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Fresh Water, Foul Sewage

Environmentby Mark Reutter9:30 amJun 1, 20180

DPW underreports volume of sewage dumped into the Jones Falls

VIDEO captures heavy runoff that wasn’t reported to the public or to federal and state regulators

Above: Unmeasured sewage water gushes above and around the city’s “official” overflow pipe (partially obscured) on Falls Road during last Sunday’s storm. (Baltimore Brew)

In a press release issued two days ago, the Baltimore Department of Public Works gave a very precise number for the wastewater dumped into the Jones Falls during last Sunday’s big storm:

“1901 Falls Rd – 1.471 Million Gallons.”

The reported overflow was a small part of the 10 million gallons of raw sewage mixed with rainwater that DPW acknowledged was released during the May 27 storm that pounded the region with heavy rain.

And it was a small part of the much larger actual amount of sewage that sluiced into the Jones Falls last Sunday.

The reason: DPW only measured the sewage released from its official “structured” pipe, known as SSO No. 67, on Falls Road – not the sewage that violently spurted out of a dozen manholes nearby.

State law requires local governments to notify the public and the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE) of a sewage release above the 10,000-gallon mark.

But, according to DPW, such reporting does not include wastewater coming up from underground sewer lines through manhole covers.

“Any water that escapes through a separate manhole is not calculated as part of the report on the structured overflows,” DPW spokesman Jeffrey Raymond confirmed this week.

This critical gap in reporting comes despite a 2002 consent decree, signed by the city, MDE and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), that calls for the elimination of all sewage overflows into local waterways.

The original deadline for ending such overflows was 2010.

In 2016, EPA and MDE gave the Baltimore six more years – until July 1, 2022 – to fix the overflow problem, a major cause of the cloudy water and high bacteria counts that make the city’s goal of a “swimmable and fishable harbor by 2020” a pipe dream.

What We Saw

Last Sunday, The Brew watched sewage water erupt from five manhole covers immediately next to the Falls Road overflow pipe, which is equipped with a meter to measure water flow.

As the videos show, the murky, foul-smelling liquid cascaded over and around the official overflow pipe, inundating the Jones Falls Bike Trail and backing up across both lanes of Falls Road.

A jogger splashed through the water, which DPW’s own data shows is contaminated by human waste and often contains unhealthy levels of Enterococcus bacteria, making it unsafe for human contact.

A block away, under the North Avenue viaduct, more manholes – each embossed with the label “sanitary sewer” – spouted like fountains.

Additional manhole eruptions occurred to the north, along the 2700 and 2800 blocks of Falls Road. Torrents of wastewater swept past the Potts & Callahan yard and settled into a pond at the site of city’s highway maintenance shops.

Massive Overflow at 1901 Falls Road May 27 2018 2 from Carla Thomas on Vimeo.
Videos prepared by Brew intern Carla Thomas.

Falls Road sewage overflow during 5/27/18 storm in Baltimore from Carla Thomas on Vimeo.

Sewage water sloshes over the roadway and into the Jones Falls at 1901 Falls Road on May 27 at the height of the storm.

Murky liquid still sloshed over the biking trail and roadway as the storm ended.

Big Flow, Small Pipe

So how much sewage water was actually released along Falls Road last Sunday?

One rough way to gauge the overflow is to know that the sewer main under Falls Road is 50-inches wide. By contrast, the overflow pipe at 1901 Falls Road is only 21-inches wide.

So when stormwater runoff infiltrates the sewer main, causing it to reach its capacity, less than a third a fifth of the volume can be released by the SSO pipe.

“That’s why the water is surcharging through the manholes,” says Bill Stack. “The overflow pipe doesn’t have the capacity to relieve the pressure.”

Dirt and debris left behind from Sunday's storm along the Jones Falls Trail. (Mark Reutter)

Residue left behind from Sunday’s sewer surcharge in the 1900 block of Falls Road. Below: one of the manhole covers that “blew” during the storm, with toilet paper and other debris stuck to the sides. (Mark Reutter)

sewer manhole on falls rd

Engineer: DPW Ignores the Problem

Before he retired in 2010, Stack worked for 30 years as a DPW engineer, retiring as the agency’s chief of surface water management.

He says the agency is well aware that wastewater surges up through manholes during heavy storms, especially along Falls Road.

Determining how much untreated sewage is released “is not easy, but at least the city could attempt to provide an engineering estimate, instead of completely ignoring the problem,” Stack said, noting that “they have many engineering consultants that work for them.”

Indeed, three weeks ago, the Board of Estimates (which includes Mayor Catherine Pugh and DPW Director Rudy Chow) continued through March 2019 the agency’s longstanding consulting contract with Louis Berger Water Services.

The city will pay up to $5.85 million to Berger to monitor structures, such as SSO No. 67, as part of an “overflow inspection program, maintaining, enhancing and applying a sewer system hydraulic model,” according to board records.

An experienced consultant like Louis Berger, Stack says, “could look at the pipes [under Falls Road], measure their hydraulic flow, and make a pretty reasonable guess of how much is coming out of the manholes based on the amount of rainfall.”

Bill Stack, a DPW water engineer for 30 years, says the city employs consultants that could make accurate determinations of the storm-surge sewage flowing out of manholes. (Center for Watershed Protection)

Bill Stack says the city could assign its consultants to develop accurate estimations of sewage flowing out of manholes – if it wanted to. (Center for Watershed Protection)

Tom Pelton, director of communications for the Environmental Integrity Project, also says that DPW routinely underreports sewage spills into local waterways.

Pelton was one of the authors of a 2015 report, “Stopping the Flood Beneath Baltimore’s Streets,” that documented how the agency failed to report sewage overflows to MDE’s online public database.

The report found that in 55% of reported cases of sewage releases in the city, DPW did not report any volume of overflow to MDE.

That’s because the releases were made intentionally through structured overflow pipes, such SSO No. 67, and were not considered unexpected releases that needed to be publicly disclosed, DPW explained at the time.

Pressure from state regulators and publicity by The Brew helped stop the practice.

A pond of sewage-rainwater runoff lingers from Sunday's storm at the city's highway maintenance shops on Falls Road on Monday. (Carla Thomas)

A pond of mucky runoff lingers from Sunday’s storm at the Falls Road highway maintenance shops on Tuesday. (Carla Thomas)

In the last two years, as required by state law, DPW has reported overflows above 10,000 gallons from its structured overflow pipes, chiefly No. 72, located underground behind 428 East Preston Street.

Raymond said the city also will report sewage spills that is called in by the public in 311 calls. Two weeks ago, environmentalist Timothy Nolte sent photos of sewage water gushing out of a manhole cover into Western Run, a tributary of the Jones Falls.

DPW subsequently reported the spill, which it estimated at 90,000 gallons based on the hydraulics of the sewer line, Raymond said.

What Was Reported this Week

In its Wednesday press release, DPW said that 7.5 million gallons of wastewater was released from overflow pipe No. 72 on Preston Street during last Sunday’s storm.

An additional 167,000 gallons was discharged from the overflow pipe at West Cold Spring Lane at Ayrdale Avenue. Also:

• 104,000 gallons from a pipe at Charing Cross Road at Greenwich Avenue

• 36,000 gallons from a pipe at 3104 Liberty Heights Avenue.

• 30,000 gallons from a pipe at North Charles Street at Lanvale.

DPW also reported that nearly 1 million gallons of sewage water flooded the 1800 block of East Eager Street.

The block’s low ground makes it a well-known “pressure point” for sewage headed to the city’s Back River Wastewater Treatment Plant.

Remnants of the heavy outpouring of sewage water that came out of this manhole in the 2800 block of Falls Road. (Mark Reutter)

Evidence of Sunday’s outpouring of sewage water from manhole covers was visible 40 hours later on the 2800 block of Falls Road. (Mark Reutter)

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