The Check’s In The Mail For Some Maryland Residents Who Schedule Septic Cleaning

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To encourage septic tank owners to properly pump their systems, Charles County is now reimbursing them. To help meet its nutrient load reduction targets of the multi-state Chesapeake Bay restoration program, the county has a goal of pumping 20 percent of its septic systems annually. It encourages people to schedule pumpouts every three to five years and residents can only get reimbursed every three years.

The county will send a check to system owners once the work is verified, reimbursing up to 50 percent of the cost for most homeowners and up to 75 percent for those in the Chesapeake Bay Critical Area Boundary (within 1,000 feet of tidal waters). The maximum reimbursement, however, is $187.50.

In Calvert County, the Bay Restoration Fund has provided another $1.2 million in grants for new septic tanks and system upgrades for residents. Since 2006, the state’s “flush tax” has provided money to replace 462 systems in the county, with another 80 or 90 planned. The county is among the highest recipients of state grant money, having received $6.4 million since the program began in 2004.

People with incomes up to $300,000 a year are eligible for full funding, though the grants are prioritized based on criteria including location near sensitive waters. Replacing metal tanks is a priority for the county.

California

By 2020, nearly every truck in California will be required to have a particulate matter (PM) filter, with the phase-in period already underway. Any vehicles retrofitted with PM filters by 2014 will still need to be replaced in 2023.

The regulations date to 2009 legislation covering diesel trucks and buses, public and private, with a gross vehicle weight rating more than 14,000 pounds. According to the California Air Resources Board, they required newer, heavier trucks and buses to meet PM filter requirements beginning January 2012. Lighter and older heavier trucks must be replaced starting January 2015. By 2023, nearly all trucks and buses will need to have 2010 model year engines or equivalent.

Some relief was made available in the spring when a few requirements were amended, but Alvin Urke told The Union newspaper his excavation and septic business has two trucks, one a 1979 model and the other from 1991. He said it will cost him $20,000 to $40,000 a year to stay in compliance until 2020, when it will cost him up to $200,000 to buy a new truck. The new exemptions will allow Urke to run his trucks without the filters, but only up to 5,000 miles a year.

Maine

Maine now has a law regulating odors from companies that compost septage and municipal biosolids. The Department of Environmental Protection has finalized the rule, established in response to a 2013 law passed by the Legislature.

The original odor limit was 25 parts per million, but the final rule sets the limit at 300 ppm for more than four hours per month, or 600 ppm for three hours a month using an n-butanol odor intensity scale developed by the state.

The only company in the state doing such work, Soil Preparation Inc. in Plymouth, has until March 2015 to comply with the law. The firm says it is investing more than $10 million into gasification technology to reduce odors that have generated complaints. The company accepts biosolids and septic waste and makes an organic fertilizer for non-food crops.

Washington

New standards have been proposed for residential onsite systems in shoreline areas of Spokane County. The standards are part of a limited amendment to the county’s existing shoreline program to reduce nutrients released to the groundwater.

The proposed amendment also calls for the drainfield portion of onsite systems to be located outside shoreline areas whenever possible. When lot boundaries limit the location of onsite systems to within shoreline areas, the systems must meet strict design, performance and maintenance standards, including monitoring.

Wisconsin

A state panel approved spending $337,000 to replace the septic system for Mirror Lake State Park near Wisconsin Dells. The system has failed due to being undersized for the 2,180-acre park. The Department of Natural Resources has received reports of untreated sewage above ground near the trailer dump station.

A new drainfield will be installed across the road from the current location and sized to accommodate 50 recreational vehicles daily. The park’s vehicle maintenance shed used to drain into the septic system, but such a design no longer complies with groundwater regulations. A holding tank will be installed for the vehicle shed, which will be pumped out and hauled off for treatment.



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