Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Reply to Misinformed Poster

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Yes please, let's bring on the "INDEPENDENT" review! NO ONE in their RIGHT MIND will ever again suggest Okanagan Lake as a source of good, clean water!

Here are the facts on Okanagan Lake water (that you don't need to pay a consultant to tell you):

1. In the City of Vernon alone around Okanagan Lake, there are still 1,100 homes on septic.
REPLY: 
 In the City of Vernon, there is sewage collection around both sides of the Vernon arm of Okanagan Lake.  I am unaware of septic tanks around the lake except in the higher areas.  Where the poster gets 1,100 septic tanks around the lake within the City of Vernon is beyond me.  Someone should check with both the City and IHA.


2. There is no sewer on the westside of the lake - so how many other homes are on septic, maintained or not, or simply flushing it all straight in?
REPLY: 

On the west side of the lake  (Okananan Indian Band) there is no sewage system.  The leased lots all dispose of sewage either in pit toilets or in septic systems.  There is no question that nutrients and coliforms are entering the lake from these sources, but the amount has little or no effect on the overall quality of the lake.


3. The water quality in the Kin arm of the lake is terrible - nutrient-loaded and filthy from uncontrolled runoff. There is no stormwater utility mitigating these impacts on the lake. Ever wonder why does the milfoil grow so??
4. And don't forget, the sewer outfall pipe!
REPLY TO 3 + 4: 
Stormwater enters Okanagan Lake via Vernon Creek and other discharge pipes such as at Adventure Bay.  Stormwater is not treated in BC since it contains very little contaminants, and would cost a fortune to construct facilities to treat basically water.

The milfoil commenced in the late 1960's when the City was discharging nutrient rich wastewater into Vernon Creek and the areas around the lake were still on septic systems.  Since the discharge was removed in 1977, the nutrient content of the Vernon arm of the lake has reduced substantially.  The milfoil is still harvested since there is still phosphorus and nitrogen in the lake, and small amounts are entering from things like fertilizer runoff.
As for the outfall pipe, since it was installed in the 1990's, it has been used only once in the late 1990's due to an emergency situation, and has not been used since.  So, the reference to the outfall pipe is unclear.


Source water protection for Okanagan Lake will bankrupt us, long before building the ALWAYS-REQUIRED Filtration Plant at Duteau Creek.
REPLY: 
If Okanagan Lake was used for a water intake, source water protection would not be an issue as the writer states.  The example of Kelowna's intake shows us that raw water quality in the lake is  excellent and needs only disinfection to meet the Provincial Drinking Water Objectives.


The writer fails to understand the issue of providing potable water quality to serve more agricultural uses than potable uses.  It is this kind of uniformed citizen who needs a lesson on reality.



And speaking of wasting money... If we had built the filter at the same time as the clarification plant, as it was supposed to have been done, it would have cost us $10 million. Ten years on, $20 million. Now, in 2012 dollars, $26.5 million, and who knows how much when IHA finally orders us to do it.

So the question that should be asked of our politicians is: why do we keep deferring this necessary project?

$26.5 million sounds like a lot of money, but it is still the smallest investment we can make to bring our system into compliance with provincial standards.



"Misinformed Anonymous is parroting bureaucrats," offers Kia.


Unsupportable data is just that...

1 comment:

  1. MisInformed PosterJuly 2, 2015 at 2:06 PM

    Hey Misinformed Blog Writer, it's me again, "Misinformed Poster" - we own 2 homes just above Okanagan Lake (not high above the lake), and both of them are on SEPTIC, not SEWER.

    Did you call the City or IHA to confirm, or do you prefer to just call me a liar?

    To fact-check, check out the City of Vernon's liquid waste management plan. Then you can weep with the rest of us!


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