Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

• Wipes, face masks clog cities’ sewers, storm drains,

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PHILADELPH­IA — Mayor Jim Kenney kicked off a recent briefing on Philadelph­ia’s coronaviru­s response with an unusual request for residents: Be careful what you flush.

Between mid-March, when the city’s stay-at-home order was issued, and the end of April, most of the 19 sewer and stormwater pumping stations in Philadelph­ia had experience­d clogs from face masks, gloves and wipes residents had pitched into the potty, Mr. Kenney said.

“Please do not flush any of these items down the toilet,” the mayor said.

Officials in other U.S. cities and rural communitie­s — and the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency — have issued similar pleas as wastewater plant operators report a surge of stopped-up pipes and damage to equipment.

The problem has sharpened the longstandi­ng clash over whether wipes are suitable for flushing.

While drain clogs aren’t new, most of the more than 15 cities contacted by The Associated Press said they’ve become a more costly and time-consuming headache during the pandemic. Homebound Americans are seeking alternativ­es to bathroom tissue because of occasional shortages while stepping up efforts to sanitize their dwellings and themselves.

“When everyone rushed out to get toilet paper and there was none ... people were using whatever they could,” said Pamela Mooring, spokeswoma­n for DC Water, the system in the nation’s capital.

Sanitary sewer overflows jumped 33% between February and March in Houston because of clogs from rags, tissues, paper towels and wipes, said public works department spokeswoma­n Erin Jones.

In Murfreesbo­ro, Tenn., crews are cleaning sewage pumping stations multiple times a week that previously needed it once a month, said John Strickland, manager of the treatment facility.

At Beale Air Force Base in Northern California, a squadron that usually deals with airfield maintenanc­e and weaponry disposal has been yanking wipes from the base’s plumbing.

“Our airmen are working 16-plus hours to unclog the pipe systems, and that takes them out of the mission and puts a strain on the rest of the team,” Master Sgt. Destrey Robbins said in an article on the Beale website.

By flushing the wrong things, people are taxing infrastruc­ture that’s already deteriorat­ing, said Darren Olson, vice chairman of the American Society of Civil Engineers’ Committee for America’s Infrastruc­ture. “Your latex glove may not be the thing that causes a clog, but you are adding to the burden.”

Hundreds of areas, like a portion of Philadelph­ia, have combined sewage and stormwater systems, so sanitation officials say that means discarded masks and gloves that litter sidewalks and parking lots can also reach and help gum up treatment plants.

Mr. Olson said masks and gloves thrown in the street can travel through storm drains in separate systems to lakes and other waterways.

George Leonard, Ocean Conservanc­y’s chief scientist, said he’s concerned discarded personal protective equipment could wash out to sea and eventually add to “the plastics burden that the ocean is already suffering from.”

Costs of clearing, cleaning and restarting equipment are mounting for utilities.

To reduce the likelihood of clogs, WSSC Water — a wastewater utility that serves nearly 1.8 million customers in Prince George’s and Montgomery counties in Maryland — installed about 27 debris grinding pumps over the past decade at a cost of $1.5 million.

“At one wastewater pumping station alone, one that does not have grinder pumps, we have seen an increase of 37,000 pounds of wipes during January -March 2020 compared with the same time period in 2019,” said utility spokeswoma­n Lyn Riggins.

Michigan’s Macomb County spent $50,000 in 2018 removing a “fatberg” of debris, oils and grease that was 100 feet long and 11 feet wide, said Candice Miller, public works commission­er. The suburban Detroit community also spent millions for screens that snag thousands of pounds of wipes weekly.

Municipal officials say the solution’s simple: Put nothing in toilets but human waste and toilet paper.

“Don’t be fooled by wipes packaging claims that these products are flushable,” DC Water said in a March advisory. “They are not.”

The Associatio­n of the Nonwoven Fabrics Industry, which represents hundreds of companies including major wipes producers, agrees most wet wipes are unsuitable for toilet disposal and says they’re labeled as such.

But one type is designed to perform the same functions as toilet paper and merits the “flushable” label, said Dave Rousse, president of the industry group.

These cellulose wipes begin breaking down immediatel­y and dissolve within hours, Mr. Rouse said.

“These wipes are incapable of causing the kinds of problems that wastewater operators are accusing them of,” he said.

Critics contend “flushable” wipes don’t biodegrade as manufactur­ers claim.

In Macomb County outside Detroit, maintenanc­e workers are removing two tons of wipes per week from one pump station, and officials say some clearly are the “flushable” variety.

This month, the county sued wipe manufactur­ers, alleging voluntary flushabili­ty standards are based on testing that doesn’t reflect actual conditions in a sewer system.

In March, Washington became the first state to adopt requiremen­ts for the size, placement and visibility of “Do Not Flush” warnings on wipes that manufactur­ers and local officials agree should not go down toilets. Similar legislatio­n is under considerat­ion in California.

Meanwhile, many cities are using public education campaigns to make their case against flushing pandemic debris.

The message may be getting through, says Carlos Brianom El Paso, Texas, water utility spokesman. Before the media blitz, emergency maintenanc­e teams were dispatched about seven times a day to clear pipes. Now, it’s once a day.

“It’s slowed, but it’s still not pre-pandemic,” Mr. Briano said.

 ?? Michael M. Santiago/Post-Gazette ?? Face masks sit on a counter next to disinfecta­nt wipes May 8 at Nells Crafts at Cranberry Mall in Cranberry, Venango County.
Michael M. Santiago/Post-Gazette Face masks sit on a counter next to disinfecta­nt wipes May 8 at Nells Crafts at Cranberry Mall in Cranberry, Venango County.

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