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http://www.jamestownpress.com/news/2007/0816/News/048.html

August 16, 2007
Town cited for sewer discharge
problems
By Dotti Farrington
Jamestown is one of six Rhode Island communities
ordered Aug. 10 by the federal Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) to take steps to stop harmful raw sewage
from discharging from municipal pipes and wastewater
systems into state waterways.
Town Administrator Bruce Keiser said Tuesday that the
orders reflect illegal house sump pumps, poor practices
of disposal of grease by downtown food establishments
and deficiencies at the wastewater treatment plant. He
said the town is working to correct all those problems.
Letters were sent some weeks ago to all users of the
sewer system, seeking their cooperation before further
enforcement is tried, he said. The town is working with
downtown merchants to notify and help them resolve the
grease disposal that creates blockages and causes pipes
to overflow, Keiser reported. He said the multi-million
dollar rehabilitation work at the treatment plant is
proceeding on schedule.
Keiser said EPA officials acknowledged that Jamestown
is working to resolve all aspects of the sewage
discharges but explained that they must enforce their
regulations as aggressively as they are doing in order
to be effective. Keiser said no fines are involved in
the orders. He said the only additional step the town
has to take is to report the progress of the measures it
is already taking.
The EPA advised the town that it has been documenting
the overflows since 2002, according to the town
administrator. The town began planning pipe projects and
the plant renovations in the mid-1990s, according to
town records.
The orders are part of a coordinated effort by the
EPA and the state Department of Environmental Management
(DEM) to end serious water quality problems caused by
overflows.
The EPA administrative orders were issued to East
Greenwich, Narragansett, Warwick, West Warwick and
Woonsocket, as well as Jamestown. The orders are part of
a broader strategy to reduce sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs)
by enforcing existing regulations and by increasing
assistance to help municipalities take necessary steps
to address their SSO problems.
Robert Varney, regional administrator of the EPA's
New England office, said the stepped up work is meant to
help communities protect the Ocean State's coastal
beaches, shellfishing areas and fresh water resources.
The EPA last February issued such orders about
overflows to the Narragansett Bay Commission and
Providence, Barrington, Smithfield, Cranston and
Bristol.
The EPA said SSOs are caused by breakdowns in the
system of pipes, pumps and other equipment that
municipalities employ. 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.
The last time Jamestown had an overflow from its
treatment plant aeration tanks was in April due to heavy
rains, combined with infiltration of rainwater into
pipes bringing much greater volumes of water than the
plant can handle.
When a SSO occurs, raw sewage is released from the
wastewater collection system directly to surface waters
or onto streets, where it poses a direct public health
risk, the EPA said. Discharges of untreated sewage from
SSOs are a significant cause of the water quality
violations that cause beach and shellfish closures in
New England, according to the EPA. Overflows also back
up into homes and other buildings, posing health risks
and causing property damage.
The EPA, which reported about 40,000 overflows
throughout the country last year, issues orders
requiring systems with overflow problems to conduct
assessments and fix problems in the systems.
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