bigleo48
Active member
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2007
- Messages
- 1,887
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 36
All,
So last week a city employee showed up in huff and starting laying into my employee about a blockage down the road in the sanitary sewer. They said they traced it back to us. They also went next door and accused the owner of the Oil Change biz next door of releasing oil into the system. I guess the guy was a real A hole. The Oil Change guy had his environmental services people who pump out his waste check and they said he was fine and that the oil likely came from the Shell oil distribution warehouse down the road. He also mentioned that the city guy taking the samples didn't seem to know what he was doing.
Anyway, I get an email from the city saying they are going to bill me for the clean up and the following "We also collected samples from the two discharging manholes at your property line (wash bays and automatic drive thru). Preliminary analyses of these samples show Total Suspended Solids (TSS) results of >500 mg/l and >1000 mg/l being discharged into the sanitary collection system. The Sewer Use By-law (12-91) limit for TSS is 350 mg/l. This is a non-compliant discharge with the Sewer Use By-law. This also indicates your interceptors are not working efficient and are overdue for a clean-out. There is additional testing we are completing on the samples we collected and once all the results are complete we will forward a copy of the results."
Anyway, I find it hard to believe that we don't have a problem for 8 years and now all of a sudden down the road there is a sand build up!? Our SS bays all have large sediment pits, that flow into an oil and grease separator, then to the sanitary sewer.
Any ideas on how to best deal with this. How to I know its all my sand? I can I be sure tests were taken properly?
Regards...Big Leo
So last week a city employee showed up in huff and starting laying into my employee about a blockage down the road in the sanitary sewer. They said they traced it back to us. They also went next door and accused the owner of the Oil Change biz next door of releasing oil into the system. I guess the guy was a real A hole. The Oil Change guy had his environmental services people who pump out his waste check and they said he was fine and that the oil likely came from the Shell oil distribution warehouse down the road. He also mentioned that the city guy taking the samples didn't seem to know what he was doing.
Anyway, I get an email from the city saying they are going to bill me for the clean up and the following "We also collected samples from the two discharging manholes at your property line (wash bays and automatic drive thru). Preliminary analyses of these samples show Total Suspended Solids (TSS) results of >500 mg/l and >1000 mg/l being discharged into the sanitary collection system. The Sewer Use By-law (12-91) limit for TSS is 350 mg/l. This is a non-compliant discharge with the Sewer Use By-law. This also indicates your interceptors are not working efficient and are overdue for a clean-out. There is additional testing we are completing on the samples we collected and once all the results are complete we will forward a copy of the results."
Anyway, I find it hard to believe that we don't have a problem for 8 years and now all of a sudden down the road there is a sand build up!? Our SS bays all have large sediment pits, that flow into an oil and grease separator, then to the sanitary sewer.
Any ideas on how to best deal with this. How to I know its all my sand? I can I be sure tests were taken properly?
Regards...Big Leo