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Overview
Growth in western Wake County has increased the challenge of protecting
our environment while ensuring adequate water supply and wastewater treatment
capacity for the region. One way the Town of Cary is meeting this challenge
is with its two water reclamation plants, which pump highly-treated wastewater
back to homes and businesses for irrigation and industrial processes rather
than discharging all of it into creeks.
Cary and its neighbors will need increased water and wastewater treatment
capacity over the long term to accommodate even today's much slower growth.
Years of study precede land acquisition, design and construction of treatment
facilities.
Cary
is a partner in the Western
Wake Regional Wastewater Management
Facilities project.
Background
Hundreds of communities in North Carolina get drinking water by drawing
it out of a river, lake, or stream and treating it with chemicals. Treated
wastewater typically is discharged into the same river system and becomes
a source of drinking water for communities downstream. Cary rests atop
a ridge that divides two river basins – the Neuse and the Cape Fear.
Cary draws drinking water from Jordan Lake, which is part of the Cape
Fear River basin, and treats it at a plant that Cary owns with the Town
of Apex. The plant currently provides drinking water to Cary, Apex, Morrisville,
and the Wake County portion of the Research Triangle Park. Water treatment
capacity increased to 40 million gallons per day in early 2002 during
phased expansion.
Cary discharges highly-treated wastewater into the Neuse River basin.
The North Cary and South Cary water reclamation plants have been designed
as regional facilities and currently handle wastewater from Morrisville
and the Wake County portion of Research Triangle Park. Reclaimed
water projects at each plant involve separate pipeline networks that
distribute the reclaimed water to some homes and businesses for irrigation
or industrial processes. This saves drinking water. Water that is not
pumped from the North Cary and South Cary plants into the reclaimed water
distribution system is discharged into creeks that feed the Neuse River.
Since Cary draws water from one river basin and discharges into another,
the State requires an interbasin transfer certificate to ensure the long-term
balance of water supplies. In connection with the water treatment plant
expansion, Cary and its partners obtained an interbasin transfer certificate
from the N.C. Environmental Management Commission on July 12, 2001. One
requirement for the certificate is that the towns return treated wastewater
to the Cape Fear basin by 2011 for use by others downstream on the Cape
Fear River.
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