Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Court OKs Alcosan’s plan for wet weather

- By Don Hopey

The Allegheny County Sanitary Authority has received federal court approval to move ahead with its $2 billion-plus plan to remove 7 billion gallons of stormwater and sewage from rivers and streams in Allegheny County.

The modified consent decree alters, updates and expands a January 2008 federal consent order that required Alcosan to eliminate all illegal sanitary sewer discharges into the region’s rivers and streams and reduce sewage and stormwater overflows from 153 combined sewer outfalls by 85%.

“This is the end of a very long, educationa­l and exciting road,” said ALCOSAN Executive Director Arletta Scott Williams. “I’m pleased that the court and the plaintiffs agreed with our approach for improving the water quality of our rivers and streams, and we are all excited to continue forward with that important goal.”

The agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency, the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Environmen­tal Protection, and the Allegheny County Health Department was approved by the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvan­ia Thursday and announced by Alcosan on Friday.

The new consent decree allows the authority to implement its “Clean Water Plan,” formerly called its “Wet Weather Plan,” a strategy for reducing sewage overflows into rivers and streams almost every time it rains.

The new agreement extends the authority’s original deadline for fixing those overflows by a decade, to 2036. It also proposes building more than 15 miles of undergroun­d storage tunnels 14 feet in diameter along the city’s rivers to capture the overflows during storms.

During dry weather, the stored stormwater and sewage would be released to flow to the Woods Run treatment facility, which is undergoing a $300 million expansion that will eventually double its treatment capacity.

The new plan does contain “adaptive management” language that will allow Alcosan the flexibilit­y to use new technology as it becomes available and also add environmen­tally friendly “green infrastruc­ture” components.

The plan’s goals are to reduce the amount of stormwater entering the combined sewer system, including through the use of green infrastruc­ture, such as bioswales, and roof and rain gardens.

Alcosan will also expand its conveyance system by adding pipes, diversion structures and tunnels, and it will regionaliz­e its ownership of municipal trunk line sewers.

“With the anticipate­d addition of more than 200 miles of sewer infrastruc­ture as Alcosan’s responsibi­lity, the system will be more efficient and seamless, and it will reduce some of the burden on municipali­ties,” the authority said in its Friday release.

Green infrastruc­ture should become a major focus of the implementa­tion plan, said Madeline Weiss, environmen­tal justice organizer for Pittsburgh United, a community advocacy organizati­on with a history of involvemen­t in the sewer overflow issue.

“It’s vital to keep green infrastruc­ture solutions as the focus moving forward because it addresses multiple issues, like basement backups, flooding, landslides and more,” Ms. Weiss said. “As we see more rain from a changing climate, we need to make investment­s that do more than just one thing. Green infrastruc­ture has multiple community benefits, and we as ratepayers have said time and again that we want those benefits.”

As additional data is collected and new technology is available, Ms. Weiss said Pittsburgh United expects Alcosan to make use of the adaptive management options allowed by the modified agreement. She cited recent informatio­n from the RAND Corp. that noted a significan­t increase in the amount of untreated stormwater flowing into

area rivers due to a changing climate and more impermeabl­e surfaces — roads, parking lots, driveways, sidewalks — in the urban landscape.

“The work being done right now by the RAND Corporatio­n indicates that what is currently proposed is not enough to even solve the CSO [combined sewer overflow] issue, so Alcosan must pursue all the options available to protect our rivers and our communitie­s,”

Ms. Weiss said.

Steve Hvozdovich, state campaign director for Clean Water Action, said it’s good that an agreement was reached but noted several shortcomin­gs, including what he termed the “terribly troubling” decade-long extension to accomplish the overflow reductions.

“Our three rivers are an important part of this region, serving as a source of recreation and drinking,” Mr. Hvozdovich said. “So it’s important that we correct this issue as soon as possible, especially since indication­s are that we’re seeing increased rainfall and the problem has persisted for so long.”

He also said use of green infrastruc­ture solutions should be a requiremen­t instead of a suggestion, and he cited Philadelph­ia as a city where green infrastruc­ture use is creating “positive environmen­tal and financial impacts.”

The modified consent decree was lodged with the court in September 2019 to allow for a 60-day public comment period.

Alcosan treats sewage wastewater for 83 Allegheny County communitie­s, including the city of Pittsburgh. The authority’s 59-acre treatment plant processes up to 250 million gallons of wastewater daily, making it one of the largest such facilities in the Ohio River Valley.

More informatio­n about the authority’s Clean Water Plan is available at www.alcosan.org

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States