Madison, WI Header
File #: 47037    Version: 1 Name: Authorizing the City of Madison Engineering Division and Madison Water Utility to work cooperatively with the Madison Metropolitan Sewerage District and other stakeholders on means to reduce the impacts of Sodium Chloride on surface waters, drinking water
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 4/26/2017 In control: BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS
On agenda: 6/20/2017 Final action: 6/20/2017
Enactment date: 6/21/2017 Enactment #: RES-17-00489
Title: Authorizing the City of Madison Engineering Division and Madison Water Utility to work cooperatively with the Madison Metropolitan Sewerage District and other stakeholders on means to reduce the impacts of Sodium Chloride on surface waters, drinking water, and the wastewater treatment plant.
Sponsors: Sheri Carter, David Ahrens, Marsha A. Rummel, Sara Eskrich
Fiscal Note
No Appropriation Required

Title
Authorizing the City of Madison Engineering Division and Madison Water Utility to work cooperatively with the Madison Metropolitan Sewerage District and other stakeholders on means to reduce the impacts of Sodium Chloride on surface waters, drinking water, and the wastewater treatment plant.

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WHEREAS, The City of Madison has been actively working on improving storm water quality for decades, starting with the preservation of greenways in the 70’s, progressing to the construction of detention and retention ponds and today building bioretention facilities, greenroofs, raingardens, porous pavement and much more; and,

WHEREAS, The pollutants of concern in stormwater runoff and the technology required to address them is continually evolving; and,

WHEREAS, Total Phosphorous and Suspended Solids are currently regulated by the EPA and WDNR under the City’s Stormwater discharge permit; and,

WHEREAS, additional pollutants, currently not numerically regulated under this permit, such as salt are impacting our receiving waters and groundwater; and,

WHEREAS, The City of Madison is committed to continuing to improve our environment by taking action to reduce pollutants being introduced to our receiving waters and groundwater; and,

WHEREAS, The Storm Water Utility has partnered with other Municipalities and Dane County to coordinate educational efforts around best practices for storm water; and,

Whereas, the Madison Water Utility Board has adopted water quality policies directing utility management to deliver water that meets all primary and secondary drinking water standards; and

Whereas, chloride may impair drinking water making it unpalatable particularly when the level exceeds the US Environmental Protection Agency secondary maximum contaminant level of 250 mg/L; and

Whereas, chloride has been steadily increasing at several Madison municipal drinking water wells, most dramatically at Well 14 where chloride ...

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