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Agenda - 02-16-2010 - 5c
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Agenda - 02-16-2010 - 5c
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Last modified
10/15/2015 11:50:42 AM
Creation date
2/12/2010 3:19:01 PM
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BOCC
Date
2/16/2010
Meeting Type
Regular Meeting
Document Type
Agenda
Agenda Item
5c
Document Relationships
Minutes 02-16-2010
(Linked From)
Path:
\Board of County Commissioners\Minutes - Approved\2010's\2010
RES-2010-015 DEFERRED - Resolution Regarding Legislative Matters
(Linked From)
Path:
\Board of County Commissioners\Resolutions\2010-2019\2010
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EXHIBIT B <br />Bio- Solids Disposal <br />Orange County is among the top five North Carolina counties in terms of acreage <br />on which wastewater treatment bio- solids is applied. The County receives bio - <br />solids from wastewater treatment plants operated by Hillsborough and Orange <br />Water and Sewer Authority (OWASA) in the County, from Mebane and Burlington <br />in Alamance County and from the City of Durham in Durham County. Some of <br />this application occurs in critical watersheds. <br />The process of land applying liquefied bio- solids is regulated by the NC Division <br />of Water Quality under US Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) <br />regulations, policies and guidelines under a primacy agreement with the USEPA. <br />Bio - solids are generally applied to agricultural land (primarily land used for active <br />livestock grazing or growing of forage crops) at "agronomic" rates. Agronomic <br />rates in this case indicate that the bio- solids are applied such that its <br />nitrogen /phosphorous content is consistent with the rate of application of <br />standard fertilizers. Unlike commercial fertilizers, however, bio- solids containing <br />industrial wastes typical of municipal wastewater treatment systems usually <br />contain a number of potentially harmful heavy metals (cadmium, chromium, <br />arsenic, lead, mercury), synthetic and volatile organic compounds (SOC's and <br />VOC's) as well as some level of active pathogenic organisms typical of human <br />waste residues. <br />The land application of bio- solids to agricultural lands is exempt — as both a <br />"discharge" wastewater treatment activity and an agricultural activity — from <br />approval, regulation, enforcement or effective oversight by County land, <br />environmental protection or health regulation. Yet potential effects to the health <br />of nearby residents that are associated with aerosol or surface and ground water <br />contamination are woefully un- or under - studied by the EPA or the Center for <br />Disease Control. Residents of Orange County that live nearby to bio- solids <br />application sites are fearful of risks to their health and have at least anecdotally <br />reported a higher incidence of health and nuisance problems to the Board of <br />County Commissioners. <br />
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