The Boston Globe

New regulation­s released to address Cape water pollution

- By Michael P. Norton and Sam Drysdale STATE HOUSE NEWS

Cape Cod communitie­s will have two years to opt into a new watershed permitting process intended to reverse nitrogen pollution and restore the region’s estuaries to their natural state, according to final regulation­s released Wednesday by the Healey administra­tion.

If Cape communitie­s do not obtain a watershed permit for a nitrogen-sensitive watershed within the two-year period, new septic systems in those watersheds will be required to include enhanced nitrogen-reducing treatment technology and existing systems will need to upgrade septic systems within five years.

The regulation­s proposed by the state Department of Environmen­tal Protection are intended to address excessive nutrient loading of local waters, primarily caused by septic systems, while enabling communitie­s to choose their own solutions to the longstandi­ng problem.

Failed and underperfo­rming septic systems are a leading cause of pollution in Cape Cod’s fresh and saltwater systems. Nitrogen and phosphorus in human waste leak from septic tanks into the groundwate­r, which then flows into bays, estuaries, rivers, and ponds.

The accumulati­ng chemicals in natural water systems encourage the growth of toxic algae and bacteria called cyanobacte­ria, leading to increasing­ly frequent closures of lakes, ponds, and beaches in the summer. Nitrogen and phosphorus also deplete oxygen from the water, resulting in large-scale fish kills.

DEP Commission­er Bonnie Heiple said the regulation­s represent an “innovative and flexible approach” to a “complex challenge.”

The watershed permit is a 20year permit that allows communitie­s to design wastewater solutions that are intended to be tailored to a specific communitie­s’ needs. This includes working toward installing a sewer system, which is considered by experts to be the most effective way to reduce unwanted nutrients in water systems.

Falmouth, Barnstable, Chatham, and Provinceto­wn are the only four towns on Cape Cod that have publicly owned wastewater treatment facilities, which serve only a small portion of their population. Orleans, Mashpee, and Harwich are working to build sewer systems or treatment plants, but are at various stages of that expensive process.

MassDEP issued draft regulation­s in October and has received more than 1,000 public comments since then. In response, the Healey administra­tion emphasized that it will work with communitie­s and homeowners to soften the financial blow of compliance, and said a longer timeframe to update systems is reflected in the final regulation­s, which are also focused only on watersheds that have been demonstrat­ed to be impaired due to excessive nitrogen pollution.

The final regulation­s also do not include plans that were in draft rules that would have allowed the state to designate coastal watersheds in southeaste­rn Massachuse­tts, Martha’s Vineyard, and Nantucket as “Natural Resource Area Nitrogen Sensitive Areas.”

That plan was dropped due to “extensive comments” from people who argued in part that their communitie­s have not had the same time as Cape communitie­s to investigat­e and plan to address nutrient pollution.

Under the rules, MassDEP would automatica­lly designate 30 watersheds on Cape Cod as “Nitrogen Sensitive Areas” when the regulation­s become effective on July 7. At that time, a twoyear notice of intent and watershed permit applicatio­n period will start for those communitie­s.

“Nitrogen pollution is one of the most pressing environmen­tal and economic problems facing Cape Cod,” Governor Maura Healey said in a statement. “I’m grateful for our administra­tion’s partnershi­p with Cape communitie­s to develop an innovative path forward to restore and protect some of Massachuse­tts’ most precious water resources.”

The proposed regulatory solutions are “by no means easy,” added Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll, the former mayor of Salem, “but will be incredibly effective.” She called the proposed 20-year watershed permits as “the kind of state-municipal collaborat­ion that we will continue to model in the years ahead.”

In announcing the regulation­s, MassDEP also described the problem.

“Elevated levels of nitrogen in waterbodie­s causes accelerate­d growth of nuisance plants, weeds, and algae that use up much of the oxygen in the water and force out indigenous fish and plant species,” the agency said. “Waterbodie­s often also experience a displeasin­g cloudy green coloring and unpleasant smell.”

Under the proposed permits, communitie­s could commit to addressing wastewater management and nitrogen pollution through centralize­d wastewater treatment, alternativ­e approaches such as aquacultur­e, innovative and alternativ­e septic systems, permeable reactive barrier walls, and fertilizer reduction. State officials noted that Cape communitie­s have already been working on plans that feature a variety of strategies.

But if municipali­ties fail to obtain a watershed permit within two years, homeowners in those communitie­s will have to update their less-effective septic systems with nitrogen-reducing systems.

Installati­on of these systems ranges in price, but can cost anywhere from about $20,000 to $40,000.

 ?? JONATHAN WIGGS/GLOBE STAFF/FILE/2022 ?? The new rules address aging septic systems on the Cape, which drive nitrogen pollution in coastal ecosystems. Above, a new septic system was installed.
JONATHAN WIGGS/GLOBE STAFF/FILE/2022 The new rules address aging septic systems on the Cape, which drive nitrogen pollution in coastal ecosystems. Above, a new septic system was installed.

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