dgilbert@gainesvilletimes.com
Article provided by The Gainesville Times.
Septic tanks can be a plus
in drought
GAINESVILLE -- The conventional wisdom is that septic
tanks are bad for the environment.
But in
a drought, a properly maintained septic system actually
can ease a water shortage by recharging local streams,
ultimately returning water to reservoirs such as Lake
Lanier.
Todd
Rasmussen, a professor of hydrology at the University of
Georgia, says septic tanks have gotten a bad rap.
"The
level of ignorance about this is amazing," he said. "The
science is at odds with the public perception."
Rasmussen confesses that he himself was uninformed about
the issue until he began studying it.
"I
came into this as ‘anti-septic,' but the data has
convinced me otherwise," he said. "During a drought, the
only streams we see flowing are those that are near
septic systems."
Rasmussen feels so strongly about this issue that he and
other hydrologists have voiced their concerns at recent
public hearings about Georgia's proposed statewide water
management plan.
Specifically, he objects to statements in Section 9 of
the draft plan.
The
section says, in part: "Some portion of the water
treated in septic systems is not returned to the water
source in a time frame that allows ... reasonable use of
that returned water. For practical purposes, this
temporarily absent water contributes to the cumulative
consumptive use in a sub-basin or watershed."
"Consumptive use" refers to water that does not go back
into the watershed. Irrigating a lawn, for example, is
consumptive because the water is either lost to
evaporation or is taken up through plants and does not
reach the groundwater.
But
Rasmussen said septic tanks are deep enough underground
that their effluent bypasses plant roots. Instead, the
wastewater gradually trickles down through layers of
soil, which filters out pollution. It then joins the
groundwater table and flows toward streams.
Maj.
Daren Payne, deputy commander of the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers' Mobile district, which manages Lake Lanier,
said the corps does not consider septic effluent to be
"lost" water.
"From
the corps' perspective, it makes no difference," he
said. "There is no net loss of water using septic versus
using a public utility system. Either way, most of the
water does make it back to a river or lake. And a
functioning septic system next to a lake can be a good
thing, because the water does return fairly quickly."
Rasmussen said Georgia's draft water plan is misleading
when it uses the phrase "temporarily absent water."
"Most
septic systems are in a relatively steady state," he
said. "People in a household use about the same amount
of water every day, so it's a constant discharge over
time."
Depending on where the house is, the wastewater could
take anywhere from a few weeks to a year to reach Lake
Lanier. But Rasmussen said there is no gap in
availability, because groundwater flows seamlessly, like
an undammed river.
"The
state plan is saying that septic systems cause a
hydrologic lag, and that's not really the case," he
said.
If
septic systems did somehow worsen the effects of
drought, Hall might be in a dire predicament because so
many of the county's households are on septic.
Pat
Braswell, environmental health manager for Hall, said
nobody knows exactly how many septic tanks there are in
the county, because many were installed before permits
were required.
"But
the (Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District)
asked us to make an educated guess, and we estimated
that more than 75 percent of the single-family homes in
Hall are on septic," she said.
That's
by far the highest percentage in any of the district's
16 metro Atlanta counties.
"Hall
has been rural for longer than most of those other
counties," Braswell said. "Sewer lines are now being
extended farther out into the county, and eventually
most new homes will be hooked up to sewers. But Hall
will always have a lot of septic tanks, because most
houses that are already on septic will probably stay
that way."
According to U.S. Census data, about 38,000 of Hall's
61,000 housing units are owner-occupied. If more than 75
percent of single-family homes are on septic, there
could be as many as 30,000 tanks in the county.
And
it's not just residential areas that use septic systems.
"We
can permit anything that has a flow of up to 10,000
gallons a day," Braswell said. "That's the equivalent of
an apartment complex with 50 to 70 bedrooms. We also
have many retail and office buildings that are on
septic, though high water users such as restaurants,
grocery stores, animal clinics and beauty shops
generally need to be on sewer."
Many
of those septic systems, assuming their tanks are pumped
out regularly and are not leaking raw sewage, may be
benefiting Lake Lanier. But not all of them.
"A lot
of homes get their drinking water from the municipal
source but they don't have sewer service," said
Rasmussen. "That's OK if they're in the same area that
their water comes from, because their septic system
sends the water back into the basin.
"The
issue is when drinking water is used by communities in
another watershed. Those homes that are on septic are
not returning water back to the lake."
That
may be the case for some homes in East Hall, part of
which is in the Oconee River watershed rather than the
Lanier basin.
But Rasmussen said even water that does not return to
Lanier can still help the regional drought situation.
The
Athens area depends entirely on the Bear Creek
reservoir, which draws its water from the Middle Oconee
River. With the reservoir almost dry, Athens is in
danger of running out of water by the end of the year.
"That
East Hall water goes into the Oconee watershed, and
Athens definitely needs it," Rasmussen said.