For Immediate Release: December 4,
2012
Contact: Dean Higuchi, 808-541-2711, higuchi.dean@epa.gov
Contact: Dean Higuchi, 808-541-2711, higuchi.dean@epa.gov
EPA proposes new NPDES permits for Agana
& Northern District Sewage Treatment Plants
HONOLULU - The U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency issued a notice of proposed action under the Clean Water Act to
reissue National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permits to the Guam
Waterworks Authority for the Northern District and Agana Sewage Treatment
Plants.
The proposed permits will require the
plants to upgrade to full secondary treatment and establish wastewater quality
levels consistent with secondary treatment requirements. GWA will need to comply
with effluent limitations for bacteria based on protecting Guam's beaches, and
establish additional controls to reduce sewage spills from the improper
management of fats, oils and grease.
"GWA is currently under a schedule to make
significant improvements to their drinking and wastewater infrastructure," said
Jared Blumenfeld, EPA’s Regional Administrator for the Pacific Southwest."These
new permits underscore EPA’s commitment to improve water quality for the
protection of Guam’s ocean waters."
The Clean Water Act generally requires
municipal wastewater treatment plants to use both primary and secondary
treatment. The act does allow for variances from secondary treatment for marine
discharges, provided the plant meets primary treatment requirements, water
quality standards and other specific criteria. On September 20, 2009, EPA issued
final decisions to deny GWA’s application for variances. The EPA concluded
discharges from the two plants no longer qualify because the treated wastewater
exceeds Guam's ocean water quality standards for bacteria, designed to protect
recreational activities such as swimming and fishing. Additionally, neither
plant has met the minimum standards for primary treatment, which require 30
percent removal of total suspended solids and biochemical oxygen demand.
Primary treatment generally involves
screening out large objects such as rags and sticks, removing grit, such as
cinders, sand and small stones, and allowing wastewater to settle, followed by
the removal of collected solids. When secondary treatment is used,
primary-treated wastewater flows into another facility where a large portion of
the organic matter in the wastewater is removed by treating the sewage with
bacteria. There are a variety of different biological treatment techniques that
allow the bacteria to consume most of the waste’s organic matter.
The proposed permits, fact sheets, and
background information are available on EPA's website for review and comment.
EPA will consider all comments received on the proposed permit.
For more information, please visit: http://www.epa.gov/region09/water/npdes/pubnotices.html
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