EMMITSBURG,
Md. – The last time a storm came through Emmitsburg,
something else came through the town’s sewer lines and
settled in A. M. Winch’s toilet … sewage.
“I
do not understand why I should have sewage in my basement,
in my garage, in my toilet,” Winch said.
It
is not the first time something like this has happened in
that area of town. Emmit Gardens is the lowest-lying area
on the town sewer system. Sewage from all areas of town
passes through there on its way to the sewer plant.
“I
have personally witnessed sewer water spilling out of and
springing up from manhole covers in the middle of the street
and the field adjacent to my property. This sludge enters
my yard and home from the stream, the field, the street,
the driveway and via reflux into the commode and sink in
my basement,” Winch wrote in a letter to the Emmitsburg
mayor and commissioners.
She
wrote that homeowners in her neighborhood “plug their
drains to avoid regurgitation of the effluent and must serve
as involuntary auxiliary pumping stations for the town by
using their sump pumps.”
Mayor
James Hoover responded on July 10 that the town has experienced
two small spills of untreated sewage over the past seven
months.
Town
Manager Dave Haller told the commissioners, “It wasn’t
due to the high flows. It was excess grease build up.”
Haller
said the problem is businesses that are not using grease
traps as defined by town ordinance to keep grease out of
the sewer system. When grease gets into the system, it tends
to build up on the pipes.
“Where
you did have a 10-inch pipe you might have a four-inch pipe,”
Haller said.
For
now, the pipes in the Emmit Gardens area have been cleaned
out and town staff is putting together a plan to identify
the businesses in violation of the ordinance.
Winch
suggested that the town seal its manholes to keep the sewage
from getting outside the system. Hoover said this would
only force sewage spills to come out into people’s
homes.
“While
we don’t want to see the spills in the environment,
we also don’t want to see it in people’s homes.
So you’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t,”
Hoover said.
Though
the system is ill-suited for its current uses, when it was
first built, it was adequate. However, it was built in 1947
before the town had regulations governing such things as
sewer capacity.
Winch
recommended that a building moratorium be imposed until
all of the sewer problems are fixed. Hoover replied that
new growth allows the town to sell water and sewer connections
and builders pay $22,000 for a water and sewer connection.
It is that money that allows the town to make capital improvements
to the system. Without it, repairs and improvement would
not be funded or not be funded as quickly.
“Without
some growth and the collection of the ‘sewer collection
system charge’ the cost to repair and upgrade the
town’s existing sanitary sewer system would have to
be borne solely by the existing residents,” Hoover
wrote.
While
the town has started working to address Emmit Gardens problem
specifically, Hoover said it could still take a year to
fully address.