There was a Town Hall meeting held at Battlefield High School on Thursday, April 28th 2022 about the changes planned in land us in the Comprehensive Plan Update and Amendments and what the impact will be on Prince William County. Below is my talk.
image from PW Conservation Alliance |
The Changes in land use proposed in the PW Digital Gateway CPA
, and the 2040 Comprehensive Plan Update will effectively remove over 10,000
acres from forested, open and agricultural use and convert them to:
- Higher density Residential: 2,400 acres
- Village and Hamlet residential and commercial mixed: 1,500 acres
- Data center/ industrial 4,200 acres
- The remainder of the rural area will be up-zoned.
This massive rezoning will bring great wealth to the landowners-
land that is worth $25,000-$50,000 would magically be worth up to $1,000,000 an
acre (in the case of data centers), but these windfall profits threatens the drinking water supply for all of
Prince William County and the entire Occoquan Watershed.
The Occoquan Watershed is the source of the groundwater that
not only feeds the private and public water wells in Prince William, but also supports
the rivers and streams that provide drinking water for much of northern
Virginia.
The Occoquan Reservoir contains 8.5 billion gallons of water
that provides 40% of the daily water supply for Fairfax Water which in turn
supplies Prince William Service Authority and 350,000 residents of Prince
William.
The Occoquan Watershed is 590 square miles that covers two
thirds of Prince William County including the all-important headwaters of the
Occoquan and Bull Run. The water in the reservoir is a reflection of its
watershed, and the Occoquan watershed is the most urban watershed in the nation
with Prince William planning to make it even more so.
from U.S. EPA |
Development in the Rural Crescent threatens the health of
the Occoquan watershed and the very sustainability and affordability of the
drinking water supply for Northern Virginia. When generally open rural area is
developed stormwater runoff increases in quantity and velocity washing away
stream banks, flooding roads and buildings carrying fertilizers, oil and
grease, and road salt to the Occoquan Reservoir.
Increased development in the Bull Run and Occoquan watershed
as outlined in the PW Digital Gateway CPA, the 2040 Comprehensive Plan Update
will increase paved and compacted surfaces and runoff and decreased forested
and agricultural land. The result will decrease groundwater recharge and
increase salinity and chemical and sediment contamination in the watershed.
The salinity in the reservoir has been rising over time and
is reaching a critical stage. Increased
population, industry and paved surfaces that need to be salted will only make
it worse. The only way to remove salt from the drinking water supply is to
invest billions of dollars (by increasing your water rates) in building and
installing desalination equipment in the region’s water treatment plants which
are not currently capable of removing salt from the source water. There is no
other source of water to supply our area. The costs to add treatment lines at
Fairfax Water and UOSA (because it supplies up to 40 million gallons of
reclaimed water a day to the Occoquan Reservoir) to keep the Occoquan Potable
is estimated to cost between $1 and $2 billion. This is a cost that will be
borne by the water rate payers including the residents in Prince William
County.
from ICPRB top sodium sources wet weather on top |
Development in the watershed triggers a number of problems
with storm water runoff as the primary driver, though wastewater from UOSA and
septic sources also contribute to the deterioration of the water quality. The
rising salt in the reservoir is primarily from watershed runoff during wet
weather and reclaimed water from UOSA during dry weather.
Sodium concentration in the reclaimed water is higher than
in outflow from the two watersheds right now and has increased. As you can see
in the slide from the Occoquan Watershed Lab more than half the salt in the 40
million gallons of water a day from UOSA is of unknown source- it is suspected
that blowdown from data centers’ cooling may be a significant source since that
water is typically softened to protect the heat exchangers.
Prince William County did not even consider the impact of
the proposed changes to the quality, availability and sustainability water
supply as they are required to do under the Comprehensive Plan law. Before we
do irreversible harm to the ecology and our regional drinking water supply, we
need to look at what the impacts of planned changes will be to the water
supply.
Fairfax Water has taken the unusual step to ask that Prince
William County convene the Occoquan Basin Policy Board and oversee a
Comprehensive Study of the proposed PW Digital Gateway CPA and the 2040
Comprehensive Plan Update to evaluate their impact on water quality and
quantity in the Occoquan Reservoir before any action is taken. The cost to
restore the basin and treat the water is in the billions of dollars that will
be borne by us, the residents who remain- not those who get the windfall from
the sale of their land and dash off with their millions.
No comments:
Post a Comment