The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Infrastruc­ture need poses challenges

DeKalb must weigh need for growth while reducing sewage spills.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

Like dozens of other new businesses in DeKalb, Mercy Care got caught up in the county government’s desperate need to put an end to repeated sewage spills.

Constructi­on on the Chamblee health clinic was mostly finished when the county informed Mercy Care executives that they would need to add a $500,000 sewage holding tank before the busi- ness could open. Later, county officials reversed course, deciding a tank wasn’t needed to safeguard against spills and allowing the clinic to begin operations. Later still, county officials briefly resumed the debate before finding a solution.

Mercy Care’s case shows there’s much to figure out as the county works to reduce the risk of major spills, such as the two that spewed more than 10 million gallons of waste into two local creeks last month.

Even so, DeKalb officials say the county is open for business.

While new constructi­on projects must get approval to ensure they don’t strain the county’s sewer system, government officials hope recently created stepby-step guidelines will let companies know up-front whether there might be issues.

“We don’t want to cause any financial harm to someone who in good faith is following our rules and regulation­s,” said Ted Rhinehart, DeKalb’s deputy chief operating officer for infrastruc­ture. “At least now, it can be more predictabl­e and understood by everybody.”

In most locations, there’s no problem with sewer capacity,

Rhinehart said. In other cases, businesses or the county can overcome sewer limitation­s by cleaning pipes, replacing stream crossings or building holding tanks.

Sewer obstacles surroundin­g Mercy Care were resolved at the county’s expense in July, three months after the clinic began treating patients. The county replaced 78 vented manhole covers that had been allowing storm water into the sewer system and limiting its capacity during rainy weather. Now, storm water flows abovegroun­d into streams, leaving more room in the sewers for sewage.

“All the manholes have been replaced, so that solved the sewer capacity issue — if there was a sewer capacity issue,” said Diana Lewis, a spokeswoma­n for Mercy Care. “We’re taking care of lots of people, so that’s what’s important to us.”

Before the manhole fix, DeKalb Watershed Director Scott Towler had raised concerns that, by allowing Mercy Care to open, the county might have violated its ongoing $700 million agreement with the federal government to improve its sewer system and reduce spills.

The Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division and U.S Environmen­tal Protection Agency are investigat­ing the county’s sewer capacity issues, including at Mercy Care, said EPD spokeswoma­n Kevin Chambers on Tuesday. The agencies have fined DeKalb $924,000 for sewage spills since 2011.

Since the county government started a formal process for evaluating new businesses last month, it will more quickly grant conditiona­l approvals or give the go-ahead to those companies, Rhinehart said.

The county government is now whittling down a backlog of 358 pending applicatio­ns from businesses seeking to tie into the sewer system, Rhinehart said.

In addition, the county has approved 107 developmen­ts that have sufficient sewer capacity since January 2016, he said. Another 110 constructi­on projects have been given conditiona­l approval to move forward,

and in some cases have been required to prepare plans for holding tanks.

While businesses don’t like delays, they usually understand that DeKalb is working to correct its sewer problems, said Michael Paris, president and CEO for the Council for Quality Growth, an advocacy organizati­on for the developmen­t industry.

“For any developer or builder, any additional day they have to spend in an approval or permitting process, they’d prefer not to do that,” Paris said. “But the county is making every effort to solve this as quickly as possible. Nobody is sitting on their hands on this issue.”

And while there are sewer capacity limitation­s in parts of the county, they’re not as severe as once feared, said DeKalb CEO Mike Thurmond.

Thurmond said a computer model exaggerate­d the danger of sewage spills. A new model must be in place before the end of the year, and that will aid the government as it assesses whether businesses’ face capacity issues.

“We have not done what we’ve needed to have done in the past, but we’re recognizin­g it and correcting it,” Thurmond said. “More importantl­y, we’re learning from those mistakes.”

Still, the county will continue to face competing pressures from businesses and environmen­tal agencies until it makes significan­t sewer system upgrades.

 ?? CHAD RHYM/ CHAD.RHYM@AJC.COM ?? After demonstrat­ing the county’s sewer cleaning efforts by sending a member down the manhole, a crew member is raised up from the sewer on June 28 in Brookhaven. New guidelines will let companies know up-front whether there might be constructi­on issues.
CHAD RHYM/ CHAD.RHYM@AJC.COM After demonstrat­ing the county’s sewer cleaning efforts by sending a member down the manhole, a crew member is raised up from the sewer on June 28 in Brookhaven. New guidelines will let companies know up-front whether there might be constructi­on issues.
 ?? DEKALB COUNTY ?? A sewer line broke near a tributary in Nancy Creek in Brookhaven, spilling millions of gallons of sewage, the largest spill in DeKalb County in more than a decade.
DEKALB COUNTY A sewer line broke near a tributary in Nancy Creek in Brookhaven, spilling millions of gallons of sewage, the largest spill in DeKalb County in more than a decade.

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