Community Forum and Discussions

Proposed Mundaring Sewage

BEWARE OF THE MUNDARING WASTE WATER TREATMENT PLANT!

Water Corp wants to expand the Mundaring sewage plant by 2012.
The plant has been irrigating the local oval and 2 primary school grounds with excess treated water in summer, and "temporarily" dumping into Jarrah Creek each winter for 11 years. Now they want to double the plant's capacity. They are floating 4 plans to deal with the excess water.

1. Continue dumping into the creek autumn, winter, spring, irrigate the oval summers (with twice as much water). Cost: $5 mil

2. Store water in a tank autumn, dump it winter, store in spring and in
summer irrigate the oval and schools. Cost: $6 mil

3. Store the water autumn, winter, spring; irrigate the oval, schools and
an undetermined horticultural enterprise in summer. Cost: $7 mil

4. Build a pipe down to Midland and join it to existing pipes out to the
coast. Cost: $12 mil

#4 is most portentous. The Water Corp Planner publicly admitted if they went this way, the pipe would also connect the Parkerville, Stoneville, Gidgegannup, and future developments. They will have found a way of getting sewerage to the hills. Development would now be unbridled. Water Corp expressed concern that the extra $12 mil. could be cost-prohibitive, but the developers could easily come up with it since they are poised to make hundreds of millions in profits and could easily write this off.

None of these options are good. The original design wasn't supposed to produce any excess effluent, now they want to double it. Option 3 seems to be the best choice, store it in a dam during the wet months, and irrigate the oval and a yet-to-be-found horticultural site during the dry.

Sewage Plant Update

At a follow-up meeting about it's proposed sewage plant expansion, Water Corp representatives have announced the upgraded plant would be filtering to a much higher degree than presently, eliminating most complex molecules and bacteria. It isn't possible to filter most viruses, hormones and small chemical compounds. Water Corp is in favour of the first option as it is cheapest and easiest: discharging the water into Jarrah Creek during the wet months as is currently the practice. The flow increase would be to 240,000 litres/day. Interested ratepayers can vote for their choice, contact Judith Krsnik, Sr. Planner. (details below))

Water Corp PowerPoint on sewage plant expansion - important point is on page 8 in option 3 documenting 120,000Lt per day being dumped into Jarrah Creek.

to comment call or write Julia Krsnik, Water Corp Planner
julia.krsnik@watercorporation.com.au , or phone 9420 2823.

 

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