Village to change wastewater treatment rules to accept drilling wastes
Written by http://www.theithacajournal.com/article/20090429/NEWS01/904290328/1126/NEW   
Wednesday, 29 April 2009
According to tests on wastewater coming to the plant, the village accepted
material exceeding standards for metals such as copper and lead, and greatly
exceeded standards for "Chemical Oxygen Demand" and "Total Suspended
Solids." S
Wastewater may not have met standards
Cayuga Heights says there was no violation
By Krisy Gashler . This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . Staff Writer . April 29, 2009

Cayuga Heights may have violated its own law in accepting gas-drilling
wastewater that exceeded standards established to protect its treatment
plant and Cayuga Lake.

Meanwhile, a regional engineer from the state Department of Environmental
Conservation told the village it was OK to continue accepting the waste
without a completed study of what kinds of wastewater came to the plant. DEC
policy - reaffirmed in a December 2008 memo - requires such analyses before
a plant accepts gas-drilling waste.

According to tests on wastewater coming to the plant, the village accepted
material exceeding standards for metals such as copper and lead, and greatly
exceeded standards for "Chemical Oxygen Demand" and "Total Suspended
Solids."


Walter Hang, whose company compiles such information and obtained the data,
said Cayuga Heights' experience shows that the understaffed DEC has not been
enforcing its own regulations. "This whole program has been a backwater," he
said. "No one has paid attention to it."

Mayor Jim Gilmore and Superintendent of Public Works Brent Cross responded
that the gas-drilling wastewater was 3 million gallons of 540 million
processed during the period. Monthly tests showed no violations of the
village's DEC permit while accepting the waste, Cross said.

Gilmore emphasized the village's desire to protect Cayuga Lake, noting the
$2 million phosphorus-removal project to be online by year's end.

Cayuga Heights began accepting wastewater from conventional, vertical
gas-drilling operations in May and temporarily stopped March 31 to complete
the loading analysis. A January 2009 sample of drilling brine water found
chemical oxygen demand at 6,880 milligrams per liter and total suspended
solids at 884 milligrams per liter, more than 30 percent higher than 600
milligrams per liter village law allows.

Cross said the village's law was written when the plant accepted only
residential sewage and may need to be changed.

Municipal wastewater plants are required to conduct loading studies every
five years or whenever they consider a new source of wastewater, said Joe
DiMura, director of the DEC Bureau of Water Compliance in Albany. DiMura's
bureau oversees enforcement of water quality standards related to state
pollution discharge permits.

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Cayuga Heights should have completed its study before taking the drilling
wastewater and required the drilling operation to disclose its the chemicals
and characteristics, DiMura said. If a company is reluctant to fully
disclose its drilling chemical mixture, the DEC likely wouldn't require the
company to disclose the chemicals to the public, but they must still be
shared with the DEC, DiMura said.

"If you can't tell us what's in the wastewater, you're not going to get
approved," DiMura said.

This guidance was reiterated in a Dec. 8, 2008 DEC memo to all wastewater
plant operators, but in a March 19, 2009 email between Cross and DEC
regional engineer Fred Gillette, Cross explained the headworks study was not
complete and asked if it was "still OK to keep accepting" drilling
wastewater.

Gillette responded, "Yes, it's OK." The e-mail was provided in response to a
FOIL request from the Journal.

DEC spokeswoman Lori Severino said the guidelines "are not new." but Cross
said that was not his impression.

"That only came into existence as a guideline by the DEC as a directive from
them to all (wastewater plants) in a letter dated Dec. 8, 2008. Prior to
December 8 of '08 they had no such policy," he said.