Monday, November 12, 2007

The Urgency of protecting our fragile water supply


The Groundwater Monitoring Improvement Agreement (PDF) was quietly and quickly -- almost surreptitiously-- approved during the "Consent Agenda" of Council's 10/2 meeting. Council never openly discussed the agreement nor were study sessions held on this urgent matter. About a month ago Council listened to a powerpoint Wellhead Protection Program Update from our city geologist about the "state of our *wellheads". When he showed how two drops of a contaminate could pollute ALL the water in Redmond pool he had my attention. So far, the city has removed contaminated soil equivalent to three City Halls.

This $331,000 ground water monitoring enhancement agreement was is so important and urgent that time constraints were given by staff's. Staff advised that passage was needed right away to complete 90% of the project by March 2008.

The project involves hiring GeoEngineers consultants to drill a network of 26 monitoring wells in our critical, shallow aquifer recharge area to:

  • track the movement of groundwater
  • track contaminant plumes
  • monitor clean-up efforts
  • evaluate the effectiveness of the hazardous materials management processes
  • enable the City to make better policy decision regarding pollution prevention and groundwater protection.

The mission of this project is a wake-up call! Our underground drinking water supply is extremely fragile and vulnerable to ongoing contamination. In my final Redmond Reporter Citizen Watch column I brought attention to the vulnerability of our well water and the importance of the Cascade Water Alliance and conservation. Fortunately, Councilman John Marchione sits of the Cascade Water Alliance Board so the City has regional voice in planning our water supply for future generations. While interviewing Councilman Jim Robinson for Mayor, Jim told me unequivocally, nothing was wrong with our aquifer. I asked him again. Yes, no problem. ....hmmm....does citizen awareness and openness fit in someplace here?

My Citizen Watch water supply article and other columns I wrote for the community were well received, but the Administration didn't like my shedding light into their corners of government. So, the Administration's community- initiative-public-relations manager issued Advisory action to remove my column. (Since then Redmond Reporter "Letters to the Editor" have been reduced to a trickle -- and this, during a Mayoral election!

NOTE, an aquifer atrocity: A couple of years ago, I and a neighbor, Richard Morris, discovered septic and grease contaminants on Evans Creek bank in SE industrial Redmond. A year later we blew the whistle on a business that required 11 *regulatory agencies to "swoop down" and enforce emergency hazardous waste controls. It was ugly.

The Administration's PR staff (of 8) insisted that all groundwater monitoring controls were in place prior to our discovery of this natural resource atrocity. No doubt our "citizen watch" waved enough red flags to move the City forward in their July 17 update of our Wellhead Protection Program.

After the July 17 Council meeting, Mayor Ives told me my Reporter water supply column was "very good". She had only one concern and that was my urging citizens to ask city officials for a water conservation program. It was my opinion we needed a bonafide program. So far, all I've found in our water conservation program are: free Cascade Water shower heads, RCTV reader board plugs, and FOCUS ad. After my column, the city placed an ad and write-up in FOCUS , ramped up RCTV plugs and the Reporter posted several PSA's. Staff now tells me a new, quantitative water conservation program will be reviewed by Council soon. You'll hear about it here.

** Five shallow wells located east of the Sammamish River supply Redmond with 3.5 to 5 million gallons of water/day or about 40% of Redmond's drinking water. According to the City report of 10/2/07 C.3 "these five wells...are highly susceptible to contamination..."

* regulatory agencies at SE Redmond hazardous waste site were: - EPA, DNR county/city, County Health Dept.,Puget Sound Clean Air, Fire Marshal, Code Enforcement, Wellhead Protection Officer, Department of Ecology.

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