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Date: Fri 02-May-1997

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Date: Fri 02-May-1997

Publication: Bee

Author: ANDYG

Quick Words:

WPCA-sewer-regulations

Full Text:

WPCA Works On Regulations for Sewer System

B Y A NDREW G OROSKO

Water Pollution Control Authority (WPCA) members are fashioning a set of

regulations for operating the municipal sewer system now under construction.

Also, town officials are interviewing management firms who want to operate the

sewer system for the town.

The sewer regulations, which are in their formative stages, will be based on a

set of model regulations promulgated by the US Environmental Protection Agency

(EPA), Fred Hurley, town public works director, said Monday.

The regulations' continuing development follows rounds of comments made by

town officials and consultants on refining the operational rules.

In creating the regulations, the town seeks to anticipate issues that will

arise in running the sewer system, according to Mr Hurley. The sewer system

will cleanse wastewater from connected homes and businesses at Taunton Pond

North, the Borough, and Sandy Hook Center.

The regulations will address issues such as: sewer system hook-up fees; how

the sewer system may be expanded to handle wastewater discharged by new

residential development; how the regulations can be amended; and how the

system will be maintained.

In developing a set of regulations, local officials have reviewed existing

sewer regulations used by other towns, according to Mr Hurley.

Many technical appendices will be attached to the regulations, he said. Also,

the regulations will contain definitions of terms used in the document, he

said.

Currently, the proposed regulations are "strictly in review," according to Mr

Hurley. After further refinements are made, a "working document," will be

developed from which an eventual set of finished regulations will be written

and adopted, he said.

The WPCA will use the regulations to govern sewer system operation, much like

the Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) uses its subdivision regulations to

govern development and its zoning regulations to control specific land uses.

The town is under a state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)

pollution abatement order to rectify longstanding pollution problems posed by

groundwater contamination due to failing septic systems. A $34.3-million sewer

system approved by voters in 1992 is being built to resolve the pollution

problems. The municipal sewage treatment plant is scheduled to be completed in

September. About half the sewer system's capital costs will be covered locally

through users' payments and general property taxation, with the remainder

covered by state and federal grants.

Management Firms

Mr Hurley said the town is continuing to interview firms that want to operate

the sewer system for the town.

"This is the beginning of a new business," Mr Hurley said of the sewer system.

Town officials want to hire a management company to run the system which has

21 miles of sewer collection lines.

The town has been interviewing private firms capable of operating,

maintaining, and administering the system. Discussions have focused on how

each firm would run the system, their business plans, staffing, and costs for

providing various services.

Mr Hurley said town officials plan to winnow down the seven firms under

consideration to a smaller number in making a selection.

Running the system will involve operating the sewage treatment plant now being

built at the end of Commerce Road, operating four sewage pumping stations, and

maintaining the network of sewage collection lines in the Borough, Sandy Hook

Center, and Taunton Pond North.

As public works director, Mr Hurley will oversee the contract between the

sewer system management firm and the town. The initial term of the contract is

expected to be five years, with possible renewal options.

The WPCA will recommend a firm to run the sewer system to the town's

Purchasing Authority.

Firms which responded to the town's request for qualifications to run the

sewer system included: OMI, Inc, of Greenwood Village, Colorado; Earth Tech,

Inc, of Glastonbury; PSG of Houston, Texas; ST Environmental Services, Inc, of

Glen Cove, N.Y.; United Water of Harrington Park, N.J.; Weston and Sampson

Services, Inc, of Peabody, Massachusetts; Wheelabrator EOS, Inc, of North

Andover, Massachusetts; and Woodward and Curran of Dedham, Massachusetts.

The treatment plant now being built at the end of Commerce Road will be highly

automated. The facility will be unattended at nights and on weekends. An

estimated five to seven people would work there with probably no more than

five people working there at any one time, according to Mr Hurley.

Telemetry equipment will transmit information on the operation of four sewage

pumping stations and the sewage plant to a central computer. Computers will be

used to automatically regulate the sewer system's operations. If major

operational problems arise, alarms would sound and automatic telephone calls

would be made to alert staffers.

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