One of the rainiest Junes on record has led to about 189 releases of untreated sewage from Minnesota communities and businesses — a "very high number," according to Wendy Turri, program manager for the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA).
"And we're not done," she said, as rising rivers and a saturated landscape continue to work against the region's wastewater drainage systems.
Sewage releases — also called "overflows" or "bypasses" — almost always go into rivers, and infrequently into lakes, where they can shut down beaches. Health officials have continually warned residents during the past week to avoid flooded waters. But of the 31 beaches that Hennepin County tests each Monday, none was closed from contamination this week.
Overflows occur because pipes that carry human waste and other used water get overloaded by stormwater, which isn't supposed to be in those pipes in the first place. The stormwater enters though illegal connections from sump pumps and other building drainage systems, as well as through faulty manhole seals and cracks in the underground sanitary pipes themselves. The overloaded wastewater systems then threaten to back up into homes, so cities will dump the sewage without treating it to avoid such backups.
In such cases, bacteria and other pollutants are very diluted by stormwater. They still carry a public health risk, but sun, evaporation and other factors can reduce the risks "within a short time," Turri said.
Of the bypasses this month, about 45 occurred Thursday alone, when rainfall of 2 to 4 inches — more in some areas — fell across much of the southern half of Minnesota. Comparisons aren't easy, Turri said, because the most recent summer month as rainy as this one was July 1997, and MPCA records from that far back aren't reliable.
Most of the overflows have occurred outstate, with just 26 of the releases this month in the seven-county metro area. Three beaches on Lake Minnetonka were closed June 2 and one on Lake Gervais in Little Canada last Thursday so swimmers would not encounter possible E. coli contamination.
Officials for the Metropolitan Council, which collects wastewater from municipal systems and delivers it to seven regional treatment plants, say bypasses could be becoming less frequent after heavy rains, due to several strategies. First and foremost was the epic effort to install separate sanitary and stormwater sewer systems in Minneapolis, St. Paul and South St. Paul in the 1980s.