Date: Fri 07-Aug-1998
Date: Fri 07-Aug-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
aquifer-protection-Michaud
Full Text:
Aquifer Protection Plan Starts Review Process
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
A Conservation Commission member has been formulating proposed aquifer
protection regulations for the town to safeguard the quality of underground
drinking water supplies.
Sandra Michaud said Tuesday she has submitted her proposed aquifer protection
regulations to Conservation Official C. Stephen Driver for his review and
comment on the administrative aspects of such rules.
Ms Michaud, who joined the Conservation Commission in January 1997, said she
has been interested for more than a decade in protecting the quality of
underground water supplies.
The regulations are proposed to protect and preserve groundwater quality
within stratified drift aquifers which are existing or potential public and
private drinking water supplies. These groundwater resources have been shown
to be easily contaminated by many land use activities; thus there is a need
for specific land use controls be exercised within these areas, according to
the proposal.
Several years ago the Legislative Council designated the Conservation
Commission as the town's Aquifer Protection Agency. The commission's role in
that capacity has been muted during the past several years because no town
aquifer protection regulations have been in place. The state Department of
Environmental Protection (DEP) repeatedly has urged the town to wait until the
state approves a "model set" of aquifer regulations upon which municipalities
can base their regulations.
But the state's adoption of those model rules repeatedly has been delayed,
prompting Ms Michaud to urge that town regulations be adopted before the
state's model rules are in place.
The state has been working on its model regulations for the past nine years,
Ms Michaud noted, asking why it is taking so long.
Ms Michaud said she is especially concerned that the water quality of local
aquifers will be degraded by development before the town can get aquifer
protection regulations in place.
Several other towns in Connecticut already have enacted their own aquifer
protection regulations, so it would behoove Newtown to do the same, Ms Michaud
said.
After Mr Driver reviews Ms Michaud's proposals, copies of a final draft will
be distributed to Conservation Commission members for their review and
comment. Also, the town attorney will review the documents.
Ms Michaud said she hopes the final version of the town's aquifer protection
regulations can be submitted to a public hearing and acted upon by the
Conservation Commission expeditiously.
State legislation on aquifer protection allows municipalities to have
regulations that are stricter than state regulations, but not any less strict.
The DEP, in effect, sets the minimum standards for aquifer protection within
the state.
Ms Michaud noted there is much commercially-zoned land near local aquifer
areas, stressing the need to move rapidly and get local rules in place.
"I've taken these regulations as far as I can take them. We are working very
hard to get these in place. I wish this had been in place a long time ago,"
she said.
Ms Michaud said she opposed the past construction of Sand Hill Plaza on South
Main Street, noting its proximity to the Pootatuck Aquifer wellheads through
which United Water supplies about 1,000 customers with public drinking water.
Ms Michaud said she does not oppose development, but stresses that development
must be done correctly to protect the environment.
Locally, the Pootatuck Aquifer, a major sand-and-gravel aquifer, is the source
of two public drinking water supplies -- the United Water system and the water
wells that serve Fairfield Hills, Garner Correctional Institution and
Nunnawauk Meadows.
Sand-and-gravel aquifers which provide groundwater to large public water
supplies are at particular risk of contamination because their groundwater may
be very close to the surface and their soils are highly permeable.
When town aquifer protection regulations are in place and a violation is
noted, the town's Aquifer Protection Agency would issue a cease-and-desist
order to stop the violation. If that order is not effective, the agency would
pursue a court injunction to halt the violation. Zoning violations are pursued
in such a manner.
DEP Areas Of Concern
According to DEP, businesses which are likely to be regulated under aquifer
protection regulations include manufacturing and industrial operations,
wholesale facilities which store and use hazardous materials, gasoline
stations, auto repair businesses, machine shops, dry cleaners, furniture
strippers, printers, photo processors and laboratories.
Also, highway maintenance garages, road salt storage areas, airports and waste
disposal areas will be regulated. Workshops and laboratories within schools
and other institutions will have to follow "best management practices,"
according to DEP.
Also, homeowners may be affected by restrictions on underground fuel storage
and certain home occupations. Residents in aquifer protection areas will be
educated about the risk to groundwater quality from pesticides and
fertilizers, improper septic system use, paints, paint thinners, and
automotive fluids. Low-risk activities in aquifer protection areas include
low-density housing, open space land, and certain types of agriculture,
according to the DEP.