Town Considers
Moratorium on New Homes
Vic Bradshaw
Frederick News
Post
The town’s
board of commissioners supposedly entered
Monday night’s meeting planning to stunt
growth. They came out talking about
temporarily eliminating it.
A
moratorium on sewer-line extensions in the
town appears to be the commissioners’ latest
plan. They asked
Michael Lucas, the town planner, to
get his recommendation put into ordinance
form and set a workshop to discuss it next
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the town office. The
apparent goal is to reach a consensus at
that meeting so the measure can be voted on
in February.
That turn
was the latest in the meandering path taken
as the commissioners try to reduce the
amount of sewage being pumped into the
town’s collection system. Due to serious
infiltration and inflow (I&I) problems, the
wastewater treatment plant regularly
exceeded its design-capacity limits over the
past year and spilled untreated sewage 11
times.
While the
moratorium would ban extensions for new
projects, it appears that developers will
get to build out Southgate and the first
phase of the Brookfield subdivision. Because
sewer lines have been run or approved for
those projects, they wouldn’t be affected by
the ban.
In addition
to passing a moratorium, Mr. Lucas
determined the town should contract a study
of the sewer system, require mitigation
stormwater connections tied into the sewer
system, and prepare a capital improvement
plan for the system prioritizing the
greatest needs.
Going into
Monday’s meeting, the board appeared set on
finalizing the terms of a Managed and
Sustainable Growth Plan. The temporary plan
would have limited the amount of residential
construction allowed in the town in a given
year.
But when
Mr. Lucas presented his analysis of the
collection system, the focus shifted. The
planner told the board the wastewater
treatment plant exceeded its design capacity
almost one of every five days over a
one-year period. In one instance, the plant
treated 3.2 million gallons in a day, four
times its capacity. "Adding (connections) to
a system that has a huge I&I problem doesn’t
make sense," Mr. Lucas reasoned.
Because the
moratorium, as planned, would exclude the
Southgate and Brookfield projects under way,
the town may dodge potential legal action
from two developers.
During
public comment, Tom Carolan, whose company
is building Southgate, reiterated that
severe restrictions on building would ruin
him financially. Chuck Karfonta, who is
affiliated with the partnership building
Brookfield, asked the board to honor an
agreement reached with the town when the
company allowed a right of way through its
property to run a sewer line to the Pembroke
subdivision.
John
Kerekes, an attorney with experience in
environmental issues, told the board that
Emmitsburg could be fined up to $50,000 a
day if it was found to be in violation of
the Clean Water Act. Before the town added
hookups, he said, it must see that it has
the capacity to accept the extra volume.
"We’re facing an immediate disaster," said
Bill O’Neil Jr., who followed Mr. Kerekes.
"We can’t further exacerbate the problem."
Discussion
of the issue took more than two hours,
including a 25-minute closed session in
which the board queried John Clapp, town
attorney.
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