The Potomac Watershed Roundtable met last week at Fairfax Water Griffith Water Treatment Plant. The host speakers were: Greg Prelewicz, Manager-Planning for Fairfax Water and Nicki Bellezza, Watershed Protection Specialist for Fairfax Water. Mr. Prelewicz and Ms. Bellezza spoke about ensuring an adequate water supply into the future and protecting the quality of source water especially at the Occoquan Reservoir and the Griffith Water Treatment Plant.
Fairfax Water founded in Fairfax County in 1957 is now the
largest drinking water provider in the Commonwealth of Virginia and one of
the largest in the nation. They supply drinking water to 2 million Virginians
-1.13 million retail customers through their 4,000 miles of water distribution
pipes and 988,000 people through their wholesale customers - Prince William
Service Authority, American Water and Loudoun Water. About 40% of the water
supply comes from the Griffith Water Treatment Plant that obtains it’s water
from the Occoquan Reservoir.
The Occoquan Reservoir consists of 1,400 acres containing
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 a
significant portion of Loudoun County. The reservoir’s water quality is a
reflection of its watershed; spills, roadway runoff, stormwater carrying oil,
salt and dirt are all carried into the Occoquan Reservoir. The water from the
reservoir is then treated by the Griffith Water Treatment Plant and piped out
to customers.
Source water protection is the first step to ensuring
safe drinking remains available. By the early 1970’s Occoquan Reservoir began to
experience problems with water quality and became that something had to be done
to protect the water supply. Studies at that time concluded that inadequately
treated sewage discharged by eleven secondary treatment plants in the Occoquan
Watershed was largely responsible for the serious water quality problems in the
Occoquan Reservoir. To remedy the problems, the predecessor of the DEQ adopted
a comprehensive policy for the Occoquan Watershed in 1971. A principal
requirement of the Occoquan Policy was the construction of a regional wastewater
treatment facility to replace the eleven existing treatment plants. UOSA was
created to treat the wastewater to such an extent that it could be recycled for
use in the reservoir. UOSA was designed to recycle water that originated in the
Potomac River and Lake Manassas into the Occoquan Reservoir. The Virginia Tech
run Occoquan Watershed Laboratory continuously monitors the quality of the
water.
To meet needs resulting from increases in population (both
past and future) and the wastewater flows in its service area, UOSA developed
an expansion program that expanded the treatment plant capacity to 54 million gallons a day that was completed in 2005. Though
the construction of UOSA was a huge step forward in restoring and maintaining
water quality, it was not enough.
When the Occoquan Reservoir was first built 1957 it was
located in a rural and forested area and the water was pristine. The
unrelenting growth and development in this region has changed that. When
natural land is cleared to make way for commercial, residential, or industrial
uses, vegetation is removed and resulted in increases in impervious which
causes stormwater to flow at higher velocity and volume and damages and erodes
stream banks. In addition to the damage done to streams by increased storm
flows, urban/suburban runoff brings with it many types of pollution, mostly of
the type that come from diffuse large geographic areas (called nonpoint source
pollution). All sorts of pollutants can be carried in stormwater reflecting the
land use- oil, grease, solvents, fertilizer, trace toxins from roadways, etc. The
next steps to protect the Occoquan Reservoir was to develop the Occoquan
Non-Point Source Program. Fairfax County down zoned 41,000 acres to 1 house per
five acres or to parkland and created the Water Supply Protection Overlay District.
Though 40% of the 570 square miles of the Occoquan Watershed including the
headwaters of the Occoquan are in Prince William County, they did nothing to
protect the Occoquan Reservoir. In addition, Prince William specifically chose not
to create a Occoquan Watershed Overlay district in 2022.
Nonetheless, Fairfax Water continues to work to improve
water quality in the rivers, streams, and Occoquan Reservoir ahead of the
Griffith Plant intakes. Fairfax Water is hoping in this way, despite the lack
of cooperation and coordination from Prince William County it is possible to
keep some contaminants out of the water and make the treatment process easier, and
less expensive for all their water customers in Fairfax, Prince William and
Loudoun.
Climate forecasts for the region indicate that by 2040 precipitation
in the Potomac River Basin is projected to increase 8% and temperatures are forecast
to increase 2.2 degrees Celsius from preindustrial times. While rainfall and
storm intensity is expected to increase overall, droughts are also forecast to
increase. Though water sales have been relatively flat from 1990-2020, due
primarily to the expansion of water demand management in the form of more efficient
water fixtures, the spread of conservation practices and reductions in water
loss, it is expected to grow in the
future. Population is expanding and industrial use is growing in the form of data
centers and semi-conductor chip manufacturing.
To meet the forecast demand for water and the climate
uncertainties, Fairfax Water acquired the Vulcan Quarry in Lorton, VA right
next door to the Griffith Plant. The Quarry will be converted to a reservoir in
phases and continue to operate during phase 1 which will convert a portion of
the quarry to a reservoir with storage of of about 1.8 billion gallons by 2035.
Quarry operations will end with Phase II which will convert the remaining area
to Fairfax Water reservoir with storage capacity of up to 15 billion gallons by
2080.
Fairfax Water is panning for the future, but needs Prince
William County to join them. The way to protect source water is land use
controls (such as zoning ordinances and growth controls) Regulations, permits,
and inspections. Land conservation and green infrastructure solutions utilizing plantings and open areas to manage stormwater. However, Prince William County is going in the opposite direction.
Rezoning agricultural and woodland to industrial, stripping the land of natural
vegetation that served as natural green infrastructure.
The entire Potomac watershed is being challenged by freshwater
salinization syndrome and the expansion of roadways and impervious surfaces
that require salting will make it worse. Sodium mass loading to the reservoir
is primarily from watershed runoff during wet weather and reclaimed water from
UOSA (where Micron Semi-Conductor discharges their process water) during dry
weather, sodium concentration in the reclaimed water is higher than in outflow
from the two watersheds in the current historical data, but development in the
Bull Run and Occoquan watershed has been accelerating, increasing salinity.
Currently, the Occoquan watershed is far less developed than the Bull Run
Watershed, but Prince William is considering massive development in the
watershed. Rising salinity in the Occoquan Reservoir implies that its
salt budge is out of balance and needs to change.
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