The
civil complaint filed in Superior Court, Providence, by Attorney
General Peter F. Neronha and the Department of Environmental Management
was announced at a news conference Wednesday. Flanked by DEM director
Terry Gray and environmental advocates, Neronha described the lawsuit as
necessary to protect the river, which empties into Narragansett Bay.
The
suit was filed after the latest release of sewage earlier this month.
The DEM warned the public to avoid contact with the river after the
discharge was reported on March 1. Although recent tests showed some
improvements in water quality, the agency kept the advisory in place
until after Tuesday’s rainfall. Gray announced it would be lifted
Wednesday afternoon.
Woonsocket wastewater plant has been plagued with problems
It
wasn’t the first time the plant has experienced problems over the last
18 months. After Woonsocket alerted the DEM to untreated discharges last
June, the problem continued for more than a week and the agency warned
people not to wade, swim, boat or fish in the river, or to consume fish
caught in its waters.
Previous
to that, the agency issued notices of noncompliance in November 2021
for staffing and equipment problems at the plant, and again in March
2022 after a sewage discharge was discovered during routine testing.
“There’s
been upset conditions multiple times,” Gray said. “We’ve worked with
them to try to correct the issue, but it’s come back more times than
we’d like to see.”
Why were the sewer discharges happening?
The
facility treats between 6 million and 9 million gallons of wastewater
daily, making it the fourth-largest plant in the state. It’s owned by
the city, which contracts operations to the Texas-based engineering firm
Jacobs. The plant works in conjunction with a neighboring incinerator
operated by Maryland-based Synagro that processes sludge and solid waste
brought in from other treatment plants throughout southern New England.
Synagro dewaters the liquid sludge to produce what’s known as “cake,”
which is then incinerated.
The
dewatering occurs in centrifuges, with the resulting low-solids liquid,
or centrate, going to the wastewater treatment plant for further
processing. Normally, it would go to the plant’s gravity thickener –
which is shared by Synagro and Jacobs – for additional solids removal,
but the aging thickener broke down last month. That means that more
solids than usual are entering the plant, overwhelming its filtration
systems and causing sewage that is only partially treated to enter the
river.
Synagro
has installed “frac tanks” to settle out solids before the centrate
goes to the plant, and the city has brought in a belt press to do the
same. At the urging of the DEM, the city is also set to bring in a
portable gravity thickener to replace the permanent thickener while
it’s repaired over the next year.
Meanwhile,
Synagro is accepting most sludge deliveries again after Woonsocket
ordered a temporary suspension when the discharge began.
Steve
D’Agostino, director of the city’s Department of Public Works, said the
facility can function smoothly in treating waste from Woonsocket and
neighboring communities. The problem is the amount of sludge trucked in
from elsewhere, he argued. Informed on Wednesday of the lawsuit, he
expressed disappointment.
“We’ve never been negligent,” he said. “We're always trying to run the best operation possible.”
But Jonathan Stone, director of Save The Bay, said that too much was done to clean up a river that was once among America’s most polluted to let the current problems go unaddressed.
“It’s
an incredible success story,” he said of improvements in the
river. “But to have a setback like this is an insult to the people of
Rhode Island.”
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