Was raw sewage dumped into Chicago rivers on May, 02 2009?
Whenever Chicago gets a lot of rain or there's a significant snowmelt, the Chicagoland water management agencies must dump excess wastewater into the lake and river in order to prevent flooding.
A sign outside Combined Sewer Outfall #094 | Source: Eric Allix Rogers
It's because of practices like these that the city reversed Chicago River's flow in 1900 to avoid contaminating our drinking supply. As a result, a significant amount of 'nutrient pollution' from Chicago travels down the Illinois and Mississippi rivers and collects in the Gulf of Mexico in a dead zone roughly the size of New Hampshire.
The Chicago Tunnel and Resevoir | Source: Chicago Tribune
In 1975, the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago started building a massive Tunnel and Reservoir (dubbed TARP) to prevent this flooding, but is not scheduled to complete it until 2029. The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has since sued to push this deadline forward, but as of Jan 9, 2014 a judge ruled that the 2029 deadline will stand.
The TARP Plan | Source: Metropolitan Water Reclamation District
Additionally, in June 2013, the State of Illinois adopted water quality standards as part of a consent decree by the EPA to protect primary contact recreational uses for five segments of the Chicago and Calumet Rivers by 2017 - such as kayaking, canoeing, boating and jet and water skiing. At this time, however, much of Chicago's riverways remain unsafe to recreate in.
A warning sign on the bank of the Chicago River | Source: Eric Allix Rogers
So for now, the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District will keep dumping raw sewage in to our rivers and we'll keep notifying citizens when it happens.
The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago offers email and text message notifications for Combined Sewer Overflow events.
Sign up for MWRD's text and email alerts »
Fair warning, if you sign up for these notifications, you will get text messages in the middle of the night.
As part of this website, we also send out automated tweets on the Open City Twitter account.
Want to make something with this info? We made our scraped data available via a simple API.
# for data on the current status http://istheresewageinthechicagoriver.com/cso-status/ # for data on a specific day from Jan 1, 2007 http://istheresewageinthechicagoriver.com/cso-status/?date=MM/DD/YYYY
# for scraped report data on CSO outfall locations, including duration and river segment ID http://istheresewageinthechicagoriver.com/cso-events/ # to paginate through all 10,000 records, use the offset parameter http://istheresewageinthechicagoriver.com/cso-events/?offset=100
# get the number of combined sewer overflows per waterway segment http://istheresewageinthechicagoriver.com/csos-by-waterway/
Data comes from scraping the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago portal on Combined Sewer Overflows.