ILLINOIS
POLLUTION
CONTROL BOARD
October 26, 1971
SCHOOL BUILDING COMMISSION
v.
)
PCB 71—247
Environmental Protection Agency
Supplemental Statement (by Mr. Dumelle)
I would like to amplify on the opinion in this case with
which I fully concur, on the matter of infiltration and sewer
repair. The testimony of Mr. Brian P. Nays and his engineering
notes (mt. School Ed. Ex, 6) detail the estimated hydraulic loads
to the sewer in question as follows:
Residential
450,000 gpd
High School
74,000
Elementary School
6,000
Elementary School
19,000
Water Plant (Peaks)
554,400
Infiltration (Normal)
12,600
1,116,000 gpd
Since the sewer does in fact surcharge, it is obvious that
hydraulic loads to it are in excess of its capacity of 1,670,000 gpd
during rainy weather. That additional 554,000 gpd must come from some-
where. It must be due to infiltration or illegal connections.
Even if the usual design (~normal~)infiltration rate of 500 gpd
per inch of diameter per mile of sewer is increased ten—fold (from
12,600 gpd to 126,000 gpd) the storm induced excess flow would
not be accounted for.
The sewer is evidently about 2.1 miles in length judging
from Mr. Mays~infiltration computation. It should be a relatively
simple matter to detect illegal storm connections to short length
of sewer and to repair the worst leaks sufficient to reduce hydraulic
loads during rains to the sewer~s capacity. The Village of Flossmoor
ought to do this now before frost in the ground makes excavation too
difficult.
I would also like to focus on Mr. Currie~s statements about the
hazard of raw sewage in streets and basements. The Board in recent
hearings on sewer ban regulations at Waukegan heard testimony from
a Lake County public health official telling of 22 cases of hepa~
titis there with a common factor of basement inundation by sewage.
Further, the recently issued report by the Lake Michigan And
2 695