WAVY.com

A million gallons of sewage spills into waterways after electric failure at Hopewell’s wastewater treatment plant

HOPEWELL, Va. (WRIC) — An electric failure at the wastewater treatment plant in the City of Hopewell has caused an ongoing discharge of about a million gallons of untreated sewage. A day later, the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDH) is asking the public to stay out of contaminated water areas.

On Saturday, July 12, the Crater Health District, part of the department, advised people to stay out of Gravely Run Creek, Tar Bay and sections of the James River from the Old City Point Waterfront Park, which extends downstream to Berkley, to include the entire width of the James River in this advisory region, as well as shoreline areas, out of “an abundance of caution.”


At 11:50 p.m. on Friday, July 11, an electric failure occurred at the city’s wastewater treatment plant, resulting in an ongoing discharge of an estimated million gallons of untreated sewage.

VDH is advising the public to avoid areas that “will result in prolonged contact such as swimming or stand-up paddle boarding (SUPing)” and to prevent pets from swimming. However, they say that activities that result in limited contact, such as wading in the water to launch a boat, kayaking, canoeing may continue with proper caution.

Officials said there is no evidence of impact on drinking water, as of the time of reporting.

During this time, the department is urging the public to follow these guidelines:

The department, the city and the Department of Environmental Quality will continue to monitor this incident to “assess any hazard to public health, and the advisory will be continuously evaluated,” according to VDH.

This is not the only region under this recreation swimming advisory, as a lightning strike caused 400,000 gallons of “partially treated sewage” to enter an Essex County creek on Wednesday, July 10.