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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
School
well test shut down The Sisters School
District pumped over two million gallons of water into a holding pond at
the site of the new high school while testing its irrigation well last weekend.
The Deschutes County Watermaster's
Office told the district to shut down the test on Monday, May 12.
School construction projects
manager Bob Martin said he started pumping water at the direction of the
school board.
"I was authorized by the school
board to set the pump, fill the pond and test the system," Martin said.
It was an extremely thorough
test.
"We fired up the pump on Thursday,
(May 8) at 9 a.m.," Martin said.
The pump ran 24 hours a day
at a rate of 450 gallons per minute.
"We determined that what they
were doing was illegal, that they didn't have a permit for it and we asked
them to shut it off and they said they would," Watermaster Kyle Gorman
said.
Gorman said his office will
follow up to ensure compliance, as he does in all such cases.
There is no penalty for breaking
the rules, at least not the first time. In fact, it isn't clear what the
rules and standards are in such cases. School board member Steve Keeton
told The Nugget that there is no state regulation defining how much water
can be pumped for a test.
He emphasized that the district
has not used the water for anything other than testing its systems.
"At this point we've irrigated
no fields," Keeton said. "All we've done is test our systems by filling
the pond. If we have to irrigate before we have our permit we'll have
to use city water."
Gorman acknowledged that there
is no regulatory standard for tests. He said the only specifically allowed
test is actually the required one-hour pump test that a well driller must
conduct.
Other pumping without a permit
is handled on a case-by-case basis. Gorman confirmed that filling a reservoir
pond clearly exceeds an appropriate test.
Gary Frazee, who is a sworn
irrigation ditch rider, reported the water pumping on Monday morning,
May 12. He said he tried to contact school district officials after being
informed of the pumping on Friday, but without success.
Frazee said he felt obligated
to report what he considered an obvious violation.
"I believe any government
agency or school board has the moral and ethical obligation to do what's
right," he said.
The issue of water for irrigation
will soon be moot. Keeton said the district expects to have its water
permit in hand and the well and pond in operation for irrigating within
two months. |
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