
Sent 07/27/07
http://www.sun-herald.com/NPNewsstory.cfm?
pubdate=072707&story=np7.htm&folder=NewsArchive2
07/27/07
Two old sewer plants allowed to discharge into
county creeks
The nutrient-loaded sewage wastewater discharges will
stop next June. A consent order allows them until
improvements are finished at a bigger facility.
While Sarasota County builds a $157 million sewer
system and dismantles thousands of septic tanks to keep
harmful pollution out of the Sarasota Bay system, two
old sewer plants continue to drain nutrient-loaded
wastewater into Phillippi Creek and Matheny Creek.
On July 10, without any comment, the county
commission approved a deal with the Florida Department
of Environmental Protection that allows each of the
plants to keep discharging more than a million gallons
of treated sewage a day until next June 30.
The county's Gulf Gate plant treats up to 1.9 million
gallons of raw sewage a day and discharges more than 1
million gallons of treated wastewater into Matheny
Creek, which empties into Roberts Bay just south of the
Stickney Point Road Bridge.
Not far away, the county's South Gate plant treats up
to 1.4 million gallons of sewage a day and discharges
more than a million gallons of wastewater into Phillippi
Creek, which also empties into Roberts Bay about a mile
north of the bridge.
Both plants violate federal pollution standards for
chronic toxicity discharges into surface waters, but
they are allowed to operate under a state consent order
negotiated with the former utility holding company that
sold them to the county.
When the county acquired the two plants in 2004, it
was with the understanding they would be shut down and
dismantled no later than this autumn.
The July 10 deal with state environmental regulators
allows the county to keep operating them through next
June.
The justification for allowing illegal discharges to
continue is that an $11 million Central County Water
Reclamation Facility expansion project is behind
schedule because the understaffed state agency was
unable to issue permits in a timely fashion.
"By August of next year we have to abandon these
plants and no longer accept any (sewage) flow," said
Vern Hall, a county utility manager. "We have to
disconnect the power and stop the chemical feed. Once
these facilities are off line, all the discharge
problems go away."
When that time comes, sewage pumped to the two old
plants will be diverted to the expanded water
reclamation facility.
"It won't cost a significant amount of money to
decommission the plants," Hall said. "Then we'll clean
out tanks and auction off the property."
Both plants were part of a $21.7 million acquisition
that brought private utilities formerly operated by the
Florida Cities Water Co. and owned by Avatar Holdings
Utilities into county ownership. They were briefly held
by a Florida Government Utilities Authority.
A stipulation in the purchase agreement required the
county to abide by a consent order negotiated between
the Department of Environmental Regulation and the
utilities authority that stemmed from illegal discharges
at the Gulf Gate plant.
Severn-Trent, a contractor temporarily employed by
the utilities authority to operate the plant, was cited
for discharges into Matheny Creek and Little Sarasota
Bay. The state approved a consent order that included a
remediation plan and $140,000 in fines.
By Jack Gurney
Pelican Press
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