‘This Shouldn’t Happen’: State Says City Downplayed Public Health Risks From Kailua Sewage
The Department of Health is investigating what caused high levels of bacteria in treated sewage from the wastewater plant at the popular bay.
The Department of Health is investigating what caused high levels of bacteria in treated sewage from the wastewater plant at the popular bay.
State environmental officials say they were compelled to warn the public to avoid Kailua Bay waters earlier this month after the city 鈥渄ownplayed鈥 how serious the health risks there were following several weeks of troubling bacteria test results.
Those test samples revealed abnormally high levels of a in treated sewage at the city鈥檚 1960s-era Kailua Regional Wastewater Treatment Plant between April 8 and May 4. The plant鈥檚 treated sewage is released about a mile out into the bay.
The high bacteria levels occurred on 13 different days. On two of those days, the levels exceeded more than six times what鈥檚 allowed under state and federal environmental regulations, according to the Hawaii Department of Health.
Bobbie Teixeira, an acting supervisor at the DOH鈥檚 Clean Water Branch, called the duration and the magnitude of the bacteria levels in the city鈥檚 treated sewage 鈥渆xtremely worrisome.鈥
鈥淚t is unusual,鈥 Teixeira said during an online press briefing Tuesday. 鈥淭his shouldn鈥檛 happen.鈥
None of the dozen or so press releases issued by the city鈥檚 Environmental Services Department during that three-week testing period indicated just how severe the enterococcus levels were.
They 鈥渄ownplayed how high these exceedances were,鈥 Teixeira said.
That prompted state environmental health officials on May 5 to take the unusual step of . The state release disclosed the severity of the bacteria levels and advised the public to stay out of most of the bay.
The levels violated the city鈥檚 National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit, which allows the city to operate the Kailua plant.
On May 8, Environmental Services announced that the bacteria levels had returned to well within acceptable levels over the previous three days and that the plant was back in compliance.
Teixeira said Tuesday that her branch now considers the bay’s waters safe for the public to use again.
City Environmental Services Deputy Director Michael O鈥橩eefe also said Tuesday that he鈥檚 confident the problem is over. The city is still completing its investigation into what caused the sustained, elevated bacteria levels at the plant, he added.
Asked about DOH鈥檚 concerns over the press releases, O鈥橩eefe said that his division had been in 鈥渁lmost constant鈥 communication with the state about water quality issues amid the high bacteria levels. City officials were surprised to hear the comments and did not know the briefing had taken place, he added.
Doubts Over The Shoreline Bacteria
The city also tested for bacteria along the bay’s shoreline during that same period. The results showed high levels of enterococcus there over four days.
However, storm runoff from heavy rains around that same time were to blame, not the sewage treatment plant, the city said in its May 8 press release.
State health officials on Tuesday said that the city could not know that for certain.
鈥淲e cannot tell where it鈥檚 coming from 鈥 whether it鈥檚 coming from the environment or whether it鈥檚 coming from the treatment plant,鈥 said Myron Honda, a monitoring and analysis supervisor for the state鈥檚 clean water branch. 鈥淏ut whenever it is high, we just assume it鈥檚 coming from the plant.鈥
O鈥橩eefe said the city could not be 鈥100% certain鈥 the shoreline bacteria came from storm runoff. But he said based on what the city knows about shoreline sampling results and the behavior of the water around the deep ocean outfall where the sewage is released, 鈥渨e can say very confidently that it was not from the plant.鈥
The enterococci bacteria can be harmful to humans. It can cause urinary tract infections, bacteria in the bloodstream, meningitis, intra-abdominal infections and wound infections. The medical research group says resistant strains require prolonged courses of antibiotics.
Meanwhile, both state and federal regulators continue to investigate the city鈥檚 sewage operations at the Kailua plant. The state hasn’t announced any enforcement actions.
The Environmental Protection Agency in December demanded that the city take action to more effectively treat the bacteria in the Kailua sewage with what鈥檚 called an 鈥渁dministrative order on consent.鈥 The city has to take six different steps to improve those operations at the plant, and most of them have to be done within a year, according to O鈥橩eefe.
That EPA order is different from the federal agency鈥檚 broader, 2010 consent decree that compels the city to drastically improve its sewage facilities across Oahu to better prevent spills and protect the marine environment. That consent decree, however, does not cover Kailua; it only covers the treatment plants at Honuliuli and Sand Island on the south shore.
The city is working on upgrades to the Kailua plant, O鈥橩eefe said. His division has requested $34 million in the city鈥檚 2024 budget to improve the handling of solid waste there.
The city is also spending $11 million on a backup system to treat the sewage with ultraviolet light and assure enterococcus levels stay in check, he added.
That system should be done in 2025, O鈥橩eefe said. 鈥淭he Kailua plant is kind of constantly under refurbishment,鈥 he added.
Civil Beat鈥檚 community health coverage is supported by , Swayne Family Fund of Hawaii Community Foundation, the Cooke Foundation and Papa Ola Lokahi.
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About the Author
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Marcel Honor茅 is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can email him at mhonore@civilbeat.org