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File #: 0323X-2011    Version: 1
Type: Ceremonial Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 11/21/2011 In control: Paley
On agenda: 11/21/2011 Final action: 11/23/2011
Title: To request Congress to Reform the Clean Water Act Sewer Overflow Policy to Achieve Sustainable Long-Term Goals.
Sponsors: Eileen Paley, Michelle M. Mills
Title
To request Congress to Reform the Clean Water Act Sewer Overflow Policy to Achieve Sustainable Long-Term Goals.
Body
WHEREAS, the City of Columbus is committed to providing customers superior and dependable drinking water and sewer services that fully meet all regulations and set an industry standard for excellence; and

WHEREAS, the City of Columbus has established a Long-Term Control Plan (LTCP) to comply with two consent decrees with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) based on Clean Water Act requirements; and

WHEREAS, approximately 772 other cities in the United States will be required to establish legally-binding Long-Term Control Plans (LTCPs) to comply with the Federal Clean Water Act regulations involving Combined Sewer Overflows and Sanitary Sewer OverflowCSOs/SSOs) over the current and next decade; and

WHEREAS, these LTCPs will involve the establishment of new infrastructure to reduce the discharge of untreated sewerage and/or untreated storm water into local receiving waters; and the new infrastructure options available for this purpose involve major capital investments and recurring increases in user charges for the construction of new treatment facilities or additional treatment capacity at existing facilities, new sewer lines to convey wet weather overflows to the new treatment facilities, underground storage facilities, additional monitoring, reporting and compliance costs, additional operations and maintenance costs to municipalities; and

WHEREAS, the U.S. EPA is reluctant to exercise the flexibility it adopted in the U.S. EPA CSO Control Policy and U.S. EPA CSO-Guidance for Financial Capability Assessment and Schedule Development concerning affordability, compliance schedules, volume and frequency of annual overflows necessary to comply with the Clean Water Act water-quality standards, and inclusion of green infrastructure as part of the city’s LTCP; and

WHEREAS, the capital cost - estimated at $2.5 billion in 2005 - the City o...

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