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After nearly a month, Hooper Bay stops its sewer lagoon from leaking

Hooper Bay workers have partially filled the hole in the community's sewer lagoon, stopping the flow of sewage onto the surrounding tundra.
Sandra Tall-Lake
/
City of Hooper Bay
Hooper Bay workers have partially filled the hole in the community's sewer lagoon, stopping the flow of sewage onto the surrounding tundra.

After nearly a month, Hooper Bay’s sewer lagoon has finally stopped leaking out onto the tundra. Hooper Bay City Administrator Sandra Tall-Lake said that by March 21, city workers had put enough sand into the hole in the sewer lagoon to stop the flow of sewage leaking out.

It’s taken so long because the hole is large, 40 feet wide by 15 feet tall, requiring a lot of sand to fill it. Plus, city employees had trouble plowing a path through heavy snow to the beach to get enough sand.

Hooper Bay residents have also continued to run water and flush their toilets in the last month because, as Tall-Lake pointed out, the community’s pipes would freeze if residents stopped using them.

The sewage is flowing into a slough, an important subsistence location for the coastal community. But because of that, the city administrator said that the spill on the tundra hasn’t gotten bigger. Tall-Lake said that city workers will continue placing sandbags in the hole this week. It won’t completely fill the hole because the community doesn’t have enough sand.

Hooper Bay’s long-term solution will be to build a new sewer lagoon, which is expected to be completed in around three years. Tall-Lake said that the city did not yet have a plan for what to do with the existing lagoon in the meantime.

Greg Kim was a news reporter for KYUK from 2019-2022.
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