Category Archives: Merrimack River Watershed Council

Club Meeting: May 16, 2023: Merrimack River Update: Fish Migration, CSOs and Emerging Contaminants

Merrimack River Update: Fish Migration, CSOs and Emerging Contaminants

by John Macone, Merrimack River Watershed Council

Merrimack River Update: Fish Migration, CSOs and Emerging Contaminants
John Macone from Merrimack River Watershed Council will give an update on 3 issues that impact fishing on the Merrimack River — fish counts, dam removals, progress on CSO sewer discharges, and PFAS “forever chemical” contamination in the Merrimack Valley and in fish.

Our monthly meetings are held at the Salisbury, MA Hilton Senior Center, (43 Lafayette Rd., Salisbury, MA). Admission is free to members and $5.00 for non-members.

Doors open at 6:30 pm. Our club business meeting starts at 7:15 pm and the speaker’s presentation starts around 8:00 pm.

Find driving directions and information here. The senior center is located behind the fire station, which is visible from the street.

Hilton Senior Center
43 Lafayette Rd
Salisbury, MA 01952

Senior Center Map

Many Thanks to Our Sponsors

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Law to Require Public Notification of Sewage Releases in Massachusetts

As a major step toward getting rid of sewage released into the Merrimack River, Massachusetts now has a law the requires sewage treatment plants to alert the community when releases occur.

Here is a post from www.merrimack.org, the website of the Merrimack River Watershed Council. Reprinted by Permission

January 13, 2021

BOSTON – Merrimack River Watershed Council (MRWC) applauds Gov. Charlie Baker for signing into law a bill that will require sewage plants to quickly inform the public whenever they release untreated sewage into a river.

The long-awaited public alert system is expected to be in place by this summer, when tens of thousands of people will be boating, fishing and swimming in the Merrimack River.

The bill was first proposed nearly a decade ago, but failed to attract momentum. That changed in late 2017, when a major sewage release into the Merrimack River caused public concern and began raising questions about the state’s decades-long practice of not requiring that the public be notified when sewage discharges occur. MRWC credits an extraordinarily strong push by Merrimack Valley residents, political leaders, and media with providing the impetus that catapulted this issue to the front page and led statewide leaders to act.

We’ve heard many comments from the Statehouse that the Merrimack Valley was the squeaky wheel that got this legislation passed,” said MRWC Executive Director Matthew Thorne. “The MRWC took a leadership role in pushing for this legislation, and we are so happy to see that it’s finally become law.”

The legislation requires sewage plants throughout the commonwealth to quickly alert the public whenever they release untreated sewage into a river, via a variety of means such as emails, text messages, websites, and “reverse 911” phone calls. 

These sewage releases, known as Combined Sewage Overflows or CSOs, occur in older cities where street drains are connected to sewer lines. When heavy rainstorms occur, the sewage pipes fill up rapidly and sewage plants must release excess volume into the river to prevent sewage from backing up into homes, or flooding and damaging the sewage plant itself.

The untreated sewage contains bacteria and other contaminants that can be harmful to public health. Generally, it takes about 2 days for bacteria levels to decline to safe levels.

In the Merrimack Valley, three Massachusetts sewage plants are permitted to release sewage into the Merrimack River. They are located in Haverhill, greater Lawrence and Lowell. Two plants in New Hampshire – in Nashua and Manchester – are also permitted to release sewage into the river, however those two plants are not subject to the newly-passed Massachusetts law. MRWC is hopeful that New Hampshire lawmakers will file similar legislation.

The amount of sewage released annually into the Merrimack varies, depending on the amount of rainfall in a given year. According to data collated by MRWC, over the past 5 years an average of 550 million gallons is released into the Merrimack River annually. Typically, there are 40-60 releases per year.

The highest total in recent years occurred in 2018, when 850 million gallons were released.  That year had unusually heavy rainfall, about 125% above average. Data compiled by the federal Environmental Protection Agency predicts that New England will experience more frequent heavy rainstorms due to climate change, which is expected to increase the number of CSO sewage discharges.  

Key components of the legislation are:

  • Within 2 hours of detecting a CSO activation, the sewage plant must issue a public alert that reports where the discharge is occurring, when it began, an estimate of how much sewage was released, the areas that are expected to be affected by the discharge, and precautions that the public should take. The public alert must be updated every 8 hours during an ongoing discharge, and once the discharge ends the public must be alerted within 2 hours.
  • The public can sign up for an email or text message alert. The report must also be sent to the region’s 2 largest newspapers, and posted on the sewage plant’s website. The state may also require that the alerts be posted on social media and via “reverse 911” telephone alerts.
  • The state will create universal standards for reporting on CSO events. Currently, no such standards exist. By May 15, the state will release public reports that provide details of the prior year’s CSO events.

Thorne said the legislation is one aspect of MRWC’s long term plan to help sewage plants end the practice of releasing untreated sewage into the Merrimack – a river that provides drinking water to 600,000 people. The public notification bill provides people with important public health information, but it also brings attention to the ongoing issue of CSO releases. The long term solution is to help cities get the money they need to fix the problem, and that can only be done with financial help from the federal government.

Our local sewage plant operators don’t want to be releasing sewage into the river. But they are forced to do it because their infrastructure isn’t able to handle the enormous amount of flow that occurs during heavy rainstorms,” said Thorne. “The cost of updating sewage lines is extremely expensive, and the cost is borne almost entirely by the people who live in economically-disadvantaged cities such as Lawrence. Years ago the federal government paid 85 percent of the cost of building sewage systems, now it is zero. The federal government needs to help solve this problem.”

MRWC acknowledges that this big step forward was also made possible by our allies in Mystic River Watershed Association, Charles River Watershed Association, Groundwork Lawrence, Massachusetts River Alliance, Connecticut River Conservancy and Neponset Watershed.

If you have ever asked how you can help, this is your moment. You can also help us as we fight for the Merrimack River by becoming a member, or making a donation to the Merrimack River Watershed Council.

Founded in 1976, Merrimack River Watershed Council (MRWC) is dedicated to promoting a clean and accessible Merrimack River and watershed. As “the voice of the Merrimack,” the Council’s mission is to protect, improve, and conserve the Merrimack River watershed for people and wildlife through education, recreation, advocacy, and science.

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Legislation to Protect the Merrimack River from Sewage Pollution

According to the Merrimack River Watershed Council (MRWC) :  Last year, over 750 million gallons of CSO (raw sewage) water was released into the Merrimack — the largest amount since 2011.

The MRWC has informed us of several pieces of proposed legislation in Massachusetts to avoid future sewage releases into the Merrimack River.  Some of the proposed changes are simple and cheap, others are more expensive or time-consuming.

  • Require public notification of sewage releases during big storms
  • Require visible flags indicating water quality in public access points (like boat ramps)
  • Require backup generators at sewage treatment facilities (to prevent sewage releases due to electric power disruption)
  • Set up a commission to review the health of the Merrimack River and propose solutions

There are four sewage treatment plants in Massachusetts (Haverhill, Lawrence, Lowell and Fitchburg) that would be covered by this legislation.   Two sewage treatment plants in New Hampshire (Nashua and Manchester) are also problematic.  Unfortunately, there are currently no bills in the New Hampshire legislature to address the problems in Nashua and Manchester.

We encourage all club members to contact their senators and representatives and ask their support of this legislation.

You can read details of the proposed legislation at the MRWC site.

 

Founded in 1976, Merrimack River Watershed Council (MRWC) is dedicated to promoting a clean and accessible Merrimack River and watershed. As “the voice of the Merrimack,” the Council’s mission is to protect, improve, and conserve the Merrimack River watershed for people and wildlife through education, recreation, advocacy, and science.Facebooktwitterlinkedin

Get Sewage Out of the Merrimack: Step 1: Require Public Notification of Sewage Release

The first step toward getting sewage out of the Merrimack is making the culprits own up when they do it. There is currently a bill (proposed law) in the Massachusetts legislature to require public notification of sewage releases. Please contact your representative asking them to pass the bill. All the information you need to identify your legislators and a sample letter to send is at this link and also reprinted below by permission of the Merrimack River Watershed Council.

A sample letter to send to your state senator, representative

Are you interested in helping pass a bill that will require wastewater treatment plants to alert the public whenever they dump sewage into the Merrimack River?

Currently there is a bill in the Massachusetts Legislature that would do just that. But it’s stuck in the House Ways and Means Committee, and without a push by the public it may die there.

How can you help?

Public pressure is a time-proven way to move legislation. Letters sent to your state senator and state representative can help them gauge public support and move the bill out of the Ways and Means Committee and onto the House floor for a vote (the bill has already passed the Senate).

This link will take you to a page where you can find out the name and address of your local senator and representative.  You also may want to write or call Robert A. DeLeo, the Speaker of the House, who ultimately will have significant authority for whether this bill passes this year.  The deadline is December 31, but don’t wait till then.  Speaker DeLeo can be reached at 617.722.2500 and Robert.DeLeo@mahouse.gov.

Below is a copy of a sample letter that you can fill out and send to your legislators. Feel free to modify it — particularly if you have a personal story or anecdote. (Btw, as of this November, the bill is known at S. 2617; you may want to refer to it this way if you call or write your state legislator.

SAMPLE LETTER

Dear ____,

As a resident of _________, I am very concerned about the discharge of raw sewage into the Merrimack River due to combined sewage overflows (CSOs). As the next state legislative session approaches, I am writing to urge you to support legislation that requires real-time public notification of CSO events.

As you may know, nearly 400 million gallons of raw sewage were dumped into the Merrimack during rainstorms in 2017. Based on the number of reported CSOs to date, this number is likely to be even higher in 2018. Unfortunately, since heavy rainstorms are expected to become more frequent in New England due to the changing climate, we are likely to see more CSOs in the future.

CSOs are a threat to the both environment and human health. Over 600,000 people in the Merrimack Valley get their drinking water from the Merrimack River, and many more use it for recreation, including boating, fishing, paddle-boarding and swimming. A 2015 study found a significant increase in people visiting Merrimack Valley hospital emergency rooms for gastrointestinal illnesses following CSO events. Raw sewage discharges also cause algae blooms, which deplete oxygen levels in the river and kill fish and other marine life, and can be harmful to humans as well. Despite this, wastewater treatment plants are not obligated to notify the public of CSO events.

Our larger goal should be to stop CSOs as soon as possible through coordinated federal, state and local action to fund updates to wastewater treatment facilities. In the near term, though, we need prompt notification of CSO events to safeguard human health.

Thank you for your consideration, and I hope that you will support legislation requiring timely public notice of CSOs in order to protect Merrimack Valley communities.

Sincerely,

 

Founded in 1976, Merrimack River Watershed Council (MRWC) is dedicated to promoting a clean and accessible Merrimack River and watershed. As “the voice of the Merrimack,” the Council’s mission is to protect, improve, and conserve the Merrimack River watershed for people and wildlife through education, recreation, advocacy, and science.Facebooktwitterlinkedin