Sewer Spills
by Councilman Scott Peters
October 11, 2001
All La Jollans are aware of the chronic sewer spills that occur each
year, causing pollution to reach area beaches, endangering public health
and threatening our quality of life. This is caused mainly by the neglect
we've shown our sewer collection system over the past 30 years. The 34-million
gallon Adobe Falls Spill and the 2.5 million gallon Tecolote Spill, just
this year, illustrated in graphic detail the immediate need for upgrades
to our sewer system.
In December, Mayor Murphy asked me to co-chair his Clean Water Task Force,
a collaboration of elected officials, environmental groups, builders and
businesses, scientists, and regulators, seeking creative and effective
solutions to our water quality problems. One of our missions is to reduce
sewer spills, and especially, spills to public waters by 25% by 2004.
This will help accomplish our larger goal, which is to reduce beach closures
and postings by 50% by 2004. We have already made a lot of progress.
Remarkably, half of our sewer system has not been on a regular cleaning
program, and there are sections of the system that have not been cleaned
in 10 to 20 years! We have instituted a program to have the entire sewer
system cleaned by the end of 2003, and then to put the system on a regular
maintenance cycle. The City has also issued a contract to begin televising
the interior of our sewer lines to identify the areas that have the highest
priority for cleaning and replacement, so that we get there before big
problems develop. The early pictures from the televising have pinpointed
many of the problems, including weakened and broken pipes and extensive
root intrusion.
The City is also concentrating on the 400 miles of sewer pipes that line
the bottom of our urban canyons. These canyon pipelines are the most likely
to threaten water quality. Since they are so difficult to get to, they
don't receive routine maintenance. Spills from isolated canyon sewers
are likely to go undetected for much longer than spills from street sewers.
With the help of our Sewer-Canyon Citizens Task Force, the City is now
buying equipment and creating procedures that will give us access to our
lines for maintenance and replacement without ruining our canyon environments.
We are also performing a manual assessment of all of our canyon manholes,
and, this weekend, we began our Volunteer Canyon Watchers Program, that
will enlist hikers and joggers to be additional eyes on the canyons where
the risks of spills is greatest. And in the future, we will put sewer
mains in the street, where we can get to them and watch them, not in the
canyons, where we can't.
Now, however, we must confront the biggest problem. We have to replace
our broken and rotting pipes.
Soon after this City Council took office, the City's Metropolitan Wastewater
Department informed us of the conditions in our wastewater collection
system. Although the City had spent over a billion dollars in the last
decade to upgrade our treatment systems -- outfalls and major interceptors
-- it paid almost no attention to the underground pipes that make
up our collection system. An independent study concluded that the City
is replacing our 3,000-mile sewer system every 100 years, while the average
life span of those pipes is only 50 years. As a result, our system has
aged beyond its life span and is in danger of continuing to cause major
spills like those that occurred at Adobe Falls and Tecolote Creek.
The Council took a preliminary vote during the budget process to create
an aggressive program of pipe replacement and rehabilitation that will
replace the areas of the system that are in immediate danger of breaking
and also catch us up on 30 years of deferred maintenance. Currently the
sewer department replaces an average of 15 miles of sewer pipeline each
year. The new accelerated program will replace or rehabilitate 60 miles
of pipeline each year, as well as accelerated cleaning and improving ongoing
maintenance.
One of the core missions of the City Council is to protect the health
and welfare of our citizens and protect our quality of life. By taking
these necessary steps we are addressing a problem that has been decades
in the making. We will not solve this problem quickly or easily. We will
continue to have spills, but I am confident that the work we do today
will be effective in reducing this threat to public health in the near
future. Our only alternative is dirtier beaches and a growing health threat.
I am not willing to choose this alternative, and I hope you will support
our actions to improve the quality of life for all San Diegans.
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