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Janice Kaspersen Janice Kaspersen Stormwater Editor

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SW Editor's Blog

July 14th, 2009 7:33am PST

A Combination Problem

Posted By Janice Kaspersen 1 Comment

Most cities that have combined storm and sanitary sewer systems have either had problems with combined sewer overflows in the past or have looked ahead uneasily to the possibility.

Until now, most of the capacity problems were caused by cities simply outgrowing their sewer systems. More users create greater demand on the existing pipes, and a larger amount of impervious surface sends runoff into those pipes during a storm.

Recently, some stormwater managers have become concerned about another stressor on the system: climate change. Increasingly severe storms and unpredictable weather patterns could exacerbate an already serious problem. (See how Montreal is dealing with its water problems, for example.)

There are many ways to deal with the problem, all of them expensive. Increasing the size or the number of water treatment plants is one. Separating the sewer systems—or at least portions of them—so that stormwater doesn’t get treated along with the sanitary sewage is another. Incorporating more low-impact development techniques to increase infiltration of stormwater runoff—and therefore take some of the pressure off the existing infrastructure—is a third and increasingly popular one.

If your city has a combined sewer, what do you think is putting the greatest stress on the system: Ongoing development? Climate change? Something else entirely? And what do you see as the most viable solution?

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

jsnead

July 15th, 2009 1:26 PM PT

I believe the biggest contributor to the city of Augusta Georgia is infiltration and inflow from an old system that was originally set up as a combined storm/sanitary system, which has been separated from past projects. One very much overlooked source of infiltration in my opinion is from the 1000's of sewer laterals that are very old and made of clay pipe which is subject to root intrusion along with old brick manholes. Thank you, John Snead

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