Smell of sewage radiates out to Texas communities

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Youth in Alamo, Texas, campaign for cleaner air. The smell of sewage is affecting the community’s quality of life. PHOTO/DONATED
Youth in Alamo, Texas, campaign for cleaner air. The smell of sewage is affecting the community’s quality of life.
PHOTO/DONATED

 
ALAMO, TX — Hi, my name is Andrea Guzman. I’m 16-years-old and I live in a community called South Tower Estates. In this community, we have a serious problem. This problem is a bad smell. I never really knew where it came from or what caused it until this past summer. Through our organization, ARISE, we participated in several trainings on social and environmental justice. Josué Ramirez, the Lower Rio Grande Valley Co-Director of Texas Low-Income Housing Information Service, gave us a presentation on environmental justice. With that information, Imma De Stefanis, RSCJ and Reyna Gonzalez, RSCJ from the Stuart Center, helped us develop our plan to make a change in our community.
In our trainings with Mr. Ramirez, we learned basic information, such as what was causing the smell and where it came from. The odor is caused by an open lagoon wastewater treatment plant in our community. This plant is over 65 years old, and it runs on solar panels. Because the plant is an open lagoon style plant, the smell of sewage radiates out to the surrounding communities, like mine. Through our trainings, we learned that there are 14 colonias affected by the smell in all. We also discovered that the waste that is treated at the plant is not even ours—it comes from the city of Alamo!
We started to understand our problem as an effect of environmental racism. Just because we are a low-income community doesn’t mean we have to live with this smell. After we had gotten all the information we needed, we took the next step: to go to our community and pass out flyers so that people are aware and know where the smell is coming from.
We also went to talk to the Commissioner’s Court of the City of Alamo, and met with representatives of Precinct 2 of Hidalgo County. We encouraged residents to record odor logs whenever they experience the smell so they can report it to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) so that the organization would come and investigate to see if the plant was violating its permit. We also learned the difference between the plant we have, an open lagoon plant, and a mechanical plant. The mechanical plant actually helps decrease the smell and is a more effective plant. We hope that our next big step is to get a mechanical plant and make a big impact on our community.
For more information, visit arisesotex.org/
“ARISE has been working in this community for 20 years, and we have seen how the odor has affected the quality of life of residents.  Our youth volunteers began the South Tower Power campaign to advocate for cleaner air for their families and neighbors.”—says Andrea Landeros, ARISE staff member.

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1 COMMENT

  1. We are Canadian winter snow birds, the strong sewage smell every time the prevailing winds bring this disgusting raw sewage ,bio hazard to our winter home is making our stay very unpleasant . We can’t even open the windows in the evening for the benefit of cooler fresh air…this is not good for tourism or any bodies health or well being . .the officials should get their head out of their app s . ..and get with the real world

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