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Left click or use Page Down to advance through presentation. Lands’ End Owner’s Association. Septic System Use – Inspection – Maintenance “How things work and why.”. Prepared by 2010 Lands End Owners’ Association Board of Directors 352 Back Nine Drive ~ Baneberry, TN 37890 865-761-0039.

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  1. Left click or use Page Down to advance through presentation

  2. Lands’ End Owner’s Association Septic System Use – Inspection – Maintenance “How things work and why.” Prepared by 2010 Lands End Owners’ Association Board of Directors 352 Back Nine Drive ~ Baneberry, TN 37890 865-761-0039

  3. What’s here • Hazardous Waste • Dishwasher • Garbage Disposal • Water Softeners • Additives? • Electricity • It’s About the Water • Questions / Discussion • System Service Life • References • That’s All • Purpose • Importance • Subdivision Facts • Maintenance Questions • What Were Your Reasons? • Overlooked? • Types of Systems • Typical Septic Tank • How Does One Work? • Lands’ End System • Protecting Your System • Not Down the Drain!

  4. Purpose • To ensure lot owners connected to the subsurface waste removal system: • Know why they are connected to a subsurface waste removal “system” • Understand how a “typical” septic system works • Know what should have been installed in their on-lot system • Properly care for the on-lot septic systems, ensuring long-term, uninterrupted service • Comply with State and Association inspection, maintenance and operating requirements

  5. Importance, Page 1 of 3 • If your septic system isn’t maintained, your may need to replace it, costing thousands or even tens of thousands of dollars • A malfunctioning system can contaminate groundwater that may be a source of drinking water • If your septic system is NOT in good working order, you may not be “permitted” to sell it

  6. Importance, Page 2 of 3 • An unusable septic system, or one that is in disrepair will lower property value and may pose a legal liability • Household wastewater pollutants include nitrogen, phosphorus, disease causing bacteria, viruses, and other pathogens or hazardous elements • Properly designed, installed and maintained septic systems effectively reduce or eliminate most human health and environmental threats posed by pollutants in household waste water

  7. Importance, Page 3 of 3 • One-fourth of U.S. homes use septic systems • More than 4 BILLION gallons of wastewater per day is dispersed below the ground’s surface • Inadequately treated sewage poses a significant threat to drinking water and to human health causing diseases and infections in both people and animals

  8. Subdivision Facts • Land’s End subdivision was initially “parceled” into 65 lots • 27 lots would NOT percolate • The Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, Division of Ground Water Protection approved a proposal to use a 10-plus acre parcel to serve as the drain field for these 27 lots • The State approved the system as designed to serve a maximum of twenty-seven, 3-bedroom homes

  9. Maintenance Questions Do you periodically: • Have your car/truck serviced? • Mow or have your yard mowed? • Sweep, vacuum, mop and dust? • Clean sinks, tubs, showers and toilets? • Inspect, repair and replace your HVAC, appliances, electronics, lawns & garden equipment, sporting and hobby gear, etc. WHY?

  10. What Were Your Reasons? • Reliability? • Dependability? • Safety? • Sanitation? • Cleanliness? • Comfort? • Protect Investments? • Others… ?

  11. Overlooked? • How about the septic system? Why is it so easy to forget to inspect and maintain? Because it’s out of sight!

  12. Types of Systems, Page 1 of 3 Individual (private, on-lot system) Shared system The Lands’ End system is a “shared” system.

  13. Types of Systems, Page 2 of 3 Public systems

  14. Types of Systems, Page 3 of 3 • Conventional: • Gravity system • Pressure Distribution System • Alternative Systems: • Aerobic Treatment Units (ATUs) • Mound System • Sand Filter System • Proprietary Systems LEOA’s is a pressure distribution type There are others …

  15. Typical Septic Tank Scum Access In-flow Out-flow Tank Effluent Sludge How One Works

  16. How Does It Work?Page 1 of 6 • Black and gray waste water moves through the house plumbing to the inlet side of the septic tank • The tank holds the wastewater long enough to allow the solid’s to settle to the bottom of the septic tank forming a bio-mass referred to as sludge

  17. How Does It Work?Page 2 of 6 • Microorganisms (bacteria) in the waste, effluent, and in the air in the tank consume nutrients from the waste • Over time the sludge compresses through anaerobic biodegrading and chemical changes during the fermentation processes • The fluids in the tank are known as effluent

  18. How Does It Work?Page 3 of 6 • Constituents in the effluent and discharged elements from the sludge mass float on the surface of the effluent forming a top layer known as the scum • In a conventional gravity system, the effluent passes through a filter then through the septic tank’s outlet to a distribution box and beyond into the various legs of the drain field known as laterals

  19. How Does It Work?Page 4 of 6 • The effluent seeps through passages in the drain field tiles and into the gravel, sand and soil upon which the drain field was installed • The wastewater percolates into the soil which provides final treatment by removing harmful bacteria, viruses and nutrients • Microbes in the soil digest or remove most contaminates from wastewater before it eventually reaches groundwater

  20. How Does It Work?Page 5 of 6 • In a conventional pumped system, the effluent reaches a “high” fluid level in the pump chamber (vault) causing a float switch to activate a submersed pump which forces the effluent “up” to a distribution box and out into the various legs of the drain field known as laterals • In the pumped system, a low level float is used to deactivate the pump and assure it does not pump the tank dry and possibly damage the pump

  21. How Does It Work?Page 6 of 6 • Over time the mass of the sludge increases upward and the crust or scum layer on the top of the effluent becomes thicker • As the two masses accumulate, the tank will eventually reach the point where, if not properly serviced, it fails, typically flooding the lowest level plumbing fixtures with sewage • The accumulation process is depicted in the following illustrations

  22. How Does It Work?

  23. How Does It Work? Scum Sludge

  24. How Does It Work? Scum Blockage! Sludge Trouble!

  25. How Does It Work? Okay! NOT Okay!

  26. Lands’ End System (typical) Page 1 of 4 • Septic System Requirements: • 1. Two 1000 gallon capacity septic tanks fabricated per Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, Division of Ground Water Protection Standard 1200-1-6.08 • Concrete shall be mixed with cement conforming to TYPE II cement content of not less than 6 sacks per cubic yard with an aggregate size of ¾ of an inch. Minimum compressive strength of 4,500 psi (28 days) • Reinforcing shall be 6” x 6”, 10-gauge wire mesh with additional top reinforcing of #3 rebar • Sealant shall be 1” x 1” Butyl Rubber Mastic Sealant between lid and tank at the joint line • Septic system pump shall be an ORENCO PF10 (10 gal per minute), 07 (3/4 hp), 1 (single phase), 2 (230v); –20 or –30 for a 20- or 30-ft power cord (10-foot is standard). The pump should be installed in an ORENCO Universal Biotube pump vaults with a pump filter. • Installation shall ALSO include an Orenco OSI Biotube Effluent filter, FTO444-36

  27. Lands’ End System, Page 2 of 4 • Septic systems currently installed (or to be installed on unimproved properties) are traditional, pumped systems • However, each system uses two septic tanks rather than one • Effluent from outflow of the second tank is pumped through a system of subsurface sewerage mains to a “drain field” located away from the immediate Lands’ End subdivision

  28. Lands’ End System, Page 3 of 4 • It is believed each improved lot has: • Two, 1000-gallon, 2-chamber concrete septic tanks • One 230 volt, 60 Hz, ¾ hp effluent pump • The pumps are supposed to be ORENCO PF10, 07, 1, 2 (the present day model #) installed in an ORENCO Universal Biotube pump vaults with a pump filter High- and low-water-level float switch assembly • All pumps, filters, valves and fittings to be ORENCO • Junction box • Pull-out fuse box • NEMA Alarm

  29. Lands’ End System, Page 4 of 4 • Specs: • All pipe to be PVC, SDR-21 • All fittings to be PVC, SCH-40 • All connections to be slip type • Tracer line must be attached to all buried pipe • All lines to be water tested to 125 psi • Flow based on 42 gpm • All septic tanks to be water-tight version built by C.R. Barger & Sons

  30. Protecting Your System,Page 1 of 2 • Have your system inspected regularly. Systems with electrical float switches, pumps, or mechanical devices should be inspected annually • Have your system pumped, cleaned, inspected and tested every 4-years • Don’t dispose of hazardous wastes in sinks or toilets • Use water efficiently! Don’t flood the system

  31. Protecting Your System, Page 2 of 2 • Don’t drive or park vehicles atop any portion of your septic system

  32. NOT down the drain!Page 1 of 4 • Cleansers, bleach or disinfectants • Drain cleaners / clog removers • Medicine • Diapers, cotton swabs, wipes, Q-tips • Condoms • Personal hygiene products • Beauty products

  33. NOT down the drain!Page 2 of 4 • Caustic or toxic chemicals • Paint (including latex) • Thinners, solvents, adhesives • Automotive fluids (gasoline, oil, brake fluid, hydraulic fluid, transmission fluid, power steering fluid, antifreeze, etc.) • Darkroom chemicals (fixer, developer, and other similar chemicals and related wastewater

  34. NOT down the drain!Page 3 of 4 • Lawn care products • Pesticides & herbicides • Poisons • Cat litter, sand, dirt, dust, or hair • Cooking fats (grease, lard, rendered animal fat, vegetable oil, seed oil, plan oil, margarine, butter, etc.) • Cigarette butts, dental floss, paper, or trash

  35. NOT down the drain!Page 4 of 4 • Food, eggshells, coffee grounds • Toys and live pets (or any pets for that matter!) • Bar soap that is mostly fat TIP: If it won’t pass SAFELY through your body, it probably shouldn’t be put down the drain!

  36. Hazardous Waste • Dispose of hazardous waste in accordance with local regulations • Periodic hazardous household waste disposal days are designated by the State and advertised through the radio, newspaper and flyers

  37. Dishwashers  • Wipe food and grease from dinner, cookware and utensils to the garbage – not the drain! • Load properly • Full loads only • Read labels on dish-washing soap and dryer to ensure they are septic system safe Most newer model residential dishwashers contain a garbage disposal unit! Prepare your dishes so your dishwasher doesn’t have food particles to grind and flush into your septic system.

  38. Garbage Disposal  • SIMPLE – Don’t use it!

  39. Water Softener Systems, Page 1 of 2 Possible Negative Outcomes • Backwash cycles add excessive water volume to the system • Saline discharge harmful to the bacteria (microbes) thereby reducing anaerobic biodegrading of sludge • Saline discharge disrupts and displaces sludge layer

  40. Water Softener Systems, Page 2 of 2 Alternatives? • Don’t use, or • Use modern, high efficiency model that discharges on-demand rather than on a timer

  41. Septic System Additives? • Nearly 1200 products on the market • Probably won’t hurt or damage your system or the shared system, but probably doesn’t help either • Other than the septic additive manufacturers themselves, we could find no scientist, engineer, academic, or government source that recommends the use of septic system additives

  42. Electricity • Your system runs on electricity • The main drain field runs on electricity, also • Don’t flush or discharge water to the system during a power failure If your tank is full, or nearly so, and you continue to flood the tank, the effluent and raw sewage may back up into the lowest level plumbing fixtures in your home and overflow! Likewise, overloaded on-lot systems could lead to flooding and over-flow of the main tanks at the drain field.

  43. It’s About the Water, Page 1 of 5 • Conserve water • Use aerators on all sink outlets • Use high-efficiency shower heads • Fill the bathtub with only as much water as you need • Use high efficiency toilets that restrict volume

  44. It’s About the Water, Page 2 of 5 • Repair faucet and toilet tank leaks • Periodically test toilet tanks for flapper valve and overflow leakage • A leaking toilet can waste as much as 200 gallons each day

  45. It’s About the Water, Page 3 of 5 • Energy Star clothes washers use 35% less energy and 50% less water than a standard model • Select applicable size laundry load for the job or only run “full” loads • Alternate wash days rather than running multiple loads in a single day

  46. It’s About the Water, Page 4 of 5 • Don’t “run” water while shaving or brushing your teeth • Limit use of large capacity Jacuzzi style tubs • Plumb hot tub water to an “approved” alternative drainage (check with Jefferson County Department of Environmental Health)

  47. It’s About the Water, Page 5 of 5 • Dripping faucet test. • Place measuring cup under drip for 10 minutes • Multiply volume of water in measuring cup by 1440 (# of minutes in twenty-four hours) • Divide by 10 • Equals amount of water lost each day • Example: ½ cup in 10 minutes x 1440 / 10 = • 72 cups of water / 24-hours • 4.5 gallons / day; 135 gallons / month which • is approximately 3.4 typical bathtubs’ full

  48. System Service Life • Septic systems and drainage fields are carefully designed based on soil conditions, water tables and the typical number of people living in the house (based on bedroom count). • Life spans of 20 years or more are traditionally projected, but with careful planning, proper use, and regular inspection and maintenance, systems can last indefinitely.

  49. References: Page 1 of 2 • A Homeowner’s Guide to Septic Systems, United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), EPA-832-B-02-005, Cincinnati, OH 2005 http://cfpub.epa.gov/owm/septic/index.cfm • The Septic System’s Owner’s Manual, Blair Allen and Julie Jones, Shelter Publications, Bolinas, CA, 2007 • Pennsylvania Septage Management Association (PSMA), 4305 North Sixth Street, Suite A, Harrisburg, PA 17110 ~ (717) 763-7762 • Department of Soil Science at North Carolina State University, 101 Derieux Street, 2232 Williams Hall, Box 7619, Raleigh, NC 27695 919-515-2655 • Environmental Protection Agency – http://cfpub.epa.gov/owm/septic/index.cfm

  50. References: Page 2 of 2 • National Environmental Services Center (NESC) – http://www.nesc.wvu.edu/ • National Onsite Wastewater Recycling Association – http://www.nowra.org/ • Yellow Pages; Specialized Listings – http://septicpages.com/ (enter zip code or town and state in the search box) • Federal Water Pollution Control Act, commonly referred to as the Clean Water Act (CWA) – http://www.epa.gov/oecaagct/lcwa.htmland http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clean_Water_Act • What Happens After the Flush? http://www.epa.gov/npdes/pubs/what_happens_after_the_flush.pdf • Percolation Testing – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percolation_test

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