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Fresh Water, Foul Sewage

Environmentby Mark Reutter10:23 amOct 4, 20180

The Druid Lake and Lake Ashburton construction messes: It didn’t have to be this way

The story behind the costly, problem-plagued projects to bury reservoir water in underground tanks.

Above: The western end of the Druid Lake, centerpiece of Baltimore’s most famous park, will remain a sprawling construction site through at least 2022. It didn’t start this way. (Mark Reutter)

In 2009, the Sheila Dixon administration believed that it had found a way to keep historic Druid Lake intact while satisfying the Environmental Protection Agency’s new regulation to improve water quality nationwide.

The regulation, known as the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule or LT2, required reservoirs holding “finished,” or treated, water either to be enclosed with a roof or to install advanced chemical treatments before the water is discharged to homes and businesses.

For its small storage reservoirs at Guilford (near Loyola University) and East Towson (off Hillen Road), Baltimore’s Public Works Department opted to build covers over the facilities.

But for the two large drinking water reservoirs at Druid Lake and Ashburton, the city decided to use ultraviolet (UV) disinfection to treat the water.

This would keep the reservoirs – long the aesthetic centerpieces of historic parks – intact, while keeping disruption to surrounding communities at a minimum.

First Plan Approved

The Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE) approved the disinfection plan on May 1, 2009. The Dixon-era Board of Estimates authorized the execution of the agreement on September 2, 2009, and the EPA later ratified the settlement.

The Board of Estimates agreed to get everything up and running by “a final completion date of December 31, 2018.”

Druid Lake is the region’s largest drinking water reservoir. When on-line, it supplies 12-15 billion gallons of the 93 billion gallons of water consumed annually by regional households and businesses.

To get the process moving, Whitman, Requardt & Associates was asked to design the UV facility at Druid Lake, and Hazen & Sawyer/AECOM was hired to plan the UV plant for Lake Ashburton (Hanlon Park).

All of that changed with the incoming Rawlings-Blake administration.

The new mayor replaced DPW Director David E. Scott with Alfred Foxx, and Foxx installed Rudolph S. (Rudy) Chow, a retired sanitary engineer from Montgomery County, as chief of the water bureau.

By early 2012, WR&A had located potential sites for the UV plant at Druid Lake as well as  a “conceptual” price for the treatment plant and the related pipes – $40 million.

The original timetable that DPW submitted to the EPA called for construction at both reservoirs to be finished by this year. (EPA, Baltimore Brew FOIA request)

The original timetable DPW submitted to the EPA called for construction to be completed this year. Currently, the Druid Lake and Ashburton projects are at the beginning construction phases. (EPA archives, Baltimore Brew FOIA request)

But Chow wasn’t interested. In a June 27, 2012 letter to EPA’s regional office, Chow wrote, “We have changed course . . . and have decided to design underground tanks to replace both reservoirs.”

Starting Over

Chow later said his decision was based on “community feedback” from then-City Councilman Nick Mosby and residents in Reservoir Hill, some of whom objected to the potential siting of the UV plant on a vacant parcel of land on Druid Park Lake Drive. (WR&A outlined other sites, such as near a pumping station on the Jones Falls and at the tennis courts north of the lake.)

But Chow said he was thinking on a broader scale, namely his hunch that EPA might disallow the use of UV disinfection in the future and demand that all drinking water reservoirs be covered.

He ordered WR&A to develop a “piping concept” that would involve the construction of two enormous below-grade tanks at the western end of Druid Lake and the reconfiguration of water mains under the park to bring “finished” water directly to the tanks.

The new plan meant that Druid Lake would no longer be a finished water reservoir and could be converted for recreational uses. At a June 26, 2012 community meeting, Chow called this prospect a “win-win” for the city and for park goers.

Chow also changed the direction of the Ashburton project, vetoing the disinfection plant in favor of two sprawling storage tanks at Hanlon Park.

Escalating Costs

Not publicly discussed by Chow, Mayor Rawlings-Blake and others was the cost of the piping concept.

WR&A estimated the new design for Druid Lake at $80 million, or double the disinfection plant proposal. Roughly the same escalation in cost was estimated at Lake Ashburton, where the proposed tanks would be buried under 50 feet of solid rock.

The high initial cost of the storage tanks would be offset by lower maintenance and operating costs, according to WR&A.

But looming over these savings was the life expectancy of the underground tanks. When would they have to be rebuilt or replaced?

WR&A did not directly answer the question. Instead, the consultant noted a 2012 memorandum, “Tanks generally have long-life expectancy, and these tanks would be designed to also have an extended life.”

June 26, 2012 memo describing Chow's decision to halt plans for a UV disinfection plant and instead construct two underground storage tanks in Druid Lake. (EPA, Baltimore Brew public information request)

A June 2012 memo describes Chow’s decision to scrap plans for a UV disinfection  in favor of two giant underground storage tanks. (DPW)

Cofferdam on the Cheap

As it turned out, WR&A vastly underestimated the costs of the storage tanks.

When bids were opened by clerks at the Board of Estimates in the summer of 2016, they ranged from $134.5 million to $155.9 million.

The low bidder was Oscar Renda, a Texas contractor who was a newcomer in Baltimore construction circles. (Renda would also be awarded the Lake Ashburton tank contract worth $137 million.)

Renda beat out two local competitors, as well as the DPW’s own estimate of $156 million, by proposing a cofferdam on the cheap.

The contractor would build the dam at Druid Lake not with conventional steel sheet pilings, but rather with 100,000 tons of rip-rap rock, basically rubble.

The rip-rap had the potential of introducing considerable amounts of quarry residue into the reservoir, not to speak of churning up long-settled bottom sediments.

Another wild card was this consideration, according to Karen Moran – such large-scale construction so close to an active drinking water reservoir had not been attempted before by DPW or other surveyed water systems. (Moran, senior vice president at WR&A, made this statement at a July forum at the Ashburton Water Filtration Plant.)

Rudy Chow petitions EPA for a schedule extension as he greatly enlarged the scope – and cost – of the Druid Hill and Ashburton reservoir projects. (EPA letter, from Public Information request)

Chow petitioned the EPA in 2014 to extend the deadline for Baltimore’s compliance as the scope of Druid Hill and Ashburton projects expanded. The current completion dates are the end of 2022. (EPA archives, Baltimore Brew FOIA request)

Curtains Too Short

To avoid possible contamination, Oscar Renda proposed – and DPW approved – the placement of “turbidity curtains” on the drinking water side of the cofferdam.

The curtains didn’t work.

Shortly after construction of the cofferdam began last fall, turbidity readings shot up, indicating that the water was being contaminated by sediment and other solids.

The lake was taken “off line,” meaning it was not supplying the system with its expected 30-40 million gallons of water per day.

The reservoir was used off and on as a source of the region’s drinking water in November and December 2017 before it was shut down completely in January.

No Answers

DPW officials have repeatedly declined to say why the turbidity curtains didn’t work.

Lauren Swiecicki, chief of DPW engineering and construction, said the matter is “under investigation,” while consultant Moran offered this explanation: “The particulates were finer than we expected.”

Informed sources tell The Brew that, among other factors, the curtains were too short and did not reach the bottom of the reservoir. This caused sediment churned up by the dumped stone to migrate into the drinking water.

Asked about this scenario, Swiecicki spoke of DPW’s best intentions, saying, “We do the best we can and we try to make the best choices and then adjust as we go along.”

The west end of the reservoir has been drained and will see two sprawling tanks installed in the former lake bottom and then buried. Construction is set to continue for the next four years to the end of 2022. (Mark Reutter)

The west side of Druid Lake has been drained and will eventually become the home of water tanks buried in the former lake bottom. Mark Reutter)

“We are in good hands”

Needless to say, the closing of Druid Lake has punched a hole in the city’s overall water network.

Druid Lake is the system’s largest drinking water reservoir. When on-line, it supplies between 12 and 15 billion gallons of the approximately 93 billion gallons of water consumed annually by the system’s 1.8 million customers – or 12-16% of the total.

Chow was asked about the affect of a drought on Baltimore’s water supply in a recent interview on WYPR. He said the following:

“We are watching this very, very carefully. . . Let’s just say we have a drought starting next week. We will have to react to it, and we may have to call for conservation and all that. At this time, we see no need. We have enough water to send to every household we provide water for. We are in good hands.”

PART 1 of this story is here. To contact the reporter: reuttermark@yahoo.com
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PRIOR COVERAGE IN THE BREW

Project to protect city’s drinking water so far has only compromised it (7/11/18)

At hearing on reservoir projects, councilman asks, “Where’s Rudy Chow? (7/12/18)

DPW caught dumping chlorinated water into the Jones Falls (7/20/18)

Ashburton residents revolt over tree-clearing for city water tank project (7/25/18)

Controversial reservoir projects pile up at Baltimore DPW (8/1/18)

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