Chattanooga Times Free Press

Permit for sewer plant rejected

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

Opponents of a proposed Ooltewah sewage treatment plant won one round of their fight Monday as a Hamilton County planning panel recommende­d denying a special permit for the facility.

But the panel said they know their work against a Mahan Gap Road treatment plant isn’t over, as the proposal now goes to the Hamilton County Commission next month.

“We’re not against growth,” said Dean Moorhouse, president of North Hamilton County United for Responsibl­e Growth, adding the group still needs to convince the county commission to score a victory.

Meanwhile, the Hamilton County Water and Wastewater Treatment Authority, which chose a site at 7800 Mahan Gap as the most cost-efficient location for a 10-million gallon, $45 million treatment plant, said siting and approving a new facility is “a tremendous responsibi­lity.”

“We know there is a great deal of work ahead of us, but we are confident in the expertise around the table to make the best decision for Hamilton County’s future,” said Mike Moon, WWTA’s board chairman.

Mark Harrison, the agency’s executive director, said it is mindful of the cost of services

to its customers.

“As we plan for the future, while cost is an issue, it is not the only issue,” he said. “We must continue to focus on the welfare of our community as well as the impact on economic developmen­t our actions will have both now and in the future.”

On Monday, opponents packed the county commission room for the Hamilton County Regional Planning Commission meeting, with more than 100 people showing up and many spilling out into the fourth-floor rotunda.

The neighbors say there are 3,500 homes and two elementary schools within two miles of the proposed plant. They are worried about odors, health and environmen­tal effects and a hit to their property values.

Those doubts have only sharpened since the Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on last week said WWTA must stop new sewer connection­s in Ooltewah because it had 29 sewer overflows that spilled 2 million gallons of raw sewage into Rogers Creek in just one year. That news came as an environmen­tal group sued the authority for releasing 20 million gallons of sewage from the Signal Mountain wastewater treatment plant to the Tennessee River since 2013.

Planning commission staff had recommende­d deferring for 30 days the considerat­ion of the special permit, citing the issue’s complexity. Harrison said at the meeting that he’d like a 60-day deferral to answer more questions raised by neighbors and others.

But County Commission­er Chester Bankston asked that the panel deny, not defer, the permit.

“This is not a good site,” he said. “There are other good ones to the north.”

More than a dozen people spoke against the permit, including Moorhouse, who said he had 4,400 signatures and more to come.

He claimed WWTA has withheld informatio­n and given misleading statements to the Regional Planning Agency.

Debbie Petticord, who lives in the area, termed where she lives “a special place,” but not the location for a sewage treatment plant with the growth Ooltewah has seen.

“There’s a big difference in the backyards of 40 homes and 4,000 homes,” she said about the placement of the proposed facility. “That’s a lot of devaluatio­n.”

Commission member Jason Farmer said the WWTA is in “a tough spot.”

“I understand how you got to the site. I appreciate it,” Farmer said.

However, he said, deferring a vote for 30, 60 or 90 days wouldn’t make a difference for him.

“This is one of the most active neighborho­ods in the county,” Farmer said. “To put this on this neighborho­od doesn’t seem right.”

Harrison denied anyone has been misled, but he said he wanted more time to meet with the neighborho­od residents, including in small groups. He has said the authority is planning to spend some $200 million to meet Clean Water Act requiremen­ts, over and above the cost of the treatment plant.

He called the Mahan Gap Road site “the right spot. It provides the best option.”

“It’s the lowest cost to construct and operate,” Harrison said, adding the new plants “aren’t the nuisance they’ve been painted out to be.”

The panel recommende­d turning down the special permit request in a 6-4 vote, with one recusal.

The county commission’s zoning committee will take up the issue on Dec. 12, and the full commission will vote yea or nay on the special permit Dec. 19.

The commission meets at 9:30 a.m. on the fourth floor of the courthouse. Jennifer McDonald, spokeswoma­n for the concerned citizens group, said the neighbors will be there in force.

“We want people to understand this is not a done deal,” she said.

“There’s a big difference in the backyards of 40 homes and 4,000 homes. That’s a lot of devaluatio­n.” – DEBBIE PETTICORD, RESIDENT OF THE AREA THAT WOULD BE AFFECTED BY THE SEWER PLANT

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