/2007
Contact Information: David Deegan, (617) 918-1017
(Boston, Mass. – Aug. 10,
2007) – Six additional Rhode Island municipalities have
been ordered by EPA to take steps to stop harmful raw
sewage overflows from discharging from city pipes and
wastewater systems into R.I. waterways. The orders are
part of a coordinated effort by EPA and the R.I. Dept.
of Environmental Management to combat the serious water
quality problems caused by “sanitary sewer overflows” in
the state.
The EPA administrative
orders were issued to the R.I. communities of East
Greenwich, Jamestown, Narragansett, Warwick, West
Warwick and Woonsocket. These orders are part of a
broader strategy to reduce sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs)
in Rhode Island by both enforcing existing regulations
and increasing targeted compliance assistance to help
municipalities take necessary steps to address their SSO
problems.
“EPA is committed to
improving water quality in Rhode Island,” said Robert
Varney, regional administrator of EPA’s New England
office. “By using all available tools to address sewage
overflows into Rhode Island waters, EPA will help
protect the Ocean State’s coastal beaches, shellfishing
areas and fresh water resources.”
A variety of outreach and
compliance techniques are being employed to ensure that
all R.I. wastewater utilities and municipalities with
wastewater collection systems are aware of the need to
repair and maintain sewage systems to avoid the harmful
effects of SSOs. EPA and the R.I. Dept. of Environmental
Management (RI DEM) are working with city officials
across the state to focus on this important issue.
The recent administrative
orders follow similar actions EPA took in Feb. 2007,
when the Narragansett Bay Commission and the
municipalities of Providence, Barrington, Smithfield,
Cranston and Bristol were ordered to address issues with
SSOs.
Sanitary sewer overflows are
caused by breakdowns in the system of pipes, pumps and
other equipment that municipalities and wastewater
utilities use to collect and transport sewage to
wastewater treatment plants. The unlawful discharges are
often a result of grease and other blockages;
structural, mechanical or electrical failures; or from
excess flows that enter wastewater collection systems.
Implementation of effective preventative maintenance
programs has been shown to significantly reduce the
frequency and volume of these discharges.
When a SSO occurs, raw
sewage can be released from the wastewater collection
system directly to surface waters or onto streets, where
it can pose a direct public health risk or flow to
surface water via a storm drain. Discharges of untreated
sewage from SSOs are a significant cause of the water
quality violations that cause beach and shellfish
closures in New England. Sewage overflows can back up
into homes and other buildings, posing public health
risks and causing property damage.
The Orders EPA issued in
February and those it issued recently require wastewater
systems with SSO problems to conduct a system-wide
assessment, develop plans to remedy any deficiencies
found, and adopt a long-term preventative maintenance
program. EPA’s Orders complement ongoing actions that
RIDEM has taken across the state to control SSOs.
To date, the system- wide
assessments indicate that lack of maintenance and
adequate funding are common problems that communities
need to address. This is particularly true in those
communities that only have sewer collection systems
transporting their wastewater to a neighboring
community’s treatment plant.
A critical component of
EPA’s effort to eliminate SSOs in Rhode Island is
educating city officials across the state to the
problem. To do this, EPA and RIDEM are providing
guidance to municipalities through workshops, fact
sheets and onsite assistance, on how to develop
long-term management and investment plans for future
protection. To help municipalities identify and prevent
problems with the operation and maintenance of their
wastewater collection system, EPA and RIDEM are
developing a model sewer preventive maintenance plan.
More information:
-
EPA’s
efforts to eliminate SSOs in New England
(epa.gov/ne/sso)
-
Sustainable
water infrastructure
(epa.gov/waterinfrastructure)
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