MADISON, Wis. — Around 6 million gallons of untreated wastewater was released into the environment in Madison as a result of a crack in a sewer pipe, according to the Madison Metropolitan Sewerage District.
MMSD officials estimated that the overflow from the cracked pipe started Aug. 13. The crack happened on a pipe running through wetlands on the Nine Springs Wastewater Treatment Plant, which is near the Capital Springs State Trail.
MMSD said it became aware of the leak Friday, Aug. 22, when someone using the trail noticed water bubbling in the wetland.
Following the report, MMSD completed a temporary repair by midday Saturday and was able to reopen the trail Saturday night. Until the repair was completed, MMSD said it discontinued wastewater flow through the pipe. It also began treating contaminated water from the immediate overflow area and pumped it to the treatment plant.
The flow through Nine Springs Creek in that area was also temporarily blocked by MMSD to prevent more movement of the wastewater. MMSD said an unknown portion of the wastewater entered the wetland.
In an effort to prevent any further contamination, the organization said it’s also instituting daily lab sampling and “analysis protocol” to check on the health of the creek and has notified the Public Health Madison Dane County and Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. It will coordinate with those teams for further remediation efforts.
MMSD said the historic rainfall over the weekend of Aug. 9-10 made the overflow hard to detect because it added “significant amounts of stormwater and groundwater” to the sewer system.
“While no system can anticipate every scenario, we can be prepared and accountable for how we respond,” said Eric Dundee, the District’s Executive Director. “Our team, equipped with strong maintenance and inspection practices and emergency response training, immediately activated our response plan, notified our public health and environmental regulators, and took the steps needed to reduce impacts.”
MMSD said it intends to complete a more permanent repair on the pipe in the “coming months.”
