Two years after the draft EIR appeared, the final version of the NSCARP wastewater irrigation study has been published by the Sonoma County Water Agency — and not much has changed. The study remains seriously flawed, and many of the concerns from drinking water advocates, farmers, rural residents associations and even government agencies have been given short shrift by the report’s authors and consultants. We find this disturbing.
Wastewater recycling and reuse are useful in a drought only when drinking water supplies are protected. The three appellations that would be affected by NSCARP–Alexander, Dry Creek, and Russian River Valleys–all exhibit shallow porous soils over gravel with drinking water aquifers directly below. Contaminants not removed at the sewage plant are not adsorbed under these conditions and they will pass virtually unimpeded into the aquifers, placing at risk an important current and future source of drinking water for the County.
The SCWA Board of Directors will consider approving the report at their meeting in the Sonoma County Supervisors’ Chambers, 8:30 AM, Tuesday, May 12th. We hope the Board will do the right thing and pay attention to the project’s inadequacies. CWC is urging the Board not to certify the study in its current form. Here’s how the Healdsburg Tribune reported the EIR’s return.