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Four
sewer options studied
By
Soren Velice
A feasibility
study for a possible regional wastewater treatment plan
has met further delays due to an additional study to examine
costs of other options.
Were
expecting the feasibility study to come out in mid-April,
said Roger Brown, Birch Bay Water and Sewer Districts
(BBWS) general manager. The study was originally supposed
to be finished by the end of March.
The
other options under consideration include sending waste
to the greater Vancouver system by way of Surrey, building
a system off one of the creeks feeding into Drayton Harbor
that uses manmade wetlands and ponds, similar to a system
in Arcata, California or building a new plant on Semiahmoo
hill and connecting it to the present outfall.
Blaine
public works director Grant Stewart made a list of nine
options gathered from city council meetings and study sessions,
public works committee meetings, joint meetings with Blaine
and BBWS, settlement negotiations with the Lummis and Drayton
Harbor Shellfish Protection District meetings.
Using
criteria such as impact on adjacent property values, amount
of land and compatibility with adjoining land, proximity
to service area, local control over facilities and costs,
economics of consolidating with outside utilities and cost
for service life, Stewart boiled it down to the four options
listed above.
City manager Gary Tomsic said it was too early to guess
which option, if any, is better than a regional system.
At the moment I dont have an opinion until we
see some further information, he said.
Brown
said he doesnt have any preference for the plans not
involving BBWS. We see our role as the alternative
that involves the district, he said.
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