And we're not just talking about City Hall.
The Mary's Creek Sewage Plant battle continues to rage on. Don't miss the Fort Worth Star-Telegram article. It brings up many good points that residents all over Fort Worth have been bringing up for years. WHEN will someone listen? WHEN the floods come? Or when the Trinity River has more sewage in it than it does now? Read along with us.
"We do feel like it needs to be in an area that has the natural capability to handle flooding and erosion and not be in the middle of the neighborhood."
Common sense...
The city will now conduct a study, to include an environmental impact evaluation, which will cost a little more than $500,000.
Another half a million dollar study...will it ever be completed? Will it be correct? WHO is doing the study? Will the cost escalate?
City officials and residents agree that flooding seems to be a problem along the creek already. Dumping recycled water from the sewage plant into the creek will only exacerbate the probability of high water, neighbors say.
When you already have a problem, and you do nothing, it gets worse. What happens when you contribute to the problem that already exists?
Judy Williams, the chairwoman of the coalition, whose property is on the creek, said erosion from flooding over the years has already taken a toll.
She said she has lost four trees along the banks over the past seven years. That land loss, she said, makes her property and her neighbors' all the more vulnerable to flooding.
Common sense.
The city is in the midst of a storm-water study of the area that will run concurrently with the environmental impact study of the site. Reed believes that the studies will show that Mary's Creek cannot handle additional flow.
Village Creek, built in the 1950s, is the city's only wastewater treatment plant. Far north Fort Worth is served by the Trinity River Authority's Denton Creek plant.
Fort Worth's ONLY wastewater treatment plan was built in the 1950's. That was worth repeating. The Trinity River Vision "Authority" has time to run wastewater treatment plants? The only thing we hear from them is TRINITY RIVER VISION...oh, and don't forget the streetcars they need.
Gugliuzza also played down concerns that bacteria or other pathogens would seep into the water. The water department's obligation -- whether it be drinking water or wastewater -- is promoting public health, she said.
Too bad the Water Department doesn't know what their obligation is.
"Discharges are highly regulated," Gugliuzza said, referring to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality's oversight of standards set by the EPA. "The water we're putting into the Trinity River is better than the water that's already there."
The water being put in the Trinity River by a sewage plant is better than the water already there? Did someone tell the Trinity River Authority? Remember, they want you to float with them in the Trinity. They say it's safe. And all the "news" stations in town fell in line promoting the event, instead of asking questions about the safety. Ask them WHY?
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
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