The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sewer upgrade extension sought

Judge to consider Atlanta’s request. City wants July 2014 deadline pushed to 2027 to finish work.

- By Jeremiah Mcwilliams jmcwilliam­s@ajc.com

Atlanta officials, federal and state regulators and clean-water advocates will have their day in court today as U.S. District Judge Thomas Thrash considers a re- quest to give Atlanta 13 extra years to finish mandatory sewer upgrades.

Instead of facing a July 1, 2014 deadline, the city would have until mid2027 to complete work under a proposed agreement.

The request is crucial to the city’s plans. Atlanta officials have promised that current water and sewer rates — already among the highest in the nation — will not rise for another four years if the extension is approved. More time, officials said, would save millions of dollars in constructi­on expenses by freeing the city from paying top-dollar for work under a tight deadline.

Atlanta is under a federal order to upgrade its sewage system to prevent the kind of sewage spills that repeatedly fouled lo- cal waterways and neighborho­ods in the 1990s.

Both the federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency and Georgia’s Environmen­tal Protection Division have signed off on the city’s request for more time. So has the Chattahooc­hee Riverkeepe­r, which sued Atlanta in the mid-1990s over the spills, spurring the federal government to step in.

“Given the city’s goodfaith efforts to date, which have resulted in significan­t water quality improvemen­ts in the river and tributarie­s, Chattahooc­hee Riverkeepe­r supports the deadline extension and will continue to monitor the work until it is completed,” said Sally Bethea, the group’s executive director.

In announcing its support for the extension, the EPA said it wants an outcome “that is fair and reasonable to the people of Atlanta” but also protects the environmen­t.

That leaves Thrash, who has veto power over the proposal. A court staffer said the judge declined comment Wednesday.

The city says it has spent over $1.5 billion on required improvemen­t projects and plans to spend another $445 million. Atlanta cut sewage overflow volume by 97 percent from 2004 to 2011.

Earlier this year, Mayor Kasim Reed said the extension would allow the city to complete vital infrastruc­ture repairs that reduce sewage overflows and protect drinking water without further burdening ratepayers.

Atlanta officials declined to comment Wednesday.

 ??  ?? U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Thrash has veto power over the extension request.
U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Thrash has veto power over the extension request.

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