City of Ketchikan Agrees to Pay $39,000 Settlement to Resolve Federal Clean Water Act Violations
Category:Water Type: News Source: EPA Date: Thursday, February 1st, 2007
(Ketchikan, Alaska - Feb. 1, 2007) The City of Ketchikan, Alaska, has reached a $39,000 settlement for alleged Clean Water Act violations related to the City's discharge of wastewater. The City owns and operates a wastewater treatment facility that discharges treated wastewater into the Tongass Narrows. The wastewater treatment plant is part of a sanitary sewer system that gains domestic wastewater from residential and commercial sources. The facility serves a population of approximately 8,000.
The discharge from the City's facility exceeded the fecal coliform bacteria, copper, biochemical oxygen demand (BOD), total suspended solids (TSS), pH and total residual chlorine effluent limits on numerous occasions. The effluent limits are set 4th in the City's Countrywide Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit. Between June 2001 and December 2005, the facility had 861 effluent limit violations.
"It's our job to ensure protection of water quality in Alaska," said Marcia Combes, Alaska Operations Office Director for EPA. "That's why we make sure that cities like Ketchikan are following the requirements set forth by their discharge permit. We're happy to see that the City is making strides to upgrade their facility."
The NPDES permit program, a key part of the federal Clean Water Act, controls water pollution by regulating sources that discharge pollutants to waters in the United States.
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