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Water
Quality Partnership
Brief History of the Franklin County Water Quality Partnership
The growth and development that has occurred within
Franklin County over the past 75 years has not always
been implemented in the most orderly manner possible.
In decades past, the issues of pollution and groundwater
were less of a priority. It was perceived at the time
that clean drinking water would always be plentiful
and that treatment of sewer discharges in rural developments
through home septic and leach field systems was adequate
to the task at hand. During the past 20 years, however,
urban growth and lifestyle changes have placed increasing
demands on these outdated systems.
Throughout Franklin County, including areas within
the City of Columbus, there are neighborhoods now experiencing
the effects of the demands that are being placed upon
these obsolete sewage systems. The most critical concerns
deal with health issues resulting from contaminated
ground and surface water.
Franklin County's Water Quality Partnership (WQP)
program was initiated to address these serious public
health issues by forming partnerships with local townships
and villages. Initial discussions began in 1986 with
groups from around Franklin County to address individual
concerns related to pollution from failing septic and
aeration systems. The affected areas were initially
identified as "pockets of pollution."
The concern and awareness level peaked in 1992 when
officials from both the city and county boards of
health convened a health summit to address these issues.
This gathering brought together community health leaders
from Franklin County, the City of Columbus, officials
from the state health department, the Ohio EPA, and
various citizen's groups representing environmental
issues. The consensus of that health summit was that
the pollution problem was far more dangerous than first
expected.
For Franklin County, the continuing effort to address
these health and environmental issues began in earnest
in 1994 with a project in Prairie Township called the
Emmit/Mix sewer project. This $1.2 million project
was completed in 1996 and resolved the most serious
pollution problem in the township with over 145 households
connected into central sewer. In 1997, the Franklin
County Commissioners, under orders from the Ohio EPA,
began the Cleveland Heights sewer improvement in Blendon
Township. This $2.1 million project was completed in
1999 with 124 households and businesses connected into
central sewer in the Morse Road/Cleveland Avenue area.
With the completion of these two projects, the commissioners
had resolved two of the 24 known areas in Franklin
County that were on the list identified in 1992 as
most critical.
In a joint effort between the City of Columbus and
Franklin County, a third area known as Marsdale was
sewered and eliminated from the original list of 24.
This area of Marsdale Avenue was on the initial list
of both boards of health as an area of great concern.
That project began in late 1999 and was completed
in 2000 with over 20 homes and businesses connected
into central sewer along Marsdale Avenue and Brown
Road in Franklin Township
During 2003, the Franklin County Commissioners
undertook the most ambitious series of projects designed
to eliminate existing pockets of ground and surface
water contamination in the county. Included in this
series were the following projects:
In the Darbydale community: Construction of a sewer
wastewater collection and treatment facility along
with connecting area households into the new sanitary
sewer system.
click
here for project information (PDF)
In Franklin Township: Connecting the residents living
in the following areas into the new sanitary sewer
system: Mon-E-Back Subdivision, Eureka Park Subdivision,
Briggsdale Subdivision, Brown Road West, Brown Road
East, Hague Avenue, San Margherita and Stimmel Road. click
here for project information (PDF)
The documents above
are in PDF format. You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader in order to download
these files and read them. To obtain a free copy of
Adobe Acrobat Reader, visit Adobe's website at www.adobe.com .
In Mifflin Township: Connecting the residents living
in the following areas into the new sanitary sewer
system: Leonard Park Subdivision, Englewood and Ferris
Road.
In Blendon Township: Connecting the residents of Cleveland
Heights Phase #3 into the new sanitary sewer system.
In Sharon Township: Connecting the residents of Kanawha
and Rosslyn Avenues into the new sanitary sewer system.
In the Darbydale community , some 325 residents and
approximately 450 mobile home trailers will be connecting
to the new sanitary sewer system. In the project areas
of Franklin, Mifflin, Blendon and Sharon Townships,
approximately 991 homes, churches, and businesses will
be connecting to sanitary sewer lines.
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