Skip to main content

Clean Water Act: EPA Should Track Control of Combined Sewer Overflows and Water Quality Improvements

GAO-23-105285 Published: Jan 25, 2023. Publicly Released: Jan 25, 2023.
Jump To:

Fast Facts

Combined sewer systems collect sewage and storm runoff in the same pipes for treatment. This means heavy rainfall can overwhelm system capacity, causing raw sewage to overflow into waterways. About 700 U.S. municipalities have such systems.

In 1994, the Environmental Protection Agency told these municipalities to develop plans to address overflows and comply with the Clean Water Act. The 11 municipalities we reviewed faced challenges—such as getting funds for construction and maintenance—that may extend their timelines for fixing sewage overflows.

EPA hasn’t set goals for this, or tracked progress. Our recommendations address this, and more.

(This image was updated to correct the number of municipalities with combined sewer overflows in EPA Region 2.)

Number of Municipalities with Combined Sewer Overflows by EPA Region as of 2022

National map of EPA regions with combined sewer overflows

Skip to Highlights

Highlights

What GAO Found

During heavy rainfall and other wet weather events, combined sewer systems are designed to overflow and discharge untreated wastewater mixed with raw sewage directly into a nearby water body. These discharges, known as combined sewer overflows (CSO), occur through system-designed outfalls (see fig.) and may impair water quality. The Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) 1994 CSO Control Policy directs municipalities with CSOs, which number about 700, to develop long-term control plans to eliminate or reduce CSO discharges to achieve compliance with Clean Water Act requirements. These plans identify actions to be taken by municipalities to address CSOs and a schedule for achieving compliance with the Clean Water Act as soon as practicable. The policy provides that these plans should be included in an appropriate enforceable mechanism, such as a permit or judicial order.

Illustration of Combined Sewer System in Wet Weather

Illustration of Combined Sewer System in Wet Weather

Due to EPA's limited data, GAO reviewed a sample of 11 municipalities and found that they are at different points in implementing their long-term control plans or similar efforts. Specifically, two have completed their construction work or are near completion, and one is in litigation over whether it must update its plan. The other eight municipalities' plans are ongoing, with planned completion dates up to 2040. However, the municipalities face challenges in addressing CSOs, and some have extended their completion dates. For example, Morgantown, West Virginia, initially planned to complete its controls by 2020 but extended it to 2035, due to affordability concerns.

EPA's lack of consistent nationwide data prevents the agency from reporting on the status of municipalities' control plans or their effect on water quality. EPA collects some information on whether municipalities have a plan in place and details of individual control plans. For example, as of June 2022, according to EPA documents, most municipalities had a long-term plan and enforceable schedule in place. However, no further status information, such as the time to complete planned work, was available. According to EPA officials, the agency does not currently have performance goals and measures to track the implementation status of the control plans or water quality improvements. Without such goals and measures, EPA will be unable to assess or provide information on the CSO program and its effect on water quality.

Why GAO Did This Study

Combined sewer systems collect wastewater—including domestic sewage and industrial wastewater—and stormwater runoff in the same sewer lines for treatment and discharge into a nearby water body About 700 municipalities across the U.S. have combined sewer systems. EPA directs municipalities with CSOs to develop plans to comply with requirements in the Clean Water Act, including water quality standards, which are established by states. In EPA's last estimate from 2004, 850 billion gallons of contaminated CSO discharges were released each year. Efforts to control discharges have likely reduced CSOs since then.

This report examines (1) EPA's policy to address CSO discharges, (2) the status of municipalities' long-term control plans and challenges they faced, and (3) how EPA tracks progress in implementing long-term control plans and improving water quality resulting from CSO controls. GAO analyzed law, policies, and guidance related to CSOs, as well as EPA reports; and interviewed EPA officials. To report on the implementation of EPA's CSO policy, GAO selected a nongeneralizable sample of 11 municipalities with CSOs based on geographic location and other factors.

Recommendations

GAO is making three recommendations, including that EPA set goals and measures to show progress toward implementation of long-term control plans and water quality improvement. EPA generally agreed with these recommendations.

Recommendations for Executive Action

Agency Affected Sort descending Recommendation Status
Environmental Protection Agency The Assistant Administrator of the Office of Water should develop a performance goal and measure(s) to track and assess the status of long-term control plans or other control plans for municipalities with CSOs. (Recommendation 1)
Open
In January 2023, EPA generally agreed with this recommendation. To enable tracking of the progress of CSO control efforts as described, EPA officials said full implementation of Phase 2 of the 2015 NPDES Electronic Reporting Rule would help. EPA said they expect that by December 2025, states, permittees, and others will report data electronically in a national database that can be used to track and measure performance goals for the CSO program. According to EPA, such data would enable it to track and measure progress as it will include the status of long-term control plans or similar efforts and elements related to water quality improvements. EPA also stated that the data will be made available online for regulators and the public to use to track progress and completion of control efforts. We will continue to monitor implementation of these actions.
Environmental Protection Agency The Assistant Administrator of the Office of Water should develop a performance goal and measures to track and assess the improvements to water quality resulting from CSO controls implemented by municipalities with CSOs. (Recommendation 2)
Open
EPA generally agreed with this recommendation. In January 2023, officials cited the need for full implementation of Phase 2 of the 2015 NPDES Electronic Reporting Rule. By December 2025, EPA expects states, permittees, and others to report data electronically in a national database that can be used to track and measure performance goals for the CSO program. According to EPA, such data would enable it to track and measure progress as it will include the status of long-term control plans or similar efforts and elements related to water quality improvements. EPA also stated that the data will be made available online for regulators and the public to use to track progress and completion of control efforts. However, EPA did not explicitly state that it plans to develop any goals and measures that it can use to track and assess the status of plans and improvements to water quality resulting from CSO controls. Even before it completes implementation of Phase 2, EPA can work with its state partners and others to develop goals and measures. We will continue to monitor this recommendation.
Environmental Protection Agency The Assistant Administrator of the Office of Water should report on nationwide progress and results of municipalities' efforts to control CSOs. (Recommendation 3)
Open
EPA generally agreed with this recommendation. The agency stated that it is preparing to gather the required data as part of Phase 2. Starting after December 2025, EPA plans to make the data it gathers available through the public portal to its national database. However, EPA has already collected certain data on the status of municipalities' efforts to control CSOs and water quality information, such as the number and location of CSO outfalls nationally. We continue to believe that EPA could publish data before the 2025 deadline and provide the public, states, and Congress with valuable information on the progress toward resolving CSOs. We will continue to monitor this recommendation.

Full Report

Office of Public Affairs

Topics

Clean waterCreeks (body of water)Environmental protectionPollutantsWastewaterWastewater treatmentWastewater treatment plantsWater qualityWater quality standardsCompliance oversight