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Onsite water treatment is not a one-size-fits-all industry. Yet throughout much of the nation, that's exactly how it's approached. Most state regulations include a "prescriptive code" that specifies the several different pre-approved onsite treatment systems allowed under regulations. There is an assumption that all site characteristics will be suitable for one of these systems. But obvious factors such as soil composition, water tables, and waste strength may call for alternative treatment technologies—ones that aren't specified under the code. So if alternative designs are prohibited, these pre-approved systems are often installed in site applications where they cannot function properly. If the prescribed system fails, the finger pointing begins and an unhappy property owner—who is most often responsible for ongoing operation and maintenance—usually ends up with the tab.

 
 

The alternative to a prescriptive code is a performance-based paradigm. In its purest form, say practitioners, this is a code that establishes a measurable performance objective, allows the engineer or designer freedom to develop a solution, and gives the regulator the authority to track and enforce performance standards. In theory, today's industry buzz touts this as the answer. In practice, however, a performance code is often met with budget restrictions, legal red tape, and public confusion—so much so that performance-based proponents may certainly be seen as "pioneering" the concept.

IMAGE: BIO-MICROBIOCS INC.
A cutaway of the components of a MicroFAST wastewater treatment system.

The problems arising from a prescriptive approach, or the barriers placed before performance models, are less about flagrant irresponsibility and more about a huge missing management link across the board. Consider that during its 1997 response to Congress, officials at the EPA pointed to the fact that communities require organizational structures for centralized wastewater facilities and for services such as electricity, telephone, and water; but few have an infrastructure for the management of decentralized wastewater systems. Systems are built, then it's pretty much out of sight, out of mind—a sure prescription for failure. It's estimated that at least 10% of onsite systems have stopped working, with some communities reporting failure rates as high as 70%. Plus, only about 2% of all households with onsite systems have regular maintenance programs. Few systems are being held accountable to any enforced performance standards. Consequently, failing septic systems are cited as the third most common source of groundwater contamination.

Creating a Model Performance Code

In 2005, the EPA formalized an agreement to partner with key industry organizations in an effort to improve onsite wastewater treatment nationwide. Their program strategy is upgrading the way systems are managed while boosting collaboration between EPA regions, state and local governments, and onsite treatment practitioners.

One of the partnering organizations, the National Onsite Wastewater Recycling Association (NOWRA), is developing a model performance code (downloadable at www.nowra.org). NOWRA defines the intent of its model as providing code provisions that are supported by data, science, and expert opinion, versus prescriptive codes that are supported only by tradition and not at all by data. Performance requirement data, says the EPA, can be expressed as numeric criteria (pollutant concentration or mass loading limits) or by narrative criteria (no odors or visible sheen), and should be based on ground- or surface-water conditions, water-quality objectives, and public health goals.

As no governmental entity is required to adopt a model code, the hope is to influence local officials and promote change in public health goals with a code that is well-developed and well-supported by industry experts. The adoption of model codes, says NOWRA, will reduce code variation between counties and between states, resulting in new product innovations, higher quality, lower costs, and the protection of valuable water resources.

Missing Management

Much has been accomplished within the performance-based movement—new treatment technologies, educational programs for onsite engineers and local public health officials, guidelines for proper onsite management, and more—but a formidable uphill battle still lies ahead.

Those who pioneer performance-based codes know that the real issue is the absence of management and accountability. Who will ensure ongoing maintenance? Who will pay for consistent monitoring? Who will enforce standards? What happens if performance standards are not met?

"With a prescriptive approach, there is a mere assumption that systems will meet performance standards," says Bill Stuth, owner of Aqua Test Inc., a company that evaluates and designs commercial and residential onsite wastewater systems. "You can have the same technology involved under prescriptive as in performance. The difference in the performance approach is that a management entity is monitoring and maintaining systems at the same level as a sewer district," he says.

Stuth cautions against a current regulation trend that specifies a system as one that's "deemed to comply" with performance requirements. "This is simply a prescriptive approach that ignores necessary performance tracking and monitoring as someone at a health department simply 'deemed' it so. I speak with owners every week whose systems are deemed to comply, and guess what? They're not complying," he says, adding that systems can be installed under prescriptive regulations, but they should all be tested to performance standards to make sure they're performing to the environment's needs.

Stuth's company, like other manufacturers and service providers, offers a wide variety of management services to the market. There is a debate in the industry over whether management contracts alone are sufficient. While some say "yes," many practitioners want management contracts to be tied into some sort of operating permits, so that compliance is ultimately enforced at the regulatory level. For example, Stuth's commercial management program, which is focused on the restaurant industry, ties onsite monitoring into discharge or food user permits. Aqua Test will conduct inspections every three months to monitor compliance. An annual report is sent to the health department to verify that the system is meeting the performance claim, and each year the facility's discharge permit must be renewed. In some states, the onsite permit is tied into a food user permit. "If an onsite permit isn't up to date, then a food permit will not be issued. It's a way to guarantee that the system will be operable," says Stuth, who stresses that until government entities step up to enforce the performance levels they've chosen, little will change. "Governments should set the standards, and let the engineering community figure out how to get there," he says.

Barriers to Performance

This home site on a hill in northern California forced designers to come up with an innovative solution for its onsite wastewater system.

The barriers to effective performance-based management programs are many. EPA guidelines suggest the following as just a few of the obstacles:

  • insufficient funding;
  • lack of public involvement;
  • weak compliance and enforcement programs;
  • regulatory constraints and prescriptive requirements;
  • liability laws that discourage innovation;
  • grant guidelines, loan priorities, and other financial barriers; and
  • lack of training and educational programs.

Richard Otis, of the engineering firm Ayres Associates, is one of the lead authors on a recent EPA wastewater treatment manual. His experience in pioneering a performance-based code in Minnesota suggests that insufficient funding and a lack of public involvement are the top obstacles. As early as 1995, Otis was asked to assist the Northern Minnesota Wastewater Technical Committee to investigate a performance-based management approach in an environmentally sensitive, 10-county lake and resort region. "Our objective was to develop our concept of the ideal program, one based upon risk. As the risks increase, you would have increased management controls to bring the risks down," says Otis.

After the performance code was developed, it was brought to the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency to "ground it in reality," says Otis. After all was said and done, some of the counties picked up portions of the code, but none adopted it in full. Otis does, though, point to the following positive outcomes:

  • Participants gained a better understanding of the issues and problems surrounding prescriptive codes.
  • Public health officials learned the importance of new roles in educational outreach and enforcement.
  • Funds were allocated toward the creation of an automated permit tracking system.
  • The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency has included the new code in its recent revisions. There is still some intent in various counties, and in time, some may adopt it.

So what prohibited further success? Otis said they had developed a public information campaign, but that it lacked leadership and funding. Also, certain homeowners and especially resort owners faced financial hardships should they be forced to comply. "Everybody who worked on the code liked what was produced, but it was in the implementation that it was difficult to sell, because you have to convince the public first. Even though we started so many years ago, you have to bring the public and the county boards along as you go. That would have helped—but that didn't happen," Otis says.

Another downside occurred in some counties that adopted "parts" of the code. Otis says that several counties decided to use operating permits as a way to control commercial establishments, but that they lacked the administrative infrastructure necessary to track and enforce those permits. "After a couple of years these counties lost all control and stopped using the program. It just takes more forethought. Today I tell counties that the first three years after code enactment are going to be a nightmare. When the rules change, you will have frustrated practitioners and property owners. You must have the fortitude to last through those initial years, or it will not work," he says.

To those counties that are currently examining performance codes, Otis suggests that they pick the management model they wish to have, and then select only those features of the performance code that would be appropriate for that model. "That way, they would have a better shot at getting things in place," he says.

Signs of Progress

A MicroFAST system at the Horizon Camp and Retreat Center in Arkansas City, KS.

"While mandatory performance requirements are still the exception and not the rule, there are some counties, especially certain upscale suburban areas, where the management infrastructure is in place," says Craig Goodwin, general manager of Washington-based NCS Wastewater Solutions.

In fact, Goodwin outlines an example in his home state. Washington's Kitsap County has nearly 50,000 septic systems in the ground. Of these, he says, approximately 2,500 are classified as "alternative systems," for which homeowners are required to have management service contracts in place. Aerobic treatment units and sand filters are the most common of these alternative systems.

Recognizing the importance of tracking these systems and educating homeowners about the need, Kitsap dedicated significant resources to the program. The Department of Health assigned one full-time person to the task and invested in the computer database systems required for efficient tracking. As to enforcement, for homeowners who do not have management contracts in place, regulations call for warning letters followed ultimately by issuance of a "ticket" for noncompliance. Additionally, civil infraction citations may be given, with a possible penalty of $475 per day if ordered by a judge.

But most counties are not like Kitsap, Goodwin admits. "It takes significant political will to overcome objections to more government regulation. Based upon the nation's current lack of enforcement, it will take a sea change in attitude for effective enforcement of performance requirements to become a health department mandate and practice. Despite all our progress, the toughest climb is yet ahead," he says.

Author CAROL WASSON is a freelance construction industry writer and owner of JCL Marketing, Inc.

 

OW - September/October 2005

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