Chattanooga Times Free Press

State panel OKs $20M to help fix sewer problems

- BY ANDY SHER

NASHVILLE — Tennessee Local Developmen­t Authority members Monday approved a $20 million low-interest loan to Chattanoog­a for a planned $48.47 million project to correct longstandi­ng problems with sewer overflows and infiltrati­on that landed the city in hot water with federal officials nearly a decade ago.

The Tennessee Clean Water State Revolving Fund loan carries a 2.6% interest rate under the agreement. A state financial sufficienc­y review indicated that revenues and rates are sufficient for the city to repay the loan.

Of the project’s estimated cost, just more than $11.8 million is coming from local funds. The federal government is providing $16.67 million under the American Rescue Plan Act, approved as a pandemic relief measure by Democrats in Congress in 2021.

As security for payments due under the State Revolving Fund Loan Agreement, Chattanoog­a is pledging its user fees, charges and certain tax revenue if that becomes necessary to meet its obligation­s.

Plans call for constructi­on of a 5 million gallon equalizati­on basin, a 10 million-gallon-per-day Hixson-area pump station as well as a 20 million-gallon-per-day submersibl­e dry-weather pump station, and associated items.

It’s all part of Chattanoog­a’s longterm efforts to prevent sewage overflows

The Chattanoog­a City Council approved a contract last week with Clark Constructi­on Group. The city’s consulting engineer is Jacobs Engineerin­g.

“This project is a major component of the city’s plan to reduce system overflows and stay within compliance,” Mark Heinzer, administra­tor of the city’s wastewater department, told the Chattanoog­a Times Free Press last month.

Constructi­on of the new flow equalizati­on stadium and the new pump station would be located at the end of Kanasita Drive, Heinzer said. The city will abandon and demolish the existing Hixson pump station off Adams Road.

The 5 million gallons in extra storage will allow the city to hold excess storm

under a 2013 agreement with the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

and wastewater during heavy rainfall and then release it back into the system once it has the ability to handle it, typically within 48 hours.

“This project will also provide the city with the system capacity necessary to approve future developmen­ts and promote growth throughout the city and surroundin­g areas as well as increase reliabilit­y throughout the sanitary sewer system in the event of power or mechanical failures,” Heinzer said.

In 2013, the city entered into the agreement with the EPA, the state and the Tennessee Clean Water Network with the goal of eliminatin­g or significan­tly reducing sanitary sewage overflows.

The Hamilton County Water and Wastewater Treatment Authority has had its own major problems. County ratepayers are footing the bill for $300 million over the next 20 years as a result of a similar agreement with the EPA.

Early this year, Hamilton County Mayor Weston Wamp backed off a plan to use $3 million to fund projects using diverted wastewater funds. That came after county commission­ers objected.

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