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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 2017)
Street Roots • October 20-26, 2017 News Page 4 A n arrow points to a 2dnch by 24-inch hole cut in the screen leading to the city’s sanitary sewer system, a perm it violation. P H O T O S ARE F R O M A P O R T L A N D B U R E A U O F E N V IR O N M E N T A L SERVICES IN V E S T IG A T IO N Debris, such as beverage cans, caught in and below a catch screen intended to keep debris out o f the city’s sanitary sewer. Debris that jam m ed the pum ps a t the Rivergate Pum p Station. The city has evidence Honey Bucket rigged a drain and jam m ed the sewer, but the porta-potty company blames ‘homeless folks’ BY EMILY GREEN problem as soon as possible. Luckily, each time the main and secondary back-up pump at the station were hen the Rivergate Pump Station in jammed with debris, triggering an alarm, North Portland began to jam with crews arrived in time to clear the clogs and clothing, construction materials reinstall the pumps before an overflow and hypodermic needles in April, the source occurred. of the debris was a mystery. Any facility with a permit to discharge The underground station takes sewage into the city’s sanitary sewer system is that’s been flowing downward along a required to have safeguards in place to keep gravity-powered path and pumps it upward large solid materials from entering the to higher ground. From there, the sewage system. continues its journey to the city’s For this reason, one theory floated early wastewater treatment plant to be treated. on in the city’s investigation was that When a city sewer pump jams, it can someone might be illegally dumping cause raw sewage to back up into homes clothing and other garbage directly into the and businesses, leak out into the street and sewer, according to internal city emails. possibly end up in storm drains that lead to But a city inspection of the area’s the Willamette River. manholes yielded no evidence of such Because raw sewage contains some dumping. pretty nasty bacteria, such as E. coli, these The focus of the investigation changed overflows can spell a public health when the city discovered a Honey Bucket emergency and an environmental mess. storage facility on North Rivergate Of notable concern, the Rivergate Pump Boulevard, just north of St. Johns, had Station happens to sit adjacent to nearly recently obtained a wastewater permit to 2,000 acres of wildlife habitat in the Smith begin emptying its porta-potties onsite. and Bybee Wetlands Natural Area. It’s the The site’s wastewater system had passed largest protected freshwater wetland within inspection in February, and its Industrial an American city. Wastewater Discharge Permit from the city Depending on the volume and velocity of had been approved. the spill, an overflow at that location could The day Honey Bucket began discharging have potentially flowed into the river or wastewater toward the Rivergate Pump affected wildlife. The habitat is home to many species, including river otters, black Station, however, was the day the pump began to clog. tailed deer, beavers, Western painted turtles, Chinook salmon and 100 types of “That was the big smoking gun,” said Dan bird, such as bald eagles and ospreys. Parnell, Bureau of Environmental Services When the Rivergate station jammed nine industrial permitting manager. times over 10 days, officials in Portland’s Over the course of 10 days, the only day Bureau of Environmental Services knew the city’s sewer pump didn’t jam was the they had to pinpoint the source of the only day Honey Bucket didn’t discharge S T A F F W R IT E R W wastewater, according to city documents obtained through a records request. Debris similar to the items that clogged the city’s pump was discovered onsite at Honey Bucket in its catch basins, according to city inspectors. They noted a beverage can and hypodermic needles floating in the company’s septic tank. These items had to pass through all the safeguards, which rely mainly on workers’ diligence, and a catch screen to arrive at that location, Parnell said. As it turns out, people discard all sorts of items inside Honey Buckets, which are often used at construction sites, music festivals and other outdoor events. Tom Rogers of Northwest Cascade, Honey Bucket’s parent company, told city regulators that workers regularly find everything from beer cans and Gatorade bottles to bras, underwear and other items in Honey Bucket porta-potties. When employees clean out the toilets, they’re supposed to fish out large items and throw them away. Additionally, before the water enters the onsite septic system, it has to pass through a screened drain that should stop any items that were missed by workers. But city inspectors discovered the Honey Bucket facility manager had cut a 2-inch by 24-inch hole in one of the screens intended to keep debris out of the sewer - a major permit violation. Additionally, a pipe had been replaced to alter the facility’s septic flow - another serious violation. “I’ve been in this business for 16 years now, and that’s the first time I’ve had a permittee that has drastically altered a See HONEY BUCKET, page 5