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Assessment of on-site sewage disposal systems after severe flooding. Steven R. Tidwell, E.I. U.S. Public Health Service APHT3 – Disaster Engineer Presentation June 21, 2011. Presentation Objectives. Be able to: Describe the basics of on-site sewer assessments.
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Assessment of on-site sewage disposal systems after severe flooding Steven R. Tidwell, E.I. U.S. Public Health Service APHT3 – Disaster Engineer Presentation June 21, 2011
Presentation Objectives • Be able to: • Describe the basics of on-site sewer assessments. • Explain the alternative development process for Wastewater treatment options for a community. • List four issues affecting wastewater treatment in a disaster area.
Disaster Background • On July 17, 2010 a slow-moving frontal system crossed Kentucky, spreading severe weather with flooding and heavy rains • On July 20, 2010 Governor Beshear declared a state of emergency and issues request for federal assistance. • On July 23, 2010 President Barrack Obama approved the national disaster declaration.
Impact on Community • Over 25,000 residents on a boil water advisory • Over 2,000 residents without water • 5 sewer plants down • 72 bridges destroyed preventing access to homes • Over 200 homes impacted by flood waters • 2 deaths directly related to flood
Pike County requests assistance • July 21, 2010 Pike County Health Dept. requested technical assistance because they were overwhelmed. • Assist with assessments of affected areas • Discuss options for the restoration of water and sewage systems • July 23, 2010 an Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC) request was sent to Region IV states • Mississippi offered to assist
Our Deployment Process • An EMAC was sent for interstate aid. • State of Mississippi responded - 2 person team • It was determined that greater expertise was required • OFRD put together our team to assist (they needed professional engineers) • The team reported to FEMA daily (no HHS IRCT was in the field) • Then to Pike County Health Department to assist
Mission • Work with Pike County Department of Public Health to provide technical assistance: • Assess on-site sewage disposal systems and potable water accessibility • Consider restoration options both long term and short term • (Completed Preliminary Engineering Report (PER) to help the community proceed with funding requests)
Plan of Attack • Complete assessments of the sites in Harless Creek (2 days) • Use the Health Department Assesssment sheets for future use availability • Complete a summary of the assessments • Determine the best course of action both short term and long term
On-site Assessments • The basics: • Area required or availability • Topography • Soil type • Treatment method (possible area reduction) • Water table • Many on-site systems had been there for many years, and were insufficient before the flood.
Short Term Recommendation • Temporary solution • Access to materials • On-site requirements – power, land • Construction issues • Environmental concerns – treatment level • Thoughts.
Long Term Recommendations • Land/Space availability • Soil types/disposal • Possible construction issues (environmental concerns, archeology, real estate) • Costs and maintenance capability • Service Size: Individual, Cluster, Centralized
Thoughts • How to best help the community • What is the best use of the limited time deployed • What tangibles/deliverables will be there after the deployment • Our Team: • Completed 120+ on-site sewage treatment assessments • Completed PER with short term recommendations and long term alternatives
Acknowledgements • Paul Hopkins, Director, Pike County Health Dept • Zora May, Environmental Supervisor, Pike County • Dwight Minz, Technical consultant, DPH • CDR Margo Riggs, PhD, MPH, USPHS, Kentucky DPH • CDR Rick Rivers, PE,USPHS, Indian Health Service Phoenix Area • LT Matthew Ireland, PE, USPHS, Indian Health Service Beminji Area