FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEJuly 17,
2012
US
and Tennessee Announce Clean Water Act Agreement With the City Of
Chattanooga
WASHINGTON – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), the Department of Justice, the Tennessee Department of Environment and
Conservation and the Office of the Tennessee Attorney General announced today a
comprehensive Clean Water Act settlement with the city of Chattanooga, Tenn.
Chattanooga has agreed to pay a $476,400 civil penalty and make improvements to
its sewer systems, estimated by the city at $250 million, to eliminate
unauthorized overflows of untreated raw sewage. Chattanooga also has agreed to
implement a green infrastructure plan and perform an $800,000 stream restoration
project.
“The EPA is working with communities
across the country to address sewage overflows that impact the health of
residents and impair local water quality,” said Cynthia Giles, assistant
administrator for the EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance.
“Today’s agreement with the city of Chattanooga will rehabilitate their aging
sewer system and promote innovative green infrastructure efforts to reduce
stormwater runoff, while increasing green space in communities.”
“Chattanooga residents will enjoy public health and environmental
benefits for years to come as a result of the improvements required by this
settlement agreement. The agreement prioritizes neighborhood sewer
rehabilitation projects and utilizes innovative stormwater controls in the urban
core, reducing sewer overflows and overall reducing threats to public health
posed by untreated sewage,” said Ignacia S. Moreno, assistant attorney general
for the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division. “This
is another example of how we are working toward the goal of clean water for all
communities through the vigorous enforcement of the Clean Water Act throughout
the United States.”
A consent decree, filed today in U.S.
District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee in Chattanooga, represents
the combined efforts of the United States and the state of Tennessee,
co-plaintiffs in this settlement, and of the Tennessee Clean Water Network, a
citizens’ plaintiff in this action. The consent decree resolves
claims for injunctive relief and civil penalties for Chattanooga’s alleged
violations of the Clean Water Act and the Tennessee Water Quality Control Act.
The proposed consent decree will require Chattanooga to
comprehensively assess and rehabilitate its entire sewer collection system to
eliminate overflows of untreated raw sewage. Specifically, Chattanooga will
perform rehabilitation projects to address known problems within the collection
system; implement programs to ensure proper management, operation and
maintenance of its sewer systems; and install additional controls on the
Chattanooga Creek combined sewer outfalls to ensure compliance with water
quality standards.
Prior to finalizing the proposed
consent decree, the city, along with EPA and the Tennessee Department of
Environment and Conservation, held two public meetings to provide information
regarding the sewer system and to seek community input regarding the impact that
sewer overflows were having in the community.
Chattanooga has also agreed to
perform a stream restoration supplemental environmental project at a cost of
$800,000 in the 3800 Block of Agawela Drive, to restore the stream and stabilize
the banks of a tributary of the South Chickamauga Creek and eliminate a
significant source of sediment and solids to the creek. Half of the civil
penalty will be paid to the United States. At the direction of the
state, the other half of the civil penalty will be paid by Chattanooga through
the performance of green infrastructure demonstration projects in the historic
downtown Highland Park neighborhood to, among other things, improve water
quality in the Dobbs Branch stream, which flows into Chattanooga Creek.
Green infrastructure involves the use of
soils, vegetation and natural processes to store, infiltrate and evaporate storm
water to prevent it from getting into the sewer
system.
Keeping raw sewage and contaminated stormwater out of the waters
of the United States is one of the EPA’s national enforcement initiatives for
2011 to 2013. The initiative focuses on reducing sewer overflows, which can
present a significant threat to human health and the environment. These
reductions are accomplished by obtaining commitments from municipalities to
implement timely, affordable solutions to these problems, including the
increased use of green infrastructure and other innovative
approaches.
The United States has reached similar agreements
with municipalities across the country, including the following in the
Southeast: Mobile and Jefferson County (Birmingham), Ala.; Atlanta and Dekalb
County, Ga.; Knoxville and Nashville, Tenn.; Miami-Dade County, Fla.; and
Northern Kentucky Sanitation District #1 and Louisville, Ky.
The proposed consent decree with
Chattanooga is subject to a 30-day public comment period and final court
approval before becoming effective.
More information about the
settlement:
http://www.epa.gov/compliance/resources/cases/civil/cwa/cityofchattanooga.html
R123
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