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PITTSBURGH, May 31
/PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- In a landmark settlement with federal,
state and county authorities, the Allegheny County Sanitary
Authority (ALCOSAN) has agreed to a comprehensive plan to greatly
reduce the annual discharge of billions of gallons of untreated
sewage into local waterways.
Under the proposed
consent decree, ALCOSAN has agreed to a multi-year strategy to
upgrade the sewage systems serving Pittsburgh and 82 surrounding
municipalities. The settlement also requires ALCOSAN to pay a $1.2
million penalty for past Clean Water Act violations, and to
undertake $3 million in environmental projects.
"Today's agreement is
the result of very successful cooperative efforts with our federal,
state and private partners," said Matthew J. McKeown, Principal
Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Justice Department's
Environment and Natural Resources Division. "We are confident that
the remedial measures ALCOSAN will be making and the long-term
control plan the company will adopt, will provide for significant
and lasting improvements to water quality throughout the region."
"Sewage overflows can
seriously harm public health by carrying dangerous bacteria into
waterways used for recreation, such as boating and swimming," said
Granta Nakayama, EPA's assistant administrator for enforcement and
compliance assurance. "Today's agreement will reduce the amount of
untreated sewage being discharged into local rivers by more than 22
billion gallons per year."
The proposed consent
decree, which is subject to a 30-day public comment period and final
court approval, was filed in federal district court today by the
U.S. Attorney's Office in Pittsburgh.
The settlement was
negotiated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S.
Department of Justice, Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
Protection and the Allegheny County Health Department.
"This agreement will
lead to a dramatic improvement in the water quality of the three
rivers and area streams, improving recreational and development
opportunities along our waterways," said Kenneth Bowman, southwest
regional director for the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
Protection.
"While illicit
industrial discharges into our waterways were virtually eliminated
many years ago, illegal sewage discharges have remained a very
stubborn and chronic source of pollution," said Dr. Bruce W. Dixon,
director of the Allegheny County Health Department. "Once wet
weather sewage discharges have been minimized, our rivers and
streams will become even more accessible to those who enjoy them for
recreation and pleasure."
The federal Clean
Water Act prohibits the discharge of sewage and other pollutants
into U.S. waters, unless such
discharges comply with a permit that is protective of EPA-approved
water quality standards. Each year, an estimated 22 billion gallons
of untreated sewage are discharged into Pittsburgh-area waters from
hundreds of mostly unpermitted sewage system outfalls. These
discharges often occur when the capacity of the sewer system is
overwhelmed by wet weather conditions, including storm water runoff
and snow melts. Sewage overflows carry dangerous bacteria into
waterways where people boat, swim and wade, and affect some of the
region's drinking water sources.
The settlement
requires ALCOSAN to submit a wet weather plan to EPA that would
resolve a majority of the untreated discharges from the sewer
systems by 2026. The $3 million in environmental projects will
include stream restoration work and other projects to better control
harmful storm water runoff. The $1.2 million penalty will be shared
equally by the United
States, the
Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania, and Allegheny
County.
The judicial
settlement with ALCOSAN complements a 2003 voluntary agreement by
the 83 municipalities to monitor flow throughout the regional sewer
system, and to work with ALCOSAN to identify and implement controls
to avoid sewage overflows into local waters.
Today's settlement
with ALCOSAN and the 2003 voluntary agreement with the
municipalities together represent one of the nation's largest
settlements of a Clean Water Act case involving sewage overflows --
in terms of the number of municipalities affected and the extensive
nature of the sewer system upgrade.
A copy of the consent
decree is available on the Department of Justice Web site at http://www.usdoj.gov/enrd/Consent_Decrees.html.
Additional information
on controlling sewage overflows and a copy of the settlement is
available at http://www.epa.gov/reg3wapd/npdes/index.htm.
U.S.
Department of Justice
CONTACT:
U.S. Department of
Justice, +1-202-514-2007
Web site: http://www.usdoj.gov/ http://www.epa.gov/
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