Orange County NC Website
15 <br />were found to be end -of -life failures. Further investigation revealed that for the five end - <br />of -life failures, there was no suitable soil for an on -site repair. <br />The Environmental Health Department revisited the five properties and discovered that <br />two of the properties are vacant, two are seasonal failures, and one has had patchwork <br />done on it, but not a long -term solution. All of the five septic systems identified would <br />benefit from the installation of a public sewer system. <br />In 2011, Orange County received $75,000 in Community Development Block Grant <br />(CDBG) funds for the infrastructure hookups in the Rogers Road Neighborhood. In <br />order to receive connection, the homes had to be close enough to an existing water <br />and /or sewer line so that no extension of service lines would be required for connection. <br />Additionally, homeowners had to meet certain income eligibility requirements. There <br />have been five homes connected to Orange Water and Sewer Authority) OWASA sewer <br />as a result of this grant. <br />OWASA Sewer Concept Plan: <br />OWASA is the water & sewer utility for the area and as such, it investigated the concept <br />of providing sewer service as part of the Town of Chapel Hill's Rogers Road Small Area <br />Plan. On February 8, 2011 OWASA provided an updated concept plan and cost <br />estimate for the Rogers Road Small Area Plan Study Area for $3.4 million. This early <br />concept plan was completed based on the Chapel Hill Small Area Plan which is a <br />geographically different area than the Historic Rogers Road Neighborhood sewer <br />concept. There is also some difference in routing some of the main outfalls. In the <br />current estimate, OWASA needed to avoid the area of contamination coming out from <br />the Carrboro section that required more line with deeper excavation. Most importantly, <br />in the earlier estimates the availabilities fees were not included or the cost of extending <br />a lateral from the main line to the property <br />On May 16, 2012 OWASA staff provided a concept plan, layout, and cost estimate for <br />providing sewer service to the area that was delineated by the Historic Rogers Road <br />Neighborhood Task Force at the April 30, 2012 meeting. The concept plan is the most <br />efficient way to serve the defined Rogers Road Neighborhood and does not consider <br />adjoining neighborhoods. See below, the Historic Rogers Road Area Sewer Concept <br />May, 2012 Map. All the green areas show where sewer service is already available. <br />The dark green areas are parcels that have connected to the OWASA service. The light <br />green areas have not connected. The 86 parcels in yellow are the properties that would <br />be served by the conceptual sewer layout. The concept map also breaks down the <br />sewer service into 8 sub -areas with the number of parcels served and cost per parcel. <br />The 8 red lines represent the possible sub -areas of the sewer infrastructure that could <br />61 <br />