Times Colonist

Sewage gushing into Puget Sound from hobbled Seattle plant

- PHUONG LE

SEATTLE — Millions of litres of raw sewage and untreated runoff have poured into Puget Sound since a massive sewage-treatment plant experience­d equipment failures that forced it to stop fully treating Seattle’s waste.

The county-run facility has been hobbling along at about half capacity since the Feb. 9 electrical failure resulted in catastroph­ic flooding that damaged an undergroun­d network of pumps, motors, electric panels and other gear.

The sewage-treatment plant — Washington state’s largest — is only partially treating dirty water that goes down Seattle toilets and washes off roofs and roads before dischargin­g it into Puget Sound, the second largest estuary in the United States, behind Chesapeake Bay. It’s likely to face fines for violating federal clean-water laws.

“It has been a disaster, and we’re not out of it yet. We still don’t know really what went wrong,” said Jeanne Kohl-Welles, a King County councilwom­an whose district includes the 13-hectare West Point Treatment Plant, on the shores of Puget Sound next to Discovery Park, Seattle’s largest public park.

“We’ve got to get a handle on it. I’m very concerned about the environmen­t, the effects on marine life in the sound, public health,” she said.

County officials say crews have been working around the clock to repair about $25 million in flood-related damages and bring the plant to full operations by the end of April. They note that raw sewage has not flowed from the plant since Feb. 16.

In all, nearly 115 million litres of raw sewage have poured into Puget Sound — during the initial breakdown and on two other occasions. “That’s a big deal,” said Heather Bartlett, water quality manager for the state Department of Ecology.

There hasn’t been a treatmentp­lant spill of this magnitude in recent memory. The county is in violation of its clean-water permit until the facility is fully operationa­l. “The longer it goes on, the greater the probabilit­y of an environmen­tal effect,” Bartlett said.

Wastewater moving through the plant is getting primary treatment. Dirty water is screened to remove trash and debris, with some solids settling out, before it’s disinfecte­d, de-chlorinate­d and released through a 90-metre-deep emergency pipe designed to diffuse the waste into rapid currents.

Since Feb. 9, there has been no secondary treatment, a process that relies on beneficial organisms to clean the waste and is required by U.S. federal cleanwater laws.

Beaches that closed because of the initial spill reopened Feb. 21. County officials have been sampling weekly since the spill. Tests of fecal bacteria, dissolved oxygen and nutrients have been normal.

“So far, we have not seen anything that looks out of the realm of normal,” said Kimberle Stark, who manages King County’s marine monitoring program.

She doesn’t expect to see other effects to wildlife because the spill was short and the flow is now being sent through deep-water pipe.

Events unfolded quickly in the early hours of Feb. 9. Power went out to two sets of pumps that discharge treated wastewater into Puget Sound. Float switches designed to detect high water levels inside the tanks also failed, allowing water to top over and flood surroundin­g areas. Crews worked fast to divert the flows to bypass the plant and go directly into the sound, but the flooding damage was done.

While rain did not cause the electrical failure that set problems in motion, it certainly exacerbate­d it, said Robert Waddle, plant operations manager. The facility typically handles about 340 million litres a day, but it was near peak with nearly five times the volume because of heavy rain.

Crews have been working hard to get the plant up and running, replacing motors, lights, pumps and other equipment.

As the plant puts things back together, Waddle said they’re making changes and adding redundant systems in some cases.

“My job is to make sure it doesn’t happen again.”

 ?? TED S. WARREN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Robert Waddle, division operations manager at the West Point Treatment Plant in Seattle, stands near bay doors where floodwater­s rushed into the sewage treatment plant during a massive equipment failure in February.
TED S. WARREN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Robert Waddle, division operations manager at the West Point Treatment Plant in Seattle, stands near bay doors where floodwater­s rushed into the sewage treatment plant during a massive equipment failure in February.

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