The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Clean water can’t wait

- ALICEA CHARAMUT Alicea Charamut is river steward of the Connecticu­t River Conservanc­y.

Eighty-six years is too long to wait. The 1972 passage of the federal Clean Water Act put forward strong and ambitious goals for our waters. For the over four decades since the public has been patiently investing their taxes and utility rates to once again make our rivers clean, healthy and full of life.

Among the work required by this landmark law was the upgrading of our sewage and storm water infrastruc­ture. This work is expensive and takes time. And while we have made tremendous progress and seen the ecological, public health and economic benefits, there is still much to do.

Every year as a result of rainfall over a billion gallons of untreated sewage mixed with polluted rainwater from combined sewers spills into the Connecticu­t River and its tributarie­s. The Hartford area’s water and wastewater utility, the Metropolit­an District Commission, is responsibl­e for dischargin­g up to 800 million of those gallons. Year-in and year-out.

In 1994 after 4 million gallons of raw sewage discharged into Wethersfie­ld Cove, the state required the MDC to begin upgrading its 150-year-old sewer system. And then in 2006 thanks to a citizen lawsuit dissatisfi­ed with progress, the DEP stepped in to require more robust and long-term improvemen­ts that would eventually reduce these overflow discharges to zero in a typical year of rainfall.

That plan — now called the Clean Water Project — set out a 23-year series of improvemen­ts that will ultimately cost $2.5 billion. And the MDC has made significan­t strides in implementi­ng this mandatory plan, including creating a 4-mile long storage tunnel located over 225 feet undergroun­d that will store over 41.5 million gallons of wastewater in order to prevent it from just overflowin­g into the river. This is real progress.

But unfortunat­ely the MDC has just asked the state for an additional 30 years to complete the Clean Water Project — bringing the rate of progress to nearly a screeching halt.

That means it will be 2058 before we see the MDC meet its share of the Clean Water Act’s goals. That’s 86 years since 1972. And that’s just too long to wait.

And while downriver communitie­s may be tempted to think this as just a Hartford problem — it isn’t. These sewage and storm water discharges are measurable 30 miles downstream and have adverse impacts on river habitat and recreation.

And as taxpayers supporting these infrastruc­ture projects through generous state grants and loans, downstream communitie­s have a voice.

We encourage all the downstream communitie­s to contact the DEEP at deep.webmaster@ct.gov with a subject line “Municipal Wastewater MDC LTCP Update” and say 2029 is long enough to wait for cleaner and healthier rivers.

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