State Water Agency Invests $20 Million In Infrastructure Projects

The West Virginia Water Development Authority announced Wednesday that it would invest $20 million in water, wastewater and sewage infrastructure upgrades across the state.

The agency that oversees West Virginia’s water infrastructure, the Water Development Authority (WDA), announced Wednesday it would invest nearly $20 million in water system improvements across the state.

The new round of funding will aid 10 water, wastewater and sewage infrastructure projects in West Virginia. For years, water systems in the state have struggled due to aging infrastructure and decreased funding.

The funds come from the state’s Economic Enhancement Grant Fund, which has approved $400 million in projects since its creation in April 2022. 

The following projects will receive support through the new round of WDA funding:

  • Morgantown Utility Board, Monongalia County: $6,750,000 to renovate a wastewater treatment plant and a lift station to increase overall capacity.
  • Greenbrier County Public Service District #2, Greenbrier County: $3,527,000 to extend water service to about 360 new users in rural towns.
  • Hancock County Public Service District, Hancock County: $3,449,014 5o upgrade sewer infrastructure.
  • Putnam County Commission, Putnam County: $1,841,175 to provide potable water to the community of Custer Ridge.
  • Cottageville Public Service District, Jackson County: $1,350,000 to extend water lines to an industrial site in the town of Millwood.
  • Clarksburg Sewer Board, Harrison County: $1,000,000 to separate storm sewers.
  • Pineville, Wyoming County: $980,000 to upgrade water system.
  • Midland Public Service District, Randolph County: $365,000 to build two new tanks that store water.
  • Paden City, Tyler and Wetzel counties: $310,000 to replace water lines to address infiltration issues.
  • Spencer Waterworks, Roane County: $300,000 to replace a pump station.

Residents Warned Against Recreation Along Parts Of Kanawha River

Flooding rains Sunday night into early Monday washed out at least 2.5 miles of the Kanawha Falls Public Service District's sewage collection system, which serves the Mount Olive Correctional Center.

Flooding rains Sunday night into early Monday washed out at least 2.5 miles of the Kanawha Falls Public Service District’s (PSD) sewage collection system, which serves the Mount Olive Correctional Center. This disruption has the potential to allow raw sewage to discharge directly into the river.

According to the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), the advisory covers 10 miles of the river from the correctional facility to the London Locks and Dam. It will remain in effect until further notice.

People should avoid water contact recreation activities in the affected area, such as swimming, fishing, water skiing and certain types of pleasure boating in smaller craft.

The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) said this does not affect drinking water and no boil water advisories have been issued at this time.

The Kanawha Falls PSD notified the DEP of the problem with the sewage collection system through the state’s Emergency Spill Line. The PSD’s upset provision allows discharge into waters of the state until the sewer line is repaired. Emergency measures are currently being implemented to restore some level of treatment as quickly as possible and local downstream water intakes have been notified.

The WVDEP, DHHR, the West Virginia Emergency Management Division, and the Kanawha Falls PSD are working together to identify any additional damage to the sewage system and determine a temporary solution. Major repairs to local infrastructure will need to be made before the sewer line is permanently replaced.

Portable toilets have been installed at the prison to minimize additional sewage.

Wastewater Woes: For These Appalachian Towns, It’s Always Infrastructure Week

Kimberly Shatney lives just outside Pine Grove, West Virginia, an incorporated town of about 500 people with a big problem. Behind a small sandwich shop in town, she points to the ground caked with what looks like dry mud.

“This is all raw sewage. All of that, all of this is raw sewage,” Shatney said, shaking her head.

 

Shatney said a few days earlier employees here had to use a portable toilet across the street, and a stream of raw sewage ran behind the shop. It also ran through many residential yards.

“[Employees] would have to come out and either walk all the way out into the middle of the road to put the trash here,” she said “Or if they were in a hurry or the only ones in the store, they would go straight through, dump the trash and then go back out, and then serving fresh food.”

Some frustrated residents, like Candy Davis, have taken to posting video of the incidents on Facebook.

The sewage system backs up into yards and basements so often that many residents became accustomed to using buckets and throwing the refuse in nearby streams.

Unfortunately, problems like these in Pine Grove are common throughout small towns in Appalachia, where communities often lack the funding to keep up aging and inadequate infrastructure.

Funding Gaps

Accurate data on the extent of the region’s sewage problems are hard to come by. A 2005 report commissioned by the Appalachian Regional Commission found that in the few places where careful surveys have been done “substantial numbers of people have failing onsite systems or no wastewater treatment systems at all.”

That study by the University of North Carolina’s Environmental Finance Centerlooked at the region’s water infrastructure needs and reasons for funding gaps.

At the time, the authors estimated that at the low end Appalachia had about $14.4 billion in wastewater infrastructure needs. Wastewater systems in the region tend to be smaller than those in the rest of the country, on average, with about a third of people in Appalachia served by small and medium-sized systems. In general, the smaller the system, the higher the costs per person served.

These utilities are more likely to have small and shrinking customer bases, a high proportion of low-income customers, and a rapidly changing tax base due to the declines in the coal industry, which often provided a significant source of revenue.

Many water system managers and county officials are left with few funding options. The study found that many households in the region already pay a higher proportion of their income for water and sewer services, so increasing rates is not an attractive option.

Compounding the problem, relatively few communities in Appalachia’s disadvantaged counties have credit ratings that allow access to the capital market to secure loans to improve facilities.

“Not Waiting”

None of this is news to Tracy Nolan, community outreach director for Red Bird Mission, a faith-based service organization that has served the remote southeastern corner of Kentucky since 1921.

“We keep coming up against the issue of straight piping, and no access to city sewer, and families that cannot afford to put in septic systems,” Nolan said. “That creates a barrier.”

“Straight piping” means raw sewage goes directly into a nearby waterway.

Nolan and others at Red Bird worked with the University of Tennessee’s schools of nursing and civil engineering to measure the contamination of water sources and devise strategies to improve health and environmental quality.

Water sampling from 2012-2014 in the Red Bird River watershed found as many as 64 percent of the sites exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency threshold for E. coli bacteria. The mission helped researchers find the springs and wells many people used to gather drinking water and found many of those, too, had E. coli.

Nolan said that by working with universities, faith and civic groups, and federal agencies they have won grants to provide more septic tanks.

“It’s just a community taking care of ourselves, working with all partners with respect, and just not sitting back and waiting anymore,” she said.

She expects the groups involved will be installing dozens of septic systems but as they do they also find more work to do.

“We’re slowly chipping away at it, but also identifying more people in need.”

In its 2015 strategic report, the ARC reported strong progress in the percentage of homes in Appalachia with complete plumbing. Throughout the region about 97 percent of homes have plumbing, about in line with the national rate. But as the Red Bird watershed and Pine Grove show, many problem areas persist.

Seeking Solutions

In Pine Grove, the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection reports that environmental enforcement inspectors have been monitoring the situation. The town was issued a consent order that detailed the steps to address issues, including a corrective action plan that will show how the town intends to address problems.

The town’s state senator, Charles Clements, toured the community and hopes to facilitate more conversations like those in Kentucky, as well as seek out other innovative solutions to rural sewage challenges.

“This community deserves more than to be like a third world country,” he said.

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