The Government
of Guam agencies have failed for 34 years to bring the Baza Gardens
Waste Water Treatment plant into conformity under Federal EPA
standards. Since it was first installed in 1974, the residential
housing infrastructure has more than tripled. The same treatment
facility has remained as it has since it was installed without
any expansion, renovations, or integrity chamber inspections.
There is evidence of the existing facility overflowing perhaps
during peak influent periods and heavy rainfall; allowing a significant
percentage of untreated waste water to percolate, inject into
the ground and perhaps contaminate any groundwater resources in
the watershed itself.
It is now
the 21st century and millions of gallons of sewerage and waste
water still pass through the noncompliant treatment plant operation
each year. This same wastewater is not even considered fully treated
under the definition as ‘primary’ (solids removal)
as plastic solid waste has been seen to flow out from cracks and
openings in the rocks at a lower elevation down from this facility
and eventually into the Togcha River. This same effluent waste
water also gives off a strong chlorine odor perhaps added to the
water effluent as it leaves the treatment facility. This may disinfect
the water of pathogens but the high nutrient levels remain unchanged
as it eventually flows down stream and ultimately onto the Togcha
coral reef platform and channel.
The nutrients
from the treatment plant flows across the shallows and promotes
the growth of blue-green alga and filamentous green alga. Vast
expanses of this same alga cover the reef’s corals, macro-alga,
and other natural marine life. During our seasonal low tides,
the intense sun ‘bakes’ the over fertilized river
banks and reef surfaces causing the resulting gases to assist
the same blue-green alga to break loose from the bottom ‘gardens’
and rise to the surface of the water, collect / mass together
with the help of tide and wind forces into large dark, slimy slicks
that eventually floats to and deposits onto the shore line.
The smell
of the decaying alga on the shoreline is extremely offensive and
putrid to even my dogs that shy away from it. Our once pristine
Togcha Bay coral reef shallows are being smothered and slowly
dying from this alien type of alga growth allowed to blatantly
take place here. I have been promised for over 25 years this situation
would be fixed. Most recently they said two more years. Don’t
believe it.
With the impending
military build up here I see the only way to work with finding
solutions is to have the Federal EPA force the GWA out of the
waste water business by imposing fines and using those funds to
implement an environmental impact assessment to study the best
way to treat the historical waste water problems in our Ipan Talofofo
area. Once a solution is determined we should then choose an experienced
private sector wastewater engineering firm to work with the local
population and businesses to implement and maintain those solutions
and satisfy the environmental requirements.
I do not trust
the Government of Guam in any capacity to accomplish anything
with the issue of waste water. We must act together as concerned
residents of the Island and work to impress the powers that be
that this issue can no longer be allowed to continue. Enough is
enough.
Your ideas
and input is needed. Please page through our web page and leave
us your comments, advice, and recommendations in our ‘Contact
Us’ link and feel free to also visit our forum
link as well.
Jeff
Pleadwell
Togcha - Ipan
Talofofo