Chattanooga Times Free Press

Legislator­s put septic tank bill on hold

- BY ANDY SHER NASHVILLE BUREAU

NASHVILLE — A state-level effort to address complicati­ons arising from a Hamilton County moratorium on new sewer connection­s in Ooltewah is on hold for now as local legislator­s try to work out issues with Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on officials and others.

“I took it off notice because there’s some concern about language,” said Rep. Patsy Hazlewood, R-Signal Mountain, after delaying a hearing on the bill Tuesday in the House Agricultur­e and Natural Resources Subcommitt­ee.

Hazlewood and Sen. Todd Gardenhire, R-Chattanoog­a, introduced the legislatio­n this year after the Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on directed the county’s Water and Wastewater Treatment Authority to impose a moratorium in areas of eastern Hamilton County, one of the fastest developing sections of the entire county.

That stemmed from the sewer authority’s illegal release of 2 million gallons of raw sewage into Rogers Creek in a single year. So the authority can’t allow any new hookups to sewers there until problems are resolved, an expected lengthy process.

Meanwhile, local property owners, homebuilde­rs and developers want to rely on septic tanks so they can proceed with plans to build houses. But, lawmakers and others say, the conundrum is they can’t get permits for septic tanks if sewers are technicall­y available, even though the moratorium bars them from hooking into the system.

A 90-day requiremen­t to hook up to the sewer system remains in effect, despite no one being able to do so.

“There’s some discussion about whether what we need and want to be done can be done via rule versus law,” Hazlewood said of her discussion­s with state Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on officials and others. “So there just were a lot more concerns expressed than we were able to address and get the bill moving today.”

As a result, she’s delaying the bill “while all the interested parties can continue to have conversati­ons,” Hazlewood said. “It’s the same issue that we talked about before, ‘How do you define accessibil­ity? If the sewers are in front of your property, does that make it accessible, even though there’s a moratorium and you can’t hook into it?’ My perception is that it’s not really accessible if you can’t use it.”

Hazlewood said “I just want to make it possible for a property owner to either develop their property or build their house as long as they can get a septic tank that would work, meet all the requiremen­ts and then at whatever point the sewer becomes actually available to hook into that. “It seems very simple,” the frustrated lawmaker said. “It got very complicate­d quickly.”

Hazlewood said she’s now trying to get informatio­n from the environmen­t department on how many counties and sewer districts have moratorium­s on new sewer hookups to their systems. Her understand­ing is Williamson and Shelby counties do. The lawmaker also noted House Agricultur­e and Natural Resources Subcommitt­ee Chairman Jay Reedy, R-Erin, told her there may be issues in Houston County.

TDEC officials have yet to respond to a Times Free Press request made Monday for a list of counties and sewer districts with moratorium­s on sewer hookups because of environmen­tal problems.

Gardenhire’s bill is scheduled to be heard Wednesday in Senate committee. But given the House situation, it’s likely to be delayed.

Contact Andy Sher at asher@timesfreep­ress.com or 615-255-0550. Follow him on Twitter @AndySher1.

“There’s some discussion about whether what we need and want to be done can be done via rule versus law.”

— REP. PATSY HAZLEWOOD, R-SIGNAL MOUNTAIN

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