Baltimore Sun

Pa. city’s sewage reaching the Bay

Harrisburg overflows sent over a billion gallons in ’18

- By Scott Dance

Baltimore frequently gets the blame for millions of gallons of wastewater that flows from its sewers into waterways, but there is another city responsibl­e for sending large amounts of such contaminat­ion and bacteria into the Chesapeake Bay, according to a new report.

Overflows from the antiquated sewer system in Harrisburg, Pennsylvan­ia, sent more than 1 billion gallons of sewagetain­ted wastewater down the Susquehann­a River in 2018, according to a report released Thursday by the Environmen­tal Integrity Project. The Susquehann­a is the main source of fresh water for the Maryland portion of the Chesapeake.

In Baltimore, sewage contaminat­ion released into rivers and streams totaled at least 260 million gallons in 2018. The volume of Harrisburg’s pollution is far greater in part because that city has a combined wastewater and stormwater system, while Baltimore has separate systems of pipes for sewage and rainwater.

The group’s report faulted Pennsylvan­ia environmen­tal officials and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency for

failing to impose penalties for the sewage pollution. It also said the contaminat­ion has actually increased since Harrisburg was required to address the overflows under an agreement with state and federal regulators in 2015.

“Pennsylvan­ia’s governor and lawmakers should step up and take responsibi­lity to pay for a solution to this public health problem in the state capital,” said Ted Evgeniadis, the Lower Susquehann­a Riverkeepe­r, in a statement.

Sewage pollution is a hazard in waterways because it introduces dangerous bacteria that are harmful to swimmers and nutrients that overwhelm Chesapeake ecosystems with algae blooms and cloudy waters. That prevents sunlight from reaching underwater grasses, important habitat for young crabs and fish, and leads to “dead zones” with little or no oxygen along the bottom of the main stem of the bay.

J.J. Abbott, a spokesman for Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf, said state officials still were reviewing the report’s findings and recommenda­tions Thursday. He said the administra­tion has worked to reduce stormwater runoff around the state capitol complex in Harrisburg, installing rain gardens and removing pavement, and has proposed creating a grant program to help fund similar projects around Pennsylvan­ia.

Harrisburg water and sewer authoritie­s released a plan last year to spend $315 million over 20 years to reduce sewage pollution.

The Environmen­tal Integrity Project’s report said sewage overflows from Harrisburg pipes into the Susquehann­a totaled 1.4 billion gallons last year, up from 789 million gallons in 2016. While much of that increase is tied to record rainfall that repeatedly overwhelme­d wastewater and stormwater systems, the report also noted that the number of sewage overflows during dry weather increased from seven in 2017 to 28 in 2018.

More than 9 million gallons of contaminat­ion came from a sewer outfall immediatel­y downstream from the governor’s residence on the banks of the Susquehann­a, the report said. Its authors found that sewage flowed from the outfall once a week, on average, making waters unsafe for human contact downstream at City Island Park beach.

In Baltimore, heavy rain infiltrate­s cracks and breaks in aged sewage pipes and inundates the system, causing sewagetain­ted stormwater to overflow from two outfalls on the Jones Falls and erupt from manholes around the city. Most of the city’s stormwater is carried in a separate system of pipes.

The city is under a federal consent decree similar to Harrisburg’s ordering improvemen­ts to its sewage system and has agreed to spend $1.6 billion on fixes over the next 13 years.

In Harrisburg, sewage overflows flow through the same pipes that carry rainwater from storm drains to waterways.

While the amount of sewage said to contaminat­e waterways in Baltimore is significan­tly less than that measured around Harrisburg, Angela Haren, the Baltimore Harbor Waterkeepe­r, said she and others at advocacy group Blue Water Baltimore believe the total here is underrepor­ted.

“We have reason to believe there is far more than that,” Haren said of the 260 million gallons reported in 2018. “That’s the best estimate.”

 ?? JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Brown water from the Susquehann­a River fills the Havre de Grace waterfront after a week of heavy rain brought in sediment.
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN Brown water from the Susquehann­a River fills the Havre de Grace waterfront after a week of heavy rain brought in sediment.

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