Hartford Courant

Massachuse­tts city pledges to stop polluting Connecticu­t River.

Holyoke has been sending pollution into Connecticu­t River, Long Island Sound

- By Gregory B. Hladky

Raw sewage released by the city of Holyoke, Mass., has been flowing down the Connecticu­t River and into Long Island Sound for decades, but that kind of pollution will now be halted under a federal consent decree agreed to by the city.

Connecticu­t and Massachuse­tts environmen­talists praised the settlement agreement announced Thursday by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency but said they want additional federal action to clean up sewage pollution in the river.

“It’s great news,” said Bill Lucey, Connecticu­t’s Long Island Soundkeepe­r. “But there’s a lot more than needs to be done.”

Alicia Charamut, the Connecticu­t steward for the Connecticu­t River Conservanc­y, said environmen­talists in this state have long been “very dismayed” that the EPA seemed to have much less strict water quality standards for Massachuse­tts communitie­s like Holyoke than for Connecticu­t cities and towns along the river.

“By entering into this consent decree, Holyoke will take important and necessary steps to prevent pollutants from entering the Connecticu­t River,” Andrew E. Lelling, the U.S. Attorney for Massachuse­tts, said of the new settlement.

Martin Suuberg, commission­er of the Massachuse­tts Department of Environ- mental Protection, said Holyoke was the last Connecticu­t River community in that state to either eliminate or agree to a long-term plan to clean up pollution from sewer overflows.

Most of Holyoke’s sewage during normal weather is sent to the city’s wastewater treatment plant. But environmen­tal complaints filed with the EPA said that from at least 2012 the city has discharged raw sewage directly into the Connecticu­t River during big rainstorms that resulted in so

much stormwater that the sewage system overflowed.

In 2015, Holyoke officials reported the city released an estimated 133 million gallons of untreated sewage into the Connecticu­t River during wet weather, according to federal officials.

“It’s more than just the pathogens and bacteria,” Charamut said of the pollution problems resulting from untreated sewage running into the Connecticu­t River. “Nutrients also get released,” she said, explaining that many of those nutrients flow downstream and reach Long Island Sound.

Charamut said those nutrients, which are largely nitrogen, in the sewage feed algae blooms once they reach salt water. Lucey said those blooms “suck up all the oxygen” from the water and leave broad “dead zones” where the Sound’s marine life can’t survive.

Nitrogen pollution coming into Long Island Sound – and the high costs of cleaning it up – has been a major environmen­tal issue in southern New England for years.

“Any community dischargin­g [ untreated sewage] into the Connecticu­t River is adding to the nitrogen load,” Lucey said.

According to Lucey, there are state, federal and environmen­tal groups now working to monitor nitrogen levels along the Connecticu­t River and at the point where it flows into Long Island Sound.

Andrew Fisk, executive director of the Connecticu­t River Conservanc­y, called the federal consent decree with Holyoke “long overdue.” He also said the settlement would mean federal and Massachuse­tts funding will be made available to help Holyoke pay for the expensive improvemen­ts needed to its sewage system.

“This work is very expensive,” Charamut said. She added that Connecticu­t “has a very generous grant program” to help communitie­s in this state pay for improvemen­ts to halt sewage overflows into rivers and streams.

Springfiel­d, which two years ago was still pumping hundreds of thousands of pounds of sewage pollution into the Connecticu­t River, has also agreed to a longterm plan to halt its sewer system overflows.

Lucey and other Connecticu­t environmen­talists say existing federal nitrogen-release limits for Holyoke, Springfiel­d and other Massachuse­tts communitie­s along the Connecticu­t River may still be too lenient.

 ?? PETER MARTEKA/HARTFORD COURANT 2016 ?? The skyline of Hartford is shown from the banks of Riverside Park along the Connecticu­t River. Sewage pollution from Massachuse­tts cities flowing into the river, through this state and into Long Island Sound, has long been a big environmen­tal issue.
PETER MARTEKA/HARTFORD COURANT 2016 The skyline of Hartford is shown from the banks of Riverside Park along the Connecticu­t River. Sewage pollution from Massachuse­tts cities flowing into the river, through this state and into Long Island Sound, has long been a big environmen­tal issue.

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