Understanding the factors impacting communities’ wastewater management
Helping communities identify alternatives to septic systems requires consideration of governance and technical factors to help suggest locally appropriate and comprehensive interventions. Arup looked at several factors, including opportunities to utilize shared or community septic systems, the impacts of wells on opportunities, locations of utility corridors and roads, impacts of population density, geographic boundaries, economic factors, and opportunities of recycling septic system wastewater.
Determining where septic systems are located is crucial, as the proximity to groundwater and water bodies can impact water quality. If large concentrations of septic systems are located close to a body of water, the water does not have time to be treated through the soil and may not be clean enough as it enters the water body. In addition to benefiting the environment, well managed and effective wastewater treatment governance carries impact for communities.
Using prior local studies, Arup’s wastewater experts used density thresholds to characterize parcels as low, medium, or high density for septic systems. Additionally, Arup’s water experts performed a literature review investigating existing documentation, regulations, County codes, and prior studies to uncover opportunities to increase access to wastewater infrastructure, community solutions, or support. This includes exploring community-based wastewater alternatives to septic systems, such as connections to sewer, community or shared systems, or other alternative wastewater treatment technologies.
The team then offered a detailed methodology to the County to help prioritize clusters and identify those that would offer greater impact to communities and water quality, considering characteristics such as density, disadvantaged community status, and technical and governance opportunities and constraints. Arup’s advice incorporates local community and stakeholder feedback. This in-depth analysis and methodology will allow a large, countywide challenge to be systematically evaluated.