😨 David Klepadlo must serve three years probation for failing to properly maintain those facilities.
https://www.wnep.com/mobile/article/...b-d1460a2b6baf
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😨 David Klepadlo must serve three years probation for failing to properly maintain those facilities.
https://www.wnep.com/mobile/article/...b-d1460a2b6baf
That's a shitty way to risk your freedom and flush your career down the toilet. This is why you should never pooh pooh on your paperwork.
He was quoted as saying " It might all be shit to you, but for me, its my bread and butter"
This thread went down the toilet at record speed.
He was shitty at his job.
https://www.pennlive.com/news/2021/0...d-in-2020.html
...and the state wants to blame farmers for the increased nutrient load into the rivers. It certainly isn't because of cities like Harrisburg. I bet there's more pollution problems coming from situations such as this than it is from farm run off.Quote:
Capital Region Water discharged 584 million gallons of untreated sewage into the Susquehanna River * 41 percent of all the water that entered the system * in 2020.
Last April, while most people were preoccupied with a global pandemic, the Trump-era U.S. Environmental Protection Agency raised an alarm over Capital Region Water*s failure to prevent sewer overflows.
Farmers have been getting blamed for increased nutrient load in the Susquehanna for about the last 15 years. This problem in Harrisburg is nothing new, and they've probably been discharging similar amounts every year. Lancaster City has the same problem and regularly discharge untreated sewage into the Conestoga which flows into the Susquehanna every time they get heavy rains.
Any other old city, with combined storm/sanitary sewer systems has the same problem. Heavy rains, causes too much flow for the plant to handle and the only solution is to let it pass through otherwise the plant gets flooded. But it's the farmers that are problem, get the EPA/DEP go after them, instead of going after the cities.