One Way to Get Their Attention

March 8, 2017
Sw Jk Blog

Last December, a sinkhole opened up in the town of Fraser, MI—on Christmas Eve, no less. The cause was a broken 11-foot-diameter sewer pipe located 55 feet underground. The hole eventually measured 250 by 100 feet, causing nearly two dozen homes to be temporarily evacuated. A few are damaged so badly as to be considered lost causes.

The sinkhole is just a chapter in an ongoing story, however. The city of Fraser and the Clinton River watershed generally have had sewer and stormwater problems for quite some time. The region has a combined sewer system; even before the burst pipe that caused the sinkhole, there were occasional combined sewer overflows and backups of sewage into homes and basements. When the sinkhole opened in December, officials deliberately dumped raw sewage to the river to prevent homes from flooding, although they say that was an emergency measure they try extremely hard to avoid. But the larger problem is that the entire system needs an upgrade. Another sinkhole appeared just over a decade ago, and several leaking sewer lines have been found.

It’s a frustrating situation for the city and for the Clinton River Watershed Council, which have seen the river transform from the most polluted in the state in the 1970s—there were virtually no fish, and people were warned not to come into contact with the water—to a much improved waterway with trout swimming in it and boaters venturing onto it. Locals attribute the improvement to changes brought about by the Clean Water Act.

The repair bill for the sinkhole that opened in December—shutting down the busy 15 Mile Road—and the associated expenses could run into the tens of millions of dollars, as did repairs for the sinkhole along that same road in 2004. In the meantime, city officials are babying the system along. For example, they cautioned people to limit toilet flushing during the Super Bowl to avoid unnecessary burden on the sewers. They keep a watchful eye on the system during storms, when stormwater runoff inundates it, and are exploring disconnect measures such as encouraging the use of rain barrels to capture roof runoff.

Here, as everywhere, infrastructure funding is hard to come by, especially for upgrading underground pipes that no one ever sees—at least, not until the ground around them literally collapses. The public works commissioner for Macomb County notes that people complain about potholes every day, but it takes a disaster to make them think about drainage systems and sewer pipes.

On Thursday, March 9, the American Society of Civil Engineers will release its latest report card on America’s infrastructure.  The last one, in 2013, gave us an overall grade of D+. The very generalized report card is a way to get people thinking and talking about infrastructure issues. What else works? Have there been dramatic events—sinkholes? floods?—in your community that have focused people’s attention on the problem?

About the Author

Janice Kaspersen

Janice Kaspersen is the former editor of Erosion Control and Stormwater magazines.