Prompt action by the Sheriff's Office, Fire-Rescue and the Department of Public Utilities after a July sewer pipe rupture closed River Road west of the Tuckahoe Creek bridge. |
On July 27, a Goochland force main—pressurized
sewer line—ruptured releasing approximately 300,000 gallons of raw untreated
sewage into Tuckahoe Creek near River Road west of the Henrico County Line.
The force main is part of the Tuckahoe Creek
Service District (TCSD) infrastructure. It runs from a pump station on the
north side of Rt. 6, roughly opposite the entrance to the Rivergate community, through
Country Club of Virginia golf courses eventually connecting to the City of
Richmond wastewater system on Maple Avenue near St. Catherine’s School.
At the August 3 board of supervisors’ meeting Board
Chair John Lumpkins, Jr., District 3 said that the break occurred at
approximately 7:30 p.m. The county department of public utilities, fire-rescue,
and the sheriff’s office responded immediately. River Road was closed to
through traffic and the line shut down to prevent additional spillage. Lumpkins
said that a utility contractor was hired to repair the damage, and an environmental
contractor retained to remove and dispose of sewage collected behind a
containment berm.
According to Goochland Director of Public Utilities
Matt Longshore, the cause of the rupture is believed to have been improper
installation of fiber reinforced pipe (FRP) during construction of the TCSD
trunk lines around 2004. A similar breach occurred in the vicinity in December
of 2008.
Longshore explained that the quantity of spillage—approximately
300,000 gallons—was calculated using construction drawings “for the pipeline
(length, diameter, elevation head conditions) along with the operational set
points in the pump station controls.” The county has a supervisory
control and data acquisition (SCADA) system in place that provides off site operational
capability.
Longshore said that the SCADA system allowed DPU to shut down the force main
remotely as soon as the problem was reported. “That pipeline holds just over
4.3 million gallons of sewage at any given time, so the remote-control
capabilities of the SCADA system played a key role in helping to limit the
quantity of sewage spilled.”
As of August 12, the county, according to Longshore, had not received an
invoice for clean-up costs from the outside contractor. The county is insured
by VACORP. A claim has been filed.
Longshore was not aware of any pending action by the Department of
Environmental Quality (DEQ) for the impact of the spill on the James River.
The TCSD was created in 2002 to provide public utilities—water and sewer—to
an area roughly bounded on the east by the Henrico County line, the north by
the Hanover County line, the south by Rt. 6 and the west by Hockett and Manakin
Roads. Created to attract commercial development in Goochland, the TCSD was
financed with a peculiar issuance of bonds for $65 million through the Virginia
Resource Authority. Service of this debt was predicated on the levy of an ad
valorem tax on landowners in the TCSD in addition to the county’s real estate
tax. The ad valorem tax rate is currently 32 cents per $100 of assessed valuation.
Construction of the TCSD trunk lines did not go smoothly. Cost overruns,
delays, and lawsuits haunted the project. When it began operation, no provision
was made for routine maintenance or upgrades in connection fees and user rates.
Litigation between the county and the owners of the West Creek business
park hobbled investment in West Creek, which, powered by TCSD utilities, had
been touted as an economic engine for county revenue. Even before the 2008 collapse
of financial markets, growth in the TCSD, which had been forecast in double
digits, was negligible, which made debt service more burdensome to the county.
Since 2012, when a mostly new board of supervisors took office, the TCSD
has blossomed. New businesses including medical office buildings, the Sheltering
Arms/VCU rehabilitation hospital, Hardywood Park Craft Brewery, and Greenswell
Growers have taken root there. Residential enclaves, including apartments in West
Creek, have added customers to the TCSD and increased the tax base. Refinancing
of the bonds got the debt under control.
A thorough review of the TCSD infrastructure resulted in a long-term utilities
master plan and implementation of a rate structure that funds planned repairs,
upgrades, and contingencies for unexpected incidents like the July 27 spill.
For more information on the TCSD go to https://www.goochlandva.us/Faq.aspx?TID=41,
2 comments:
As stated before, TCSD, the gift that keeps on giving.
Sewage spill. Sums up Goochland government and schools here in the last year or so. What a mess.
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