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HomeMy WebLinkAbout19970073 Ver 1_Complete File_19970309State of North Carolina Department of Environment, Health and Natural Resources Division of Water Quality James B. Hunt, Jr., Governor Wayne McDevitt, Secretary A. Preston Howard, Jr., P.E., Director Division of Water Quality Environmental Sciences Branch 4401 Reedy Creek Road Ft? Raleigh, N.C. 27607 i,2 4 1997 FAX:(919) 733-9959 Date FAX TO: -v\ (e, ( I _t NUMBER: FROM: aw- ?.? PHONE: NO. OF PAGES INCLUDING THIS SHEET: ?117 L/,C tj OK z.2s N X.; [D r--= F1 f ?/ f?rrc? f `A-7" 000 ?coo W? W?0 Environmental Sciences Branch 4401 Reedy Creek Road Raleigh, North Carolina 27607 Telephone 919-733-9960 FAX # 733-9959 An Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer 50% recycled/10% post consumer paper c n z 0 H 3 H Q n U z< U w U y c U ? o H L ? o H x W i +I I W W H Q U) Q >- ? Q W Z 3 Z 2 H O C? J Ql O W 45 U1 I m Z w W w Uh W = L Q. 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NUn ? ? i.Q 2 ?; .. v r e N b 97 00 7 :-. DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY Wilmington District, Corps of Engineers Post Office Box 1890 Wilmington, North Carolina 28402-1890 Action ID No. 199101176 PUBLIC NOTICE January 27, 1997 TOWN OF WACCAMAW, Post Office Box 145, Lake Waccamaw, North Carolina 28450, has applied for a Deent of the Army (DA) permit TO EXCAVATE AND DISCHARGE FILL MATERIAL INTO 7. ACRES OF WETLANDS TO CONSTRUCT A SEDIMENT BASIN AND DEEPEN AND WIDEN 6,200 FEET OF DRAINAGE DITCHES TO DIVERT A PORTION OF THE STORM WATER RUNOFF FROM THE MAPLE AVENUE DITCH TO NC 214 AT LAKE WACCAMAW, COLUMBUS COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA. The following description of the work is taken from data provided by the applicant and from observations made during a site visit by representatives of the Corps of Engineers. Plans submitted with the application show 6,200 feet of existing ditches will be improved to provide adequate drainage for flatland areas. The existing ditch is approximately 3 feet deep with a 3-4 foot bottom. The proposed ditch will have an average of 5 feet and bottom width of 4 feet. The width of the bottom will increase to 6 feet from Station 25+52 to Station 21+82 adjacent to the housing along NC 214. The spoil material will be placed on the south side, in this section of the ditch, to provide additional measure for flood protection. The ditch bottom width will increase to 8 feet wide on the east side of NC 214 to carry peak flow within the banks to prevent sedimentation along NC 214 right of way and to improve efficiency of the sediment basin of station 14+80 to 13+00. The purpose of the work is to divert a portion of the storm water runoff from Maple Avenue ditch at Lake Waccamaw going thru Green Swamp to Big Creek then to the lake. This project would divert 160 acres of runoff back into Green Swamp that would normally flow into Maple Avenue ditch then directly into Lake Waccamaw. A sediment basin will be constructed to improve the water quality of the runoff from the construction project. The reason for this project is to improve the water quality along the northern shoreline where the majority of the direct human activity takes place. Turbidity and coliform bacteria counts have been to exceed state standards with as little as 1" of rainfall. Runoff would have to travel over 3000 feet to Big Creek before entering Lake Waccamaw. Work will be preformed by a track backhoe and spoil will be placed along side of the ditch. Plans showing the work are included with this public notice. The North Carolina Department of Environment, Health and Natural Resources ?A has authorized the work. ?'?i?t c C`uAL?t The State of North Carolina will review this public notice to determine the need for the applicant to obtain any required State authorization. No Department of the Army (DA) permit will be issued until the coordinated State viewpoint on the proposal has been received and reviewed by this agency, nor will a DA permit be issued until the North Carolina Division of Environmental Management (NCDEM) has determined the applicability of a Water Quality Certificate as required by PL 92-500. This application is being considered pursuant to Section 404 of the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. 1344). Any person may request, in writing within the comment period specified in the notice, that a public hearing be held to consider this application. Requests for public hearing shall state, with particularity, the reasons for holding a public hearing. The District Engineer has consulted the latest published version of the National Register of Historic Places for the presence or absence of registered properties, or properties listed as being eligible for inclusion therein, and this site is *not registered property or property listed as being eligible for inclusion in the Register. Consultation of the National Register constitutes the extent of cultural resource investigations by the District Engineer, and he is otherwise unaware of the presence of such resources. Presently, unknown archeological, scientific, prehistorical, or historical data may be lost or destroyed by work under the requested permit. The District Engineer, based on available information, is not aware that the proposed activity will affect species, or their critical habitat, designated as endangered or threatened pursuant to the Endangered Species Act of 1973. The decision whether to issue a permit will be based on an evaluation of the probable impacts, including cumulative impacts, of the proposed activity and its intended use on the public interest. Evaluation of the probable impacts which the proposed activity may have on the public interest requires a careful weighing of all those factors which become relevant in each particular case. The benefits which reasonably may be expected to accrue from the proposal must be balanced against its reasonably foreseeable detriments. The decision whether to authorize a proposal, and if so the conditions under which it will be allowed to occur, are therefore determined by the outcome of the general balancing process. That decision should reflect the national concern for both protection and utilization of important resources. All factors which may be relevant to the proposal must be considered including the cumulative effects thereof. Among those are conservation, economics, aesthetics, general environmental concerns, wetlands, cultural values, fish and wildlife values, flood hazards and flood plain values (in accordance with Executive order 11988), land use, navigation, shore erosion and accretion, recreation, water supply and conservation, water quality, energy needs, safety, food and fiber production, mineral needs, considerations of property ownership, and, in general, the needs and welfare of the people. For activities involving the placement of dredged or fill materials in waters of the United States, a permit will be denied if the discharge that would be authorized by such permit would not comply with the Environmental Protection Agencies' 404(b)(1) guidelines. Subject to the preceding sentence and any other applicable guidelines or criteria, a permit will be granted unless the District Engineer determines that t would be contrary to the public interest. The Corps of. Enqineers is soliciting comments from the public; Federal, State and local agencies and officials; Indian Tribes and other interested parties in order to consider and evaluate the impacts of this proposed activity. Any comments received will be considered by the Corps of Engineers to determine whether to issue, modify, condition or deny a permit for this proposal. To make this decision, comments are used to assess impacts on 2 endangered species, historic properties, water quality, general environmental effects and the other public interest factors listed above. Comments are used in the preparation of an Environmental Assessment (EA..) and/or an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). Comments are also used to determine the need for a public hearing and to determine the overall public interest of the proposed activity. Generally, the decision whether to issue this Department of the Army (DA) permit will not be made until the North Carolina Division of Environmental Management (NCDEM) issues, denies, or waives State certification required by Section 401 of the Clean Water Act. The NCDEM considers whether or not the proposed activity will comply with Sections 301, 302, 306, and 307 of the Clean Water Act. The application and this public notice for the Department of the Army (DA) permit serves as application to the NCDEM for certification. Additional information regarding the Clean Water Act certification may be reviewed at the offices of the Environmental Operations Section, North Carolina Division of Environmental Management (NCDEM), Salisbury Street, Archdale Building, Raleigh, North Carolina. Copies of such materials will be furnished to any person requesting copies upon payment of reproduction costs. All persons desiring to make comments regarding the application for Clean Water Act certification should do so in writing delivered to the North Carolina Division of Environmental Management (NCDEM), Post Office Box 27687, Raleigh, North Carolina 27611-7687, on or before February 21, 1997, Attention: Mr. John Dorney. Written comments pertinent to the proposed work, as outlined above, will be received in this office, Attention: Mr. Michael S. Taylor, until 4:15 p.m., February 28, 1997, or telephone (910) 251-4634. 3 ?n l L Imo; U 3 O \i J Z 30 r? ~ L_L_ 4 > a a a 4 ? a 4 4 4 ? a a ? i y ? a G N G +? pO O + bL cYl 91 0 ,1 4. ,-,? rN O 4? V) -r CD CO 'o 4- E G ro -r-i Co 4, X r•, cn ?4 4-J ^ 3 ro fro ---q F_; 11 O cn . r-1 A V u' 00 • r-I G ? G •r-? •rl •H a v 4- 1-1 U) ro 4? 4-+ 4- U) o ro cn w J H W Q (n Q CC > ? W Q W Z > 3 Z H I H O O C? J m H w w I cc ? O w 49 U1 I (!1 = O F- Ul W ;n 1- W w I Cc a- 0 w w U w L Q Q m Y f F Q W O I- a '' a 3 M (n J ? 3 (n Q 1? d, j \ to C? N O? 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CU) Fj (D cnw• (D Nrta(D °,rt In < rd N rt (aD E ° w rt cn 0 (D P- ?r ~ lC N w m w m ?w ..row"??0?:s 0 F- Li. 0% w rt Z w OOOEFJMmmw rta" m Hm aw m State of North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources Division of Water Quality James B. Hunt, Jr., Governor Wayne McDevitt, Secretary A. Preston Howard, Jr., P.E., Director CERTIFIED MAIL RETURN RECEIPT REQUESTED Town of Waccamaw P.O. Box 145 Lake Waccamaw, N.C. 28450 4 o - RQ NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCES November 19, 1998 NCDWQ# 970073 SUBJECT: WRP-FAILURE OF PAYMENT NOTIFICATION Lake Waccamaw Stormwater Project Columbus County Dear Sirs: On October 8, 1997 you were issued a 401 Water Quality Certification authorizing you to impact wetlands and or waters of the State. As part of this Certification you were required to make a payment to the N.C. Wetland Restoration Program for impacts to 0.5 acres of riparian wetlands and 2.25 acres of non-riparian wetlands. As of this date, no payment for these activities has been received. You are hereby notified that the wetland and or water impacts approved by your 401 Certification must not be initiated PRIOR to payment into the WRP. Failure to make payment for wetland or stream impacts as required by your 401 Water Quality Certification may result in an enforcement action being initiated against you. Additionally, a Civil Penalty assessment not to exceed $10,000 per day may also be levied against you. Please submit your payment and return the enclosed form to the WRP (address listed on the form) within 21 days upon your receipt. If this matter is not resolved by this time, NCDWQ will proceed to revoke your Certification and initiate an enforcement action you for this matter. If you should have any questions regarding this matter please feel free to call me at (919) 733-1786 or Ron Ferrell at (919-733-5083 EXT. 358). Jo n D;Quality rney W ter Certific on Program Cc: Ron Ferrell, WRP Joanne Steenhuis, Wilmington Regional Office Wetlands/401 Unit 4401 Reedy Creek Road Raleigh, North Carolina 27607 Telephone 919-733-1786 FAX 4 733-9959 An Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer 5017o recycled/107o post consumer paper NORTH CAROLINA - DIVISION OF WATER QUALITY 401 WATER QUALITY CERTIFICATION SUMMARY OF PERMITTED IMPACTS AND MITIGATION REQUIREMENTS In accordance with 15A NCAC 2H .0500, Town of Waccamaw. DWQ Project # 970073, is authorized to impact the surface waters of the State of North Carolina as indicated below for the purpose(s) of drainage dredging. All activities associated with these authorized impacts must be conducted in accordance with the conditions listed in the attached certification transmittal letter. THIS CERTIFICATION IS NOT VALID WITHOUT THE ATTACHMENTS. AUTHORIZED IMPACTS: 2.5 acres of Class WL wetlands 0.3 acres of riparian wetlands 2.2 acres of non-riparian wetlands N/A acres of Class SWL wetlands NIA linear feet of stream channel LOCATION: COUNTY: BASIN/SUBBASIN: COMPENSATORY MITIGATION REQUIREMENT As required by 15A NCAC 2H .0506, and the conditions of this certification, you are required to compensate for the above impacts through the restoration, creation, enhancement or preservation of wetlands and surface waters as outlined below prior to conducting any activities that impact or degrade the waters of the state. Note: Acreage requirements proposed to be mitigated through the Wetland Restoration Programs must be rounded to the nearest one.quarter acre according to 15A 2R .0503(b) 2.75 acres of Class WL wetlands 015 acres of riparian wetlands 2.25 acres of non-riparian wetlands acres of Class SWL wetlands linear feet of stream channel One of the options you have available to satisfy the compensatory mitigation requirements is through the payment of a fee to the Wetlands Restoration Fund per 15A NCAC 2R .0503. If you choose this option, please sign this form and mail it to the Wetlands Restoration Fund at the address listed below. An invoice for the appropriate amount of payment will be sent to you upon receipt of this form. PLEASE NOTE, THE ABOVE IMPACTS ARE NOT AUTHORIZED UNTIL YOU RECEIVE NOTIFICATION THAT YOUR PAYMENT HAS BEEN PROCESSED BY THE WETLANDS RESTORATION PROGRAM. Signature -- Date WETLANDS RESTORATION PROGRAM DIVISION OF WATER QUALITY P.O. BOX 29535 RALEIGH, NC 27626-0535 (919)733-5083 ext. 358 Note for Eric Galamb From: Ron Ferrell on Fri, Aug 22, 1997 12:19 PM Subject: RE: Mitigation proposal To: Eric Galamb Yes, the rule says payment is calculated in 0.25 increments, once you exceed 0.25 you go to the next increment. This will be clarified in the next set of rules which hopefully will go to the EMC in Oct. From: Eric Galamb on Fri, Aug 22, 1997 12:02 PM Subject: RE: Mitigation proposal To: Ron Ferrell Cc: Eric Galamb; John Dorney According to rules, we must fall on the COE's mitigation requirements. Therefore, I can only push for 1:1 since Ernie Jahnke says 1:1 meets their needs. Do we always round up (0.3 is closest to 0.25)? From: Ron Ferrell on Fri, Aug 22, 1997 11:05 AM Subject: Mitigation proposal To: Eric Galamb Per the rules for the Wetlands Restoration Fund: .0503(b) Payments shall be calculated in 0.25 acre increments for wetlands and by the linear foot for streams (last sentence in b) Therefore the payment for these impacts should be calculated as follows: 0.3 acres riparian impact = 0.5 X 24,000 = $12,000 2.2 acres non-riparian = 2.25 X 12,000 = $27,000 Total = $39,000 Question for you, and I assume it is because the COE is requiring mitigation, but why are the multipliers not being used, i.e. 4:1, etc? I am sure the town is not going to like this but this is the way the EMC passed the rules and this is the cost of participation. Refer them to me if they have questions concerning this matter. Thanks for asking me to check their figures. Page: 1 State of North Carolina Department of Environment, Health and Natural Resources; 4 00 Division of Water Quality James B. Hunt, Jr., Governor Jonathan B. Howes. Secretary A. Preston Howard, Jr., P.E., Director February 12, 1997 Town of Waccamaw P.O. Box 145 Waccamaw, NC 28450 Dear Sirs: On 27 January 1997, you applied to the N.C. Division of Water Quality (DWQ) for a 401 Water Quality Certification to impact 7.6 acres of wetlands or waters for your project to excavate a ditch and stormwater management pond located at Lake Waccamaw in Columbus County. Your project has been forwarded to Mr. Jim Gregson (910) 395-3900 of DWQ Wilmington Regional Office for review. This review will likely require an on-site inspection prior to the approval, modification or denial of your project site. If you have sent additional information to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers concerning this project, please be certain that our staff have copies of this material so we can use it in our process in making a decision. According to our preliminary, in-house review since you propose to disturb greater than one acre of wetlands, it is likely that compensatory mitigation will be required by DWQ for this project as described in 15A NCAC 211.0506 (h). Our Regional Office staff can make this decision during their site visit. If adequate mitigation is required but not provided, this project will likely have to be denied. Also if a mitigation plan is required, we will place this project on hold until its receipt in our Central Office. Enclosed are materials describing compensatory mitigation requirements for this program. Please call me at 919-733-1786 to discuss these matters if necessary. Until a mitigation plan is provided, this application is considered to be incomplete and our processing time will not start. We recommend that you not impact any wetlands or waters on your project site until a 401 Water Quality Certification has been issued from Raleigh, The issuance of a Corps of Engineers 404 Permit does not mean that your project can proceed. According to the Clean Water Act, the 404 Permit is not valid until a 401 Certification is also issued. If DWQ staff observe impacts which are not allowable, you will be required to remove the fill and restore the site to its original condition. I can be reached at 919-733-1786 if you have any questions about the 401 Certification process. crely, . Dom y Z]o" R er Quality Certifica 2gram cc: Wilmington DWQ Regional Office Central Files John Parker, DCM 970073.1tr Division of Water Quality - Environmental Sciences Branch Environmental Sciences Branch, 4401 Reedy Creek Rd., Raleigh, NC 27607 Telephone 919-733-1786 FAX # 733-9959 An Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer - 50% recycled/10% post consumer paper UNC'VV\ RF?t?VeG THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT WILMINGTON % ^n C? t?v?,?oNN 2 61991 Feb. 25, 1997 ?rA?sc%FN??J To: John Dorney From: Larry Cahoon L®C- Re: Lake Waccamaw report Chris Holdrin (Coastal Environmental) asked me to send you a copy of our data report on stormwater pollution at Lake Waccamaw. As you will see, the worst problems were clustered around the area of the lakeshore where stormwater ditches enter the lake. Our analysis of fecal coliforms and thermotolerant amoebae indicated multiple sources of fecal contamination in the ditches. I strongly believe that rerouting stormwater drainage away from the lake is essential to preserving water quality and protecting public health at Lake Waccamaw. Please call me at 910- 962-3706 if you have any questions. BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES 601 SOUTH COLLEGE ROAD • WILMINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA 28403-3297.910-962-3487 • FAX 910-9624066 FINAL REPORT Effects of stormwater on water quality in Lake Waccamaw Lawrence B. Cahoon and Janice E. Nearhoof Department of Biological Sciences UNC Wilmington Wilmington, N.C. 28403 910-962-3706 FAX 910-962-4066 Thomas K. Sawyer Rescon Associates, Inc. Box 206 Royal Oak, MD 21662 410-745-5669 FAX 410-745-9116 Introduction The N.C. Division of Water Resources awarded a contract to UNC Wilmington in late 1994 to study the effects of stormwater runoff through man-made ditches in the Town of Lake Waccamaw on water quality in the lake. Lake Waccamaw is a state park, has been proposed for Outstanding Resource Water designation, and harbors a variety of endemic molluscs and fishes, some of which have been listed as threatened or endangered. The initial contract was for $11,216 for the period Jan. 1 through August 31, 1995. Our findings led to a request for additional work and funding, with the result that the Divisions of Parks and Recreation and Water Resources, the Town of Lake Waccamaw, and the Friends of Lake Waccamaw State Park provided an additional $4,974 for an extended study through April, 1996, which has now been completed. This report presents a summary of our work, findings and recommendations. Stormwater ditches The Town of :make Waccamaw lies largely on a limestone bluff along the north shore of the lake. A number of ditches have been dug through the elevated portion of the Town to drain stormwater from its interior portions into the lake. Anecdotal evidence indicates that many of these ditches were dug 30 to 50 years ago, almost certainly prior to construction of the Town's municipal sewage system in the late 1960's. Some of these ditches are quite large, up to 15 feet deep, exiting through culverts up to 4 feet in diameter under Lakeshore Drive, and extending up to a half mile inland. Heavy rainfall events can produce very high flows through the ditches, but typical flows between rain events are very low. Our initial survey of ditches found six relatively large and two smaller stormwater entry points to the lake or Cove Canal, but subsequent investigation revealed more smaller ditches. We enlisted the aid of concerned citizens in the summer of 1995 to map all these ditches and trace their drainages, which are diagrammed in Fig. 1. As shown, much of the Town of Lake Waccamaw is drained by a complex system of drainage ditches that now empty directly into the lake or indirectly via the Cove Canal. Stormwater runoff can be a source of several pollutants to receiving waters. Initially we planned to estimate loadings of suspended solids, phosphorus, nitrogen, and hydrocarbons to Lake Waccamaw through the large stormwater ditches. Our first field sampling efforts in early 1995 revealed that hydrocarbons were unlikely to be very important pollutants, but that fecal contamination from one or more sources might be significant. Stormwater runoff Direct measurement of stormwater runoff volumes proved to be very difficult, owing to the sporadic nature of rain events, the generally very low flows in the ditches between rain events, the rapid response of flow to rain events, and the number of small and large ditches and drains that would need to be gauged. Consequently we have estimated stormwater runoff volume indirectly, using the area of land draining into the lake through ditches, assuming a 40" average annual rainfall, and assuming that 200 of rainfall runs off via surface flow (probably conservative; USGS estimates approximately 30% for the Waccamaw River drainage). The area we used was bounded by the lake shore to the south, old Rt. 74-76 to the north, Flemington Drive to the west and Bartram Lane to the east, excluding a triangular area in the northeast corner of this polygon that probably drains into Friar Swamp (Fig. 1). The calculated area of this drainage basin is 3.62 km', about one tenth of the lake's area. For an average annual rainfall of 1.016 meters (=4011) per year and 20% surface runoff, total runoff from the drainage is calculated as approximately 736,000 cubic meters per year. Lake volume is approximately 84 million cubic meters (Casterlin et al., 1984), so runoff through drainage ditches represents a little less than 1% of lake volume per year. Therefore, the major effects of stormwater runoff on water quality in the lake should be manifested in the littoral zone along the north shore before mixing processes have driven much dilution. Suspended solids Suspended solids have been considered one of the most important pollutants in stormwater for several reasons. Silt in stormwater runoff can clog stream channels, bury natural bottoms, and suffocate benthic fauna. Sediment particles also adsorb and carry a variety of pollutants, including phosphate, metals, and pesticides. Concerns about suspended solids in Lake Waccamaw include sedimentation and adsorbed pollutant loadings along the north shore where stormwater ditches enter the lake. We measured suspended solids in the ditches, canal and lake by the standard filtration gravimetry method (APHA, 1985), in which a water sample is filtered through a combusted, preweighed glass fiber filter, the residue is dried, and the weight of retained solids is calculated. North Carolina uses a value of 30 mg/liter as a guideline for suspended solids. Values above this are considered to indicate excess suspended solids. Most samples collected from Lake Waccamaw itself had low values of suspended solids (Table 1, Fig. 2). The highest values we found were consistently associated with stormwater ditches and Cove (? 1 ?0 \ ?J1 O G O? O 0 YA ?v j j i ill Race, \ \ Flemington Dr. x D as Ave. w -1 C on ,4kevieW U1 - ?; ane 0 r^ ?I IO?ae P' \ ` 41 II V N ? ? 1 ? OA. I / I / Columbia Ave. I I I ^ •r ` ~ 1 I \ CY \ \ w M(n aw Vtrw a"IJ I-? rS rr O a 0 a rh w , I \ tnrnnrr a ZJ ?y , a o n N(D H wow I I o z :3 r P- E E Inw o o a o I Pecan Lane M "(D (wnNroy - - - I N• ` I ..? \ I r H v a cD LO \ xa~0 w ?,N ago I i \ \ i (D w ?. N• ?. o 0 0) aai o o ~w O MrhrttI ' I Q En ?(wD?wah7?Om? i Ma^le;Ave, rt W m 0 " ?r rho n (D 2 I (D 91 En (D :e (n $1 n W 0). ) I A (D 5 (D (n En ti P• A)Zrt((DDNw - ' iI -, ---- :'o?wno(DmwE ? I 0rho?cDr?:j 11 I it aawrtNm(a? :3 P. rt n• rt N n ? rt (D a ?c I? 8rtram L8 w O (D W (D r fi En N P. N wmr •a O? Ii d rh(D E ? o w ri, 0 ?•,. n ------ • 0Nroh ?OC?i•O. o to m En (D w H?% LO L71(D L71 (D o F-•+ u. O qu w rt :j w 0(D0 EE-"(D(D4 rt a" N Fj (D 91 N !D Table 1., Mean (± std) suspended solids (SS) with minimum and maximum values for sample sites in Lake Waccamaw North Carolina. site n= SS mean std min max State Park,.. Lake 2 5.1 ± 0.3 ;.:4.8 5.4 Dam,-Lake 1 0.8 Mid-Lake 15 2.1 ± 1.0. ":.0.6 3.9 Dupree Landing; Lake 5. 4.7 ± 3.0 ;.1.0 9.9 Wildlife access area, Canal 2 16.0 - 10.6 :.5.4 26.6 Canal Road; . Bridge 5' 30.3 ± 35.4. x:.:2.0 96.6 N. West, Lake 4 11.8 ± 11.1 1.7 29.9 Mill Race, Canal 4 131.2 ±170.2 :'..0.2 371.8 Flemington Dr., Lake 4 13.5 + 8.9• :. 2.2 26.6 Dallas Ave., Ditch 7 15.1 ± 8.7 .x'..5.2 31.0 Cameron 3t., Lake 3 9.0 + 3.8 4.0 13.2 North Shore 1,,.Lake 3 9.3 ± -4.5 ;.3.5 15.4 North Shore 2, ',Lake 3 11.0 ± 8.5. :.0.2 20.9 Columbus Ave., Lake 3 10.0 ± 11.7 2.2 27.2 Maple Ave., Ditch 9 62.7 ±1 11.8• .0.5 337.9 Bartram Lane, Lake 5 33.4 ± 29.0 .-•2.2 85.5 Fig. 2. Summary of data for suspended solids sampled in and around Lake Waccamaw, 1995-1996. Arrows denote ditch mouths. Stippled area is incorporated Town of Lake Waccamaw. Cross-hatched area is land portion of Lake Waccamaw State Park. f Big. Creek... 0 N SUSPENDE • GREEN U-.LU YELIDW 11-25 • ORANGE 26-50 - flan r% i-,> nn • .*4 • wqp\ -- - - - - ?1 f I Cl Canal just west of the main part of town. However, values of suspended solids measured by automated water samplers in two major ditches during a rain event never exceeded 30 mg/l (Table 2). Also, strong wind events can suspend sediment and detritus in the lake. For example, chlorophyll a levels, which are an indicator of phytoplankton biomass (one kind of suspended solid), can triple during a wind event, indicating the temporary suspension of benthic microalgae from the bottom into the water column. Therefore, high levels of suspended solids are sometimes found in Lake Waccamaw under natural conditions. So, suspended solids are not a significant problem, nor is stormwater runoff likely to be a major source of suspended solids to the lake. Phosphorus and Nitrogen Phosphorus and nitrogen are macronutrients for plants and phosphorus and nitrogen loading are recognized as the major cause of cultural eutrophication. In freshwater ecosystems phosphorus is usually the limiting nutrient, so excess phosphorus loadings are most important in driving eutrophication. Phosphorus can be found in several forms. Soluble phosphorus is often less abundant than adsorbed and particulate forms, so we measured total phosphorus as a better measure of phosphorus concentrations and loading rates. Nitrogen also occurs in a variety of forms, but is generally more soluble than phosphorus. We used the persulfate digestion method of Valderrama (1981) to measure total phosphorus and total nitrogen in raw water samples collected in stormwater ditches and the lake at various times. Total phosphorus concentrations in Lake Waccamaw itself were generally lower than in ditches and the canal along the northeast side of the lake (Table 3, Fig. 3). Cahoon et al. (1992) showed that the limestone bluff along the lake's northern shore is a significant source of phosphorus to the lake's northern littoral zone, so somewhat higher phosphorus values in lake water samples taken there were not surprising. Total phosphorus and total nitrogen values in stormwater runoff collected by ISCO automated water samplers show that concentrations of both nutrients increase approximately 2-fold during a runoff event (Fig. 4, Fig. 5.). Using a mean total phosphorus value of 250 ug/l from the data in Figs. 4 and 5 and the total annual runoff volume calculated above, one can estimate a loading of approximately 190 kg phosphorus per year entering the lake through stormwater ditches. This value is higher than the estimate of 110 kg per year for phosphorus loading to the lake from weathering of the phosphorus-rich limestone along the lake's north shore calculated by Cahoon et al. (1993). In other words, stormwater runoff more than doubles the natural phosphorus loading to the lake's northern littoral zone. A similar calculation of nitrogen loading via stormwater runoff using a mean total nitrogen concentration in stormwater of 600 ug/l yields an estimate of 465 kg nitrogen per year. Cahoon and Kucklick (1993) estimated that nitrogen fixation by blue-green algae in the lake's northern littoral zone might load approximately 390 kg nitrogen per year. Kucklick (1988) estimated that wet and Table 2. Values for total suspended sampled by ISCO 2900 automated wate ditches during and after rain event collected every 15 minutes after threshold rainfall. solids (mg/1) in runoff water r samplers in two stormwater on Jan. 6, 1996. Samples were collection was triggered by Sample time Dallas Ave. Maple Ave. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 27.6 7.6 4.4 10.0 6.0 21.6 6.8 9.6 20.8 6.4 10.8 5.6 5.6 15.6 26.8 6.4 9.6 16.4 14.4 18.8 12.4 4.4 3.6 11.2 4.4 3.2 4.8 4.4 6.0 3.6 5.2 6.8 3.2 4.8 7.2 4.0 8.0 5.2 2.8 3.2 2.0 1.6 8.0 3.6 1.2 2.8 8.0 Table 3 Mean (± std) total phosphate (TP) with minimum and maximum values for sample sites in Lake Waccamaw North Carolina. site n= State Park, Lake 2 Dam, Lake 1 Dupree Landing, Lake 5 Wildlife access area, canal 2 Canal Road, Bridge 5 N. West, Lake 4 Mill Race,'•Canal 4 Flemington Dr; Lake 4 Dallas Ave..', Ditch 8 Cameron St., Lake 3 North Shore 1, Lake 2 North Shore 2,,'Lake 4 Columbus Ave.,"Lake 3 Maple Ave., Ditch 10 Bartram Lane, Lake 5 mean std min max 50.3 ±- 0.8 49.5 51.2 21.7 69.0 ± 15.8 .38.7 80.5 212.0 ± 111.4 100.6 323.5 159.1 ± 101.4 :'.38.7 337.4 .65.9 ± 3.2 60.4 68.1 260.4 ± 147.8 91.3 421.0 81.5 ± 35.0 35.6 133.1 836.9 ± 797.9 71.2 2575.8 72.2 ± 12.3 55.7 85.1 120.2 ± 92.6 =.82.1 123.8 128.8 ± 111.5 :•32.5 318.6 49.2 ± 12.1. 35.6 65.0 288.1 ± 482.4 57..2 1707.4 77.9 ± 14.3 ;::51.1 90.5 Fig. 3. Summary of data for total phosphate sampled in and around Lake Waccamaw, 1995-1996. Arrows denote ditch mouths. Stippled area is incorporated Town of Lake Waccamaw. Cross-hatched area is land portion of Lake Waccamaw State Park. I• N Big Creek- 9 Lak Waccamaw % TOTAL PHOSPHATE UG/L %% • • GREEN 0-50 ? % YELLOW 51-200 • ORANGE 201-500 0 RED 501-1000 p TP d TN ug/1 N P rn CO O N P rn, O O O O O O O O O W N-1 hL, 01 M 0 q a a r\ a\ Q 0\ a a\ Q\ `I 4\ a\ a . ? a \ `a a? a (D C) ) O V (D U) Fig. 4. Total phosphorus and total nitrogen in water samples collected by ISCO automated water sampler in ditch at Dallas Avenue , during rain event on Jan. 5, 1996. p TP 4 TN ug/1 N W I? Ut CD ?l O O O O O O O W 0 qZ1. 0, /a a ?a ?a a a ?a . a? a/ a d ?- ?a a - b (D H1 n CC) 0 r V/ F-? N Fig. 5. Total phosphorus and total nitrogen in water samples collected by ISCO automated water sampler in ditch at Maple Avenue during rain event on Jan. 5, 1996. dry atmospheric deposition of nitrogen would load about 60 kg nitrogen per year to the northern littoral zone. Consequently, stormwater runoff approximately doubles the normal nitrogen loading to the lake's northern shore habitat. Excess phosphorus and nitrogen loading in stormwater and the relatively low ratio of nitrogen to phosphorus in the runoff water (an atomic ratio of 5.34 N:P) create conditions that can support excess plant growth, especially the growth of nitrogen-fixing blue green algae (Smith, 1983). Thus, excess phosphorus loading in stormwater runoff indirectly supports higher nitrogen loading via fixation as well. Plant growth along the north shore has been a concern of lakeshore residents for some time. Blooms of filamentous algae that carpet the lake's bottom and suffocate benthic fauna have occurred during several summers in recent years. Nutrient loading in stormwater runoff certainly contributes to eutrophication and algal blooom problems. Fecal contamination Fecal material contributes to loadings of suspended solids, nutrients, and biological oxygen demand in receiving waters, but the most compelling threat to water quality is the wide range of pathogens associated with fecal matter. Human fecal matter poses the greatest danger to humans drinking or swimming in contaminated waters, but other warm blooded animals can carry a variety of pathogens capable of causing disease in humans. Pathogens in fecal matter may also pose a threat to fish, but the nature of this threat is less well established. We used two indicators of fecal contamination in this study. The main technique we employed was the mFC method for fecal coliform analysis (APHA, 1985), which employs membrane filtration of a known volume of water followed by incubation on a selective nutrient agar and counts of positive staining colonies. This method is one of the standard methods used by the state of North Carolina and is faster and more accurate than the older MPN technique. We followed all appropriate quality control procedures applicable to the use of this technique. The other way in which we detected fecal contamination was through the identification of thermotolerant amoeboid protozoans. These organisms can live in the gut tracts of warm-blooded animals, but unlike fecal coliforms, which perish within days after excretion into the environment, they form resting cysts that can persist in sediments for many months. Their presence can therefore be used as an indicator of fecal contamination even when fecal coliform analyses are negative. This is not a quantitative measure in the same way that counts of fecal coliforms are used, however. Rather, the numbers of thermotolerant amoeba species cultured from a particular sediment sample or site are used as an indicator of the degree of fecal contamination of that sample (Sawyer, 1992). It should also be noted that thermotolerant amoebae are actual or potential human pathogens. The risk of infection to exposed people is low, but the hazard to people, particularly those with compromised immune systems, is severe. Our principal aim in sampling for these organisms was to use them as tracers for fecal contamination, but their direct threat to human health should not be ignored. Our initial field surveys and sampling for fecal coliforms in ditches, the canal and the littoral zone of the lake suggested that fecal contamination might be a more serious problem than we had anticipated. Although samples taken from the central portion of the lake almost always contained zero coliforms, samples collected near the north shore were always higher, suggesting a proximal source. Sampling in the ditches, particularly after rainfall events, showed high (>1,000 colonies per 100 ml) counts and sometimes very high counts (>10,000 colonies per 100 ml up to "too numerous to count" [TNTC]) (Table 4, Fig. 6). These findings caused us to alert the Town of Lake Waccamaw in June, 1995, to a potential risk to public health for people swimming in the lake along the north shore, particularly after a rain event had flushed water from the ditches into the lake. Concern over the possible threat to water quality from fecal coontamination also prompted coliform sampling by the Columbus County Health Department during June and July, 1995. They sampled along the entire northern shoreline of the lake, including some of the same lake stations we sampled, for five consecutive weeks. Their coliform counts did not exceed either action level established by the state (counts at one station exceeding 200 colonies per 100 mi for five consecutive samples taken within 30 days or counts exceeding 400 colonies per 100 ml at 20% of the sampled stations at one time), although a few counts reached as high as 900 colonies per 100 ml. We were able to sample concurrently with the Health Department's last field collection; our results were statistically indistinguishable from theirs. Using these standards and the Health Department's results, water quality in Lake Waccamaw was judged to be safe for swimming. There are several points that must be raised before the apparent discrepancies between our results and those of the Columbus County Health Department can be resolved. First, our highest counts were always found in the stormwater ditches themselves, which were not sampled by the Health Department, and contents of which would be diluted as they entered the lake. Second, we sampled and found very high counts on several occasions immediately after a significant rain event, which would presumably flush fresh fecal contamination into the ditches and lake. State approved sampling procedures, as followed by the Columbus County Health Department, call for a 24 hour waiting period after a rain event before sampling for fecal coliforms. Dilution and loss of viability by fecal coliforms during this period would cause much lower counts than if sampling occurred soon after it rains. Differences of opinion about the meaning of fecal coliform sampling results also led us to look for thermotolerant amoeboid protozoans in lake and ditch sediments. We collected sediment samples from the canal, lake and mouths of ditches in May, 1995, and had them analyzed for amoebae by Dr. Thomas Sawyer (Rescon Associates, Royal Oak, MD), who did this work gratis. Dr. Sawyer identified a total of 20 genera and species of amoebae, including one or more species of Acanthamoeba, the genus Naegleria, the genus Vahlkampfia, and the genus Hartmanella, which can grow at elevated Table 4. Mean (± std) Fecal coliforms (FC) with minimum and maximum values for sample sites in Lake Waccamaw North Carolina, as determined by the membrane filtration method. site n= mean std FC/100 ml min max State Park, Lake 3 26.7 ± 37.7 0.0 80.0 Dam, Lake 2 6.6 ± 3.3 3.3 10.0 Mid-lake 6 2.2 ± 2.5 0.0 6.7 Dupree Landing, Lake 5 102.6 ± 121.3 3.3 333.3 Wildlife access area, canal 5 295.4 ± 251.7 67.0 743.0 Canal Road, Bridge 7 632.6 ± 499.4 53.3 1503.3 N. West, Lake 6 2739.3 ± 5077.8 43.3 14000.0 Mill Race, canal 6 9376.8 ±11408.0 53.3 27000.0+ Flemington Dr., Lake 5 227.9 ± 177.8 16.6 516.7 Dallas Ave., Ditch 11 8190.1 ±16621.3 50.0 55000.0+ Cameron `3t., Ditch 4 236.6 ± 230.7 20.0 570.0 North shore 1, Lake 4 71.0 ± 53.6 3.3 130.0 North shore 2, Lake 3 5451.1 ± 7460.3 16.6 16000.0+ Columbus Ave., Lake 4 745.1 ± 1202.2 10.0 2826.6 Maple Ave., Ditch 11 6092.4 ±11407.8 46.6 39000.0+ Bartram Lane, Lake 6 587.7 ± 356.6 16.6 1036.6 + Fecal coliform counts from this area included plates that were to"numerous to count (TNTC) and have not been included in the data. Fig. 6. Summary of data for fecal coliforms sampled in and around Lake Waccamaw, 1995-1996. Arrows denote ditch mouths. Stippled area is incorporated Town of Lake Waccamaw. Cross-hatched area is land portion of Lake Waccamaw State Park. "TNTC" = too numerous to count. 214 Big • Creek f ?. t ? t ? , ? t . ? t ? f jL9 f N ? I ? f ? I I Lak Waccamaw • f FECAL COLIFORMS 100/NL `% • • ` GREEN 0-200 ? ?. ?? ' i YELLOW 201-2000 ?% • ORANGE 2001-5000 • RED 5001-TNTC AM. temperatures corresponding to those of warm-blooded organisms and are potential human pathogens. Thermotolerant amoebae dominated at all five ditch, canal and nearshore sites but were less frequent at sites farther out in the lake (Table 5). Collectively their presence is a strong indicator of fecal contamination. Note that all the amoeba species recovered from lake shore sediments at the Ambassador Camp, where organized swimming activities occur, were thermotolerant, indicating they came from and/or could infect warm- blooded hosts. Our coliform and amoebae results convinced us that fecal contamination through the drainage ditches posed a serious threat to water quality in the lake. However, we could not distinguish among possible animal and human sources or determine where contamination entered the ditches. Possible fecal contamination sources included leaks in the Town's sewage system, livestock, domestic pets, and wild animals such as raccoons that live in close association with humans and water. Our results and the clear need to identify pollution sources so that effective remedies could be planned led us to propose additional field work and an expansion of the scope of the project. Support for this work was secured in late 1995. We did additional sampling for coliforms and amoebae in the ditches upstream of sewage line crossings. We sampled sediments for amoebae at more sites in Lake Waccamaw and in Singletary Lake as a reference for fecal contamination from wild animals. We contracted with Dr. Sawyer to analyze the samples we collected for amoebae. We also did a dye study looking for evidence of leaks from the Town's sewer lines into the major ditches. We collected sediment samples from Singletary Lake, Lake Waccamaw, and ditches throughout the Town of Lake Waccamaw in November of 1995 for amoeba analysis. We sampled fecal coliforms from each location with standing water as well. We recovered low numbers of amoeba species, and no thermotolerant ones, from sediments in Singletary Lake compared to sediments in Lake Waccamaw, where we recovered larger numbers of all amoebae and more thermotolerant ones (Fig. 7). The two Lake Waccamaw sites with the highest numbers of amoeba species recovered and most thermotolerant species were near ditches at Dallas Avenue (site LW-10) and Ambassador Camp (LW-13). Sediment samples from ditches yielded 8-13 species of amoebae, with 3 to 5 thermotolerant species at each site (Fig. 8). A sediment sample from Colley Creek, the outlet from Lake Singletary, yielded 3 species, including one thermotolerant species. Coliform counts at sites with standing water were generally low, except for the mouths of ditches entering Lake Waccamaw (Table 6). We conducted additional sampling for amoebae in sediments and fecal coliforms in overlying water at 12 additional ditch sites in December, 1995, and at seven lake sites along the north shore in January, 1996 (Table 7). The coliform and amoebae data show that the ditch near Dallas Avenue is contaminated with fecal material well upstream of the sewer line crossings just north of Dallas Avenue and along Nancy St., indicating that leakage from the sewer lines can not be the only source of contamination to that ditch. The large ditch that empties into the lake near The Anchorage also O O N .,qpp 'd?ro A N 4-) N N 0 a 04 ? N b . N O ro?a? N 4 O N N 't1 M , ri W 4J0(0 Z7 U N rd?U ro A •,A O A N N O O 0 4-) N O a0? ,U o .,SON o p 44 A ?44 0 O ?r-I U 44 N O O O to g W •?0 w ? N .4 •rl O N ?•? N >r A AAA .00) P N tnH 0 4J N U O b A 44 -rr1 aL A + + >< x >C x 10 rt (2) O Al x ? U O ?1 `O ?C 9C O 4 ? co A N U ro ?H k k bro x x + m x x k x++ k >4 >4 + ++++ + + + k k + + + + +' ++++ ++ + + + + + + >C + >C loo ID O O H r•I 0) 10 O r- 00 N d' M 0 N •? U •? N .? (v CO rro i •rj rd A rd rd (d (d o 41 41 roQ)0bA0) r•I 4 (0 •r1 mro N OAb U O 0 Ori ro ro ro ro OA44 O•rl O 04 o •rl o 0 a) .,? o ro ro 4-1 at, $IAU Npogbg •r?r-is??o?r-?•rtt .N r" 4J r-I P •rl ro f? 0 o a? ro G ro r? ri w 3 N0roo.liOr-I?" 0•r1k r•1 roxa??ro O ro U ,? N ,? •r+ ,? 4-? d-? O d U r-I •r1 r-I S-. U .C) N Oro N 10 ?" ?C r-I ? uwUO' .?7r4 zPPi D(d D3 + Ii I N ?r 0) M CQJ a3i tP k o. Species/Station 42 C 0 series t Ambient IN Series z to 9 8 7 r s 0 t S a 4 i 3 2 Station No. Fig. 7. Distribution of low temperature tolerant (blue) and thermotolerant (red) amoebae in Lake Singletary (LS-#) and Lake Waccamaw (LW-#) sediment samples collected in November, 1995. Note higher diversity at sites LW-lo and LW-13, which were near mouths of drainage ditches at Dallas Avenue and Ambassador Camp. Also note low diversity and lack of thermotolerant species at Lake Singletary. 13 12 11 10 9 T 8 0 7 t 6 a 1 5 4 3 2 1 0 ,. LW-7 LW-3 LW-9 'LW-BH =roadside ditch bordering cow pasture and Boys Hone "LS CC=sail from Colley Creel( drairirg ! ake Singletary Fig. 8. Distribution of low temperature tolerant (purple) and thermotolerant (red) amoebae in ditch samples from Town of Lake Waccamaw in November, 1995. Site designations are as in Table 6. "LW-BH" is a sample from a ditch near Boys' Home Farm with no standing water; "LS-CC" is a sample from Colley Creek, the outlet from Lake Singletary (note low diversity there). LW-12 LW-14 LW-BH• LS-CC* Station No. tI ??v Table 6. Coliform counts (by mFC method) at sites sampled for amoeboid t p ro ozoans in November, 1995. LS = Single tary L ake sites, LW = Lake Waccamaw sites. Data are means ± 1 std . dev. Sediments were also sampled for amoeboid protozoans at one Singletary site (soil near Colley Creek) and two Waccamaw sites (a second site near the dam and a ditch near Boys' Home farm) where coliforms were not sampled). Site # Site Description C olifor ms/100 ml LS-1 Singletary, mid-lake 0 ± 0 LS-2 Singletary, mid-lake 0 ± 0 j LS-3 Singletary, lake shore 0 ± 0 4 LS-4 Singletary, outlet creek mouth 3 ± 5 LW-5 Waccamaw, above outlet @ dam 10 ± 8 LW-6 Waccamaw, lake @ Dupree landing 3 ± 5 LW-7 Waccamaw, canal below lift sta. #11 53 ± 5 LW-8 Waccamaw, pond @ Boys' Home farm 110 ± 16 LW-9 Waccamaw, ditch on Cameron St. near rest home 0 + 0 LW-10 LW-11 Waccamaw, ditch @ Dallas Ave. W l k h 723 ± 9 accamaw, a e s ore @ The Anchorage 3 ± 5 LW-12 Waccamaw, ditch in woods @.McRae La. 0 + 0 LW-13 Waccamaw, ditch @ Ambassador Camp 337 ± 59 ! LW-14 Waccamaw, ditch @ Maple Ave. 363 ± 17 I - 11 1 ? }p 1 ? p 1 ? ? --_E f 1 t'I r r ' F , 1 1. 1 - ' I j t k ; Y F ? I ' i j I i i + ' I t 1 t71 Table 7. Fecal coliform and amoeba recovery data from ditch sampling in December, 1995, and lake sampling in January, 1996. Data are mean fecal coliforms/100 ml ± 1 std. dev. and numbers of species of amoebae cultured from sediment samples at 20°C and 40-42 °C (thermotolerant), respectively. Ditches are named for the streets nearest their outlets to the lake (Fig. 1). amoebae spp. C i f-n ...., s ?........ in , no- n... .... Ditches (on 12/21/95) Dallas Ave., mouth Dallas Ave., 50 m inland Dallas Ave., north of Nancy St. Anchorage, north of Ash St. Anchorage, south of Ash St. Anchorage, 100 m inland Anchorage, mouth Lakeview, upstream of sewer line Maple St., at Columbia Ave. Maple St., at West Oak St. Maple St., at Pecan Lane Maple St., mouth Lake (on 1/10/96) 200 m south of Big Creek mid-lake 100 m south of Dallas Ave. ditch 100 m south of Anchorage ditch 100 m south of Maple Ave. ditch 500 m south of Maple Ave. ditch 100 m south of Big Creek 1410 ± 135 7 6 1710 ± 194 7 6 1080 ± 137 3 7 30 ± 8 6 7 1777 ± 138 6 6 34 ± 4 9 7 117 ± 39 8 8 50 ± 16 9 6 53 ± 25 8 7 33 ± 9 6 9 497 ± 9 8 6 620 ± 85 8 6 10 ± 8 4 1 3 ± 5 3 0 0 ± 0 4 1 17 ± 5 3 0 7 ± 9 4 0 20 ± 16 2 1 0 ± 0 3 1 shows evidence of fecal contamination upstream of the sewer line crossings. The ditch at Lakeview Avenue is relatively short and shallow and shows low coliforms but the same level of amoeba recovery as the other ditches, suggesting it, too, receives fecal contamination from sources other than leaks in the sewer line crossing the ditch. The large, branched ditch system that empties into the lake near Maple Avenue shows increasing coliforms nearer the lake, but essentially the same high level of amoeba recoveries throughout. Lake samples taken about three weeks later show much lower numbers of coliforms and amoebae, but dilution and cold temperatures would be expected to produce these results. Analysis of recoveries of amoeba species in the genus Acanthamoeba from ditch and lake samples helps illustrate the overall pattern and emphasizes the threat posed to human health by fecal contamination (Table 8). Eight species of this genus were identified in ditch and lake sediment samples collected in December, 1995, and January, 1996, and one new species has now been described by Dr. Sawyer. Acanthamoeba hatchetii is a human pathogen that can cause fatal infections of the brain and nervous system. This dangerous microorganism was recovered from five ditch sites and two lake sites in the late 1995 sampling and from three sites in the northern littoral zone of the lake in May, 1995 (Table 5). Other thermotolerant species are also potential human pathogens. Half the total isolates from the ditch samples were thermotolerant, but only four of 22 isolates from lake samples were thermotolerant. The results of the last series of ditch and lake sampling confirm our earlier coliform and amoeba results. Fig. 9 summarizes the amoebae recovery data from the November, 1995, sampling and indicates a broad distribution of fecal contamination throughout the ditches in the Town of Lake Waccamaw. Assuming that the presence of thermotolerant amoeba species represents an indication of fecal contamination at some time in the past, even if concurrent sampling for fecal coliforms yielded low counts, then there is fecal contamination in lakeshore sediments, in the mouths of ditches entering the lake, and in the ditches well upstream of their mouths. The low levels of coliforms and thermotolerant amoebae recovered from Singletary Lake suggest that wild animals contribute very little to the fecal contamination signal we detected around Lake Waccamaw, and that fecal contamination at Lake Waccamaw is associated with the presence of humans. However, the presence of fecal contamination indicators in ditches upstream of where the Town's sewage system crosses those ditches points strongly to non-human fecal contamination sources, perhaps pets, livestock, or wild animals that associate with humans, such as raccoons and opossums. Cattle at the Boys' Home farm are a likely source of the coliforms and thermotolerant amoebae we recovered from sites downstream of the farm. However, livestock are an unlikely source of contamination to ditches entering the lake near Dallas Avenue, Ambassador Camp, or the Anchorage. Sewage System Dye Study The Town of Lake Waccamaw completed a project to slip-line portions of the municipal sewage system in late summer of 1995 it •r Table B. Distribution of Acanthamoeba species isolates from lake and ditch samples by growth temperature. A. astronyxis 8 11 2 0 A. castellani 0 0 1 0 A. culbertsoni 0 3 0 0 A. hatchetii 2 5 6 2 A. jacobsi 2 5 0 0 A. polyphaga 5 0 7 0 A. rhysodes 8 3 5 2 A. terricola 1 0 1 0 Totals 26 27 22 i 4 s i i i j f i '??t.crf??? Ilrstrit,ijtic,rr 20 18 N 16 ° 14 12 S P 10 e 8 C i 6 e s 4 2 0 0 Ambient 942C Lake Waccamaw lake pitches Lake Singletary _ j sarnpie site J Fig. 9. Summary of distribution data for amoebae that grew at ambient (20°C) temperature and thermotolerant species that grew at 42°C in samples collected in November, 1995. (Fig. 1). Slip-lining was intended to correct infiltration problems that were causing overflows at lift stations. Overflows and exfiltration from breaks in the old sewer lines were probably responsible for a substantial amount of sewage contamination in the lake and canal. We conducted dye studies in the fall of 1995 and spring of 1996 with help from the Town of Lake Waccamaw and concerned citizens. A 1/2 lb. (265 g) tablet of rhodamine WT dye was placed in a sewage lift station near Bartram Avenue (pump station # 13) on the eastern side of town and water samples were then drawn at intervals from several ditches for 1-2 days. Dye content was assayed using a Turner model ill fluorometer equipped with the Rhodamine filter set and light source and calibrated against a dilution series of dye. We made an effort to do the dye study immediately after a substantial rain event so that any leaks in the sewer pipes would drive dye into the ditches. The first study was inconclusive, but the second revealed evidence of some small leaks from the system into several of the ditches (Fig. 10). Dye concentrations in the ditches were low at the first sampling time immediately after the dye was placed, rose significantly within 2-3 hours, then fluctuated or dropped. Dye concentrations in the ditch at Lakeview Avenue, a very shallow ditch, never rose as much as dye concentrations at deeper ditches, where sewer lines must be closer to the bottoms of the ditches. Dye concentrations are all in the range of 10 to 180 parts per hundred million, which indicates a combination of substantial dilution and/or minor leakage from the system. Large leaks from the system, even the portions not yet slip-lined, are unlikely as they would produce blowouts near the leaks. However, the results of this study do not rule out the sewer system as a source of low volumes of sewage inputs to the drainage ditches. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS Stormwater runoff through man-made ditches into Lake Waccamaw poses different '_evels of threat to water quality for different measured parameters. Stormwater probably contributes negligibly to overall loadings of suspended solids in the lake. Stormwater runoff apparently doubles the normal loadings of phosphorus and nitrogen to the northern littoral zone, thereby exacerbating eutrophication problems along that shoreline. Stormwater runoff also carries fecal contamination into the lake from multiple sources distributed throughout the area drained by the drainage ditch system. This fecal contamination poses an ongoing threat to human health, particularly immediately after rain events and along the north shoreline, where swimming activity is high. Repairs to the Town's sewer system, although highly desirable and mostly effective at limiting this source of fecal contamination to the lake, will not completely remove fecal contamination from stormwater entering the lake. The most effective remedy for water quality problems caused by stormwater entering the lake through man-made ditches is to reroute as much of this water as possible away from the lake through alternate drainage systems, ideally into the swamps on either side of the Town of Lake Waccamaw. O b Q Q p> 0 a E ro ? N U N ?. > ro S. Q a? J > 'o 3 Q u E Q ro ro a? ro ro cn S. 'r cn ? S. N 0 > ro 4J ro .c 0 F- b b E C b r 00 ? Q Q J 0 ? D Q 0 0 0 0 o O o 00 LO N m (D f7 T T T 8?0 ?/ [GAP @UIWDpOy?] 0 O O C o •E L o --j E 0 O L- r? ti-- N 0 E • - co I- 0 U) :3 .N ?A N -p P4 cl i .? d .° U 4-) ?ul ?b I0 ? U P4 >a o NJ .? 5, ra a) N U U 44M4-) r-4 o ab N EA ? a 4-) •b a C o hi tr w9ul t References APHA. 1985. Standard methods for the examination of water and waste water. American Public Health Association.. A.E. Greenberg, ed. 1268 pp. Cahoon, L.B., and J.R. Kucklick. 1993. Characteristics of nitrogen fixation in Lake Waccamaw, North Carolina. J. Elisha Mitchell Sci. Soc. 109:20-29. Cahoon, L.B., J.R. Kucklick, and J.C. Stager. 1990. A natural phosphate source for Lake Waccamaw, North Carolina USA. Int. Revue ges. Hydrobiol. 75:339-351. Cahoon, L.B., J.R. Kucklick, R.H. Kiefer, and J.D. Willey. 1993. The effects of chemical weathering on limestone dissolution and phosphate release into Lake Waccamaw, North Carolina. J. Elisha Mitchell Sci. Soc. 109:123-134. Casterlin, M.E., W.W. Reynolds, D.G. Lindquist, and C.G. Yarbrough. 1984. Algal and physiochemical indicators of eutrophication in a lake harboring endemic species: Lake Waccamaw, North Carolina. J. Elisha Mitchell Sci. Soc. 100:83-103. Kucklick, J.R. 1988. Undescribed sources of nutrients to Lake Waccamaw, North Carolina. Unpublished M.S. thesis, UNC-Wilmington, 116 pp. Sawyer, T.K. 1992. Distribution of microbial agents ?n marine ecosystems as a consequence of sewage-disposal practices, pp. 239- 262, in A. Rosenfield and R. Mann, eds., Dispersal of living organisms into aquatic ecosystems. Univ. of Maryland Sea Grant, College Park, MD. Smith, V.H. 1983. Low nitrogen to phosphorus ratios favor dominance by blue-green algae in lake phytoplankton. Science 221:669-671. Valderrama, J.C. 1981. The simultaneous analysis of total nitrogen and phosphorus in natural waters. Mar. Chem 10:109-122. R CAPE FEAR RESOURCE CONSERVATION and DEVELOPMENT, INC. Brunswick o Columbus o New Hanover o Pender First Union Building • 201 N. Front Street, Suite 615 • Wilmington, N.C. 28401 Telephone (910)763.6611 o Fax (910)763.8989 To: Jeff Bruton, DEHNR-DWR Tim Kennedy, DEHNR-DSWC Dr. Larry Cahoon, UNCW Dr. Greg Jennings, NCSU David Cotton, Town Manager, Lake Waccamaw Eric Galamb, DEHNR-DWQ Mike Taylor, US COE keV(Ai From: Greg Wal/? Director Subject: Meeting Confirmation Lake Waccamaw Stormwater Diversion Project Date: October 16, 1997 This memo is to confirm our meeting plans for Wednesday, October 29, 1997, at 11:00 AM, at the Lake Waccamaw Town Hall. Our purpose for meeting is to discuss monitoring the outlet of the proposed project. Please call if you have questions. A non-profit organization. R CAPE FEAR RESOURCE CONSERVATION, e,.,,, and 2??c DEVELOPMENT, INC. F? Brunswick v Columbus O New Hanover 0 Pender Fs First Union Building e 201 N. Front Street, Suite 615 e Wilmington, N.C. 28401 Telephone (910)763-6611 o Fax (910)763.8989 Mr. Eric Galamb Division of Water Quality Environmental Science Branch 4401 Reedy Creek Road Raleigh, North Carolina 27626-0535 October 6, 1997 Subject: Lake Waccamaw Project #970073 COE#199701176 Dear Mr. Galamb: This letter is in response to the requirements set forth in the letter dated August 29, 1997, 401 certification. You should be in receipt of our request to extend the date 60 days for payment into the Wetland Restoration Program (item #6). Item number eight requests a management plan for the sediment basin. The sediment basin will be managed by the Town of Lake Waccamaw. The following is a description of the plan: 1. The first year of the project would be most critical. For the first year, the basin will be evaluated after each major rainfall event. A major rainfall event would include 3" or greater in a 24-hour period or possibly a lessor amount in a "flash flood" type of event. When the basin reaches 50% capacity, plans will be made to excavate the basin to original conditions. Spoil will be hauled away and deposited on non-wetland soils. 2. After the first year, the project should be more stabilized by vegetative material, therefore, minimizing sediments moving in the channel. The basin would be monitored on a quarterly basis. When the basin reaches 50% capacity, plans will be made to excavate the spoil. Again, the spoil will be hauled away and placed on non-wetland soils. 3. If maintenance work degrades the vegetation established, it will be re- seeded within seven days. Technical assistance for the seeding operation or A non-profit organization. for the evaluation process of the basin can be requested of the Columbus Soil & Water Conservation District. It is the intent of the Town to manage and maintain this project. If you have suggestions to add to the management of the basin, please offer them. Sincerely, Greg Walker Director Cc David Cotton, Manager, Lake Waccamaw Donna Register, NRCS, Columbus County Mike Taylor, US COE Cape Fear RC & D 4t" Quarter Report Projects Adopted: Canterbury Stables Waste Management II EWP Assessments Dune Revegetation Projects Projects Completed: Canterbury Stables Waste Management EWP Assessments Direct Dollars: $5,075.00 Non-Direct Dollars: $ 5,200 Cape Fear Canoe Trail $ 30,514 Lake Waccamaw Stormwater Diversion $ 335 SBHS Aquaculture $ 1,300 Canterbury Stables Grants Written: $2,600,000 EWP Pender $ 41,000 EWP Columbus $ 135,000 EWP New Hanover $ 39,000 Lake Waccamaw Stormwater Diversion $ 135 SBHS-Brunswick SWCD $ 75 SBHS-Brunswick Farm Supply $ 50 SBHS-Robinson Farm Supply $ 75 SBHS-Mill Creek Farm Supply $ 1,300 Canterbury Stables Waste Management Active Projects: Calico Bay Water Management Enhanced Wetland Project Grissett Swamp Channel Snag Lake Waccamaw Stormwater Diversion Project NE Brunswick Wastewater & Sewer Service Study Caw Caw Swamp Channel Shingletree Acres Water Management South Brunswick High Aquaculture Biomass Energy from Coastal Bermudagrass Hay Canterbury Stables Waste Management Regional Fair Project Green Swamp Experimental Burn Pender Emergency Watershed Protection Program Cape Fear River Canoe Trail & Brochure Dune Revegetation Project Emergency Watershed Protection Program Canterbury Stables 11 R CAPE FEAR RESOURCE CONSERVATION -1VED and SEp J n U 1997. DEVELOPMENT, INC. E40n,ti,,,.? J c ,C.&,CES Brunswick o Columbus o New Hanover o Pender First Union Building • 201 N. Front Street, Suite 615 o Wilmington, N.C. 28401 Telephone (910)763.6611 o Fax (910)763-8989 Mr. Eric Galamb DEHNR-Division of Water Quality Environmental Sciences Branch 4401 Reedy Creek Road Raleigh, North Carolina 27607 September 29, 1997 Subject: WQC Project #970073, COE #199701176 Dear Mr. Galamb: As per our telephone conversation on September 25, 1997, 1 would like to request a 60-day extension in providing payment of $39,000.00 for participation in the Wetland Restoration Program. Thank you for your attention to this matter. Please call me if there are questions. Sincerely, Greg W er Director Cc: David Cotton, Manager, Town of Lake Waccamaw Roy Lowe, Member, Cape Fear RC & D Mike Taylor, US Corps of Engineers Rep. Dewey Hill, Columbus County A non-profit organization. To M,A PM Date r Time M Of Phone) Area Code Numbe Extension TELEPHONED LEASE CALL IAI CALLED TO SEE YOU WILL CALL AGAIN WANTS TO SEE YOU URGENT RETURNED YOUR CALL Message O erator AMPAD REORDER EFFICIENCY' 923-006 To Date Time o7r'D p PM UVH YOU WERE OUT M of Phone Area Code Number Extension TELEPHONED EASE CALL CALLED TO SEE YOU WILL CALL AGAIN WANTS TO SEE YOU URGENT RETURNED YOUR?CA/LL Mew ge ??-? ??QeC C Lc k-e z c U L2 0,1 Z/ z p at r r ?- r O AMPAD' 1 ? C(Gi G" - 0 ? E0qQER EFFICIEN -Yr• ltlc y TV -;Jr2 0/_ ? State of North Carolina Department of Environment, Health and Natural Resources 1 Division of Coastal Management ` James B. Hunt, Governor H N Jonathan B. Howes, Secretary Roger N. Schecter, Director February 21, 1997 MEMORANDUM TO: Mr. A. Preston Howard, P. E. Director Division of Water Quality FROM: John R. Parker, Jr. Inland "404" Coordinator SUBJECT: "404" Project Review RECEIVED FEB 2 71997. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES -.. The attached U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Public Notice for Action No. 199701176 dated January 27, 1997 describing a proposed project by the Town of Wacczmaw is being circulated to interested state agencies for comments on applicable Section 404 and/or Section 10 permits. Please indicate below your agency's position or viewpoint on the proposed project and return this form ASAP. If you have any questions regarding the proposed project, please contact me at 733-2293. When appropriate, in-depth comments with supporting data is requested. REPLY This office supports the project proposal. No comment. Comments on this project are attached. This office objects to the project as proposed. Signed Date P.O. Box 27687, ZA ©`: FAX 919-733-1495 Raleigh, North Carolina 27611-7687 An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer Voice 919-733-2293 50% recycled/10% post-consumer paper State of North Carolina Q_9? \ Department of Environment, Health and Natural Resources 4 ° o Division of Coastal Management q James B. Hunt, Governor n n Nr= Jonathan B. Howes, Secretary Roger N. Schecter, Director February 21, 1997 MEMORANDUM TO: Mr. A. Preston Howard, P. E. Director Division of Water Quality FROM: John R. Parker, Jr. Inland "404" Coordinator SUBJECT: "404" Project Review The attached U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Public Notice for Action No. 199701176 dated January 27, 1997 describing a proposed project by the Town of Waccamaw is being circulated to interested state agencies for comments on applicable Section 404 and/or Section 10 permits. Please indicate below your agency's position or viewpoint on the proposed project and return this form ASAP. If you have any questions regarding the proposed project, please contact me at 733-2293. When appropriate, in-depth comments with supporting data is requested. REPLY This office supports the project proposal. No comment. Comments on this project are attached. This office objects to the project as proposed. Signed Date P.O. Box 27687, ?© FAX 919-733-1495 Raleigh, North Carolina 27611-7687 An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer Voice 919-733-2293 50% recycled/10lo post-consumer paper DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY Wilmington District, Corps of Engineers Post Office Box 1890 ?y Wilmington, North Carolina 28402-1890 7 Action ID No. 199401176 January 27, 1997 PUBLIC NOTICE TOWN OF WACCAMAW, Post Office Box 145, Lake Waccamaw, North Carolina 28450, has applied for a Department of the Army (DA) permit TO EXCAVATE AND DISCHARGE FILL MATERIAL INTO 7.6 ACRES OF WETLANDS TO CONSTRUCT A SEDIMENT BASIN AND DEEPEN AND WIDEN 6,200 FEET OF DRAINAGE DITCHES TO DIVERT A PORTION OF THE STORM WATER RUNOFF FROM THE MAPLE AVENUE DITCH TO NC 214 AT LAKE WACCAMAW, COLUMBUS COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA. The following description of the work is taken from data provided by the applicant and from observations made during a site visit by representatives of the Corps of Engineers. Plans submitted with the application show 6,200 feet of existing ditches will be improved to provide adequate drainage for flatland areas. The existing ditch is approximately 3 feet deep with a 3-4 foot bottom. The proposed ditch will have an average of 5 feet and bottom width of 4 feet. The width of the bottom will increase to 6 feet from Station 25+52 to Station 21+82 adjacent to the housing along NC 214. The spoil material will be placed on the south side, in this section of the ditch, to provide additional measure for flood protection. The ditch bottom width will increase to 8 feet wide on the east side of NC 214 to carry peak flow within the banks to prevent sedimentation along NC 214 right of way and to improve efficiency of the sediment basin of station 14+80 to 13+00. The purpose of the work is to divert a portion of the storm water runoff from Maple Avenue ditch at Lake Waccamaw going thru Green Swamp to Big Creek then to the lake. This project would divert 160 acres of runoff back into Green Swamp that would normally flow into Maple Avenue ditch then directly into Lake Waccamaw. A sediment basin will be constructed to improve the water quality of the runoff from the construction project. The reason for this project is to improve the water quality along the northern shoreline where the majority of the direct human activity takes place. Turbidity and coliform bacteria counts have been to exceed state standards with as little as 1" of rainfall. Runoff would have to travel over 3000 feet to Big Creek before entering Lake Waccamaw. Work will be preformed by a track backhoe and spoil will be placed along side of the ditch. Plans showing the work are included with this public notice. The North Carolina Department of Environment, Health and Natural Resources has authorized the work. The State of North Carolina will review this public notice to determine the need for the applicant to obtain any required State authorization. No Department of the Army (DA) permit will be issued until the coordinated State viewpoint on the proposal has been received and reviewed by this agency, nor will a DA permit be issued until the North Carolina Division of Environmental Management (NCDEM) has determined the applicability of a Water Quality Certificate as required by PL 92-500. This applicatibn is being considered pursuant to Section 404 of the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. 1344). Any person may request, in writing within the comment period specified in the notice, that a public hearing be held to consider this application. Requests for public hearing shall state, with particularity, the reasons for holding a public hearing. The District Engineer has consulted the latest published version of the National Register of Historic Places for the presence or absence of registered properties, or properties listed as being eligible for inclusion therein, and this site is *not registered property or property listed as being eligible for inclusion in the Register. Consultation of the National Register constitutes the extent of cultural resource investigations by the District Engineer, and he is otherwise unaware of the presence of such resources. Presently, unknown archeological, scientific, prehistorical, or historical data may be lost or destroyed by work under the requested permit. The District Engineer, based on available information, is not aware that the proposed activity will affect species, or their critical habitat, designated as endangered or threatened pursuant to the Endangered Species Act of 1973. The decision whether to issue a permit will be based on an evaluation of the probable impacts, including cumulative impacts, of the proposed activity and its intended use on the public interest. Evaluation of the probable impacts which the proposed activity may have on the public interest requires a careful weighing of all those factors which become relevant in each particular case. The benefits which reasonably may be expected to accrue from the proposal must be balanced against its reasonably foreseeable detriments. The decision whether to authorize a proposal, and if so the conditions under which it will be allowed to occur, are therefore determined by the outcome of the general balancing process. That decision should reflect the national concern for both protection and utilization of important resources. All factors which may be relevant to the proposal must be considered including the cumulative effects thereof. Among those are conservation, economics, aesthetics, general environmental concerns, wetlands, cultural values, fish and wildlife values, flood hazards and flood plain values (in accordance with Executive Order 11988), land use, navigation, shore erosion and accretion, recreation, water supply and conservation, water quality, energy needs, safety, food and fiber production, mineral needs, considerations of property ownership, and, in general, the needs and welfare of the people. For activities involving the placement of dredged or fill materials in waters of the United States, a permit will be denied if the discharge that would be authorized by such permit would riot comply with the Environmental Protection Agencies' 404(b)(1) guidelines. Sub3ect to the preceding sentence and any other applicable guidelines or criteria, a permit will be granted unless the District Engineer determines that it would be contrary to the public interest. The Corps of Engineers is soliciting comments from the public; Federal, State and local agencies and officials; Indian Tribes and other interested parties in order to consider and evaluate the impacts of this proposed activity. Any comments received will be considered by the Corps of Engineers to determine whether to issue, modify, condition or deny a permit for this proposal. To make this decision, comments are used to assess impacts on 2 endangered species, historic properties, water quality, general environmental effects and the other public interest factors listed above. Comments are used in the preparation of an Environmental Assessment (EA..) and/or an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). Comments are also used to determine the need for a public hearing and to determine the overall public interest of the proposed activity. Generally, the decision whether to issue this Department of the Army (DA) permit will not be made until the North Carolina Division of Environmental Management (NCDEM) issues, denies, or waives State certification required by Section 901 of the Clean Water Act. The NCDEM considers whether or not the proposed activity will comply with Sections 301, 302, 306, and 307 of the Clean Water Act. The application and this public notice for the Department of the Army (DA) permit serves as application to the NCDEM for certification. Additional information regarding the Clean Water Act certification may be reviewed at the offices of the Environmental Operations Section, North Carolina Division of Environmental Management (NCDEM), Salisbury Street, Archdale Building, Raleigh, North Carolina. Copies of such materials will be furnished to any person requesting copies upon payment of reproduction costs. All persons desiring to make comments regarding the application for Clean Water Act certification should do so in writing delivered to the North Carolina Division of Environmental Management (NCDEM), Post Office Box 27687, Raleigh, North Carolina 27611-7687, on or before February 21, 1997, Attention: Mr. John Dorney. Written comments pertinent to the proposed work, as outlined above, will be received in this office, Attention: Mr. Michael S. Taylor, until 9:15 p.m., February 28, 1997, or telephone (910) 251-9639. 3 z v L M U ILj U ? Q U WI ? U J 4_- ? 0 n z 0 4 B ? a d 4 a a bL +? G v F o -4 o bG M 0.--1 v `J o 4- !n •r-I m E G co c? .-I m 4, X -I V) a 3 m co G n G •v O co M •r p m O 4? 0 }+ v' 00 • H r- ?? E ? G • r-I • r-I O a ? + •? U) cd V) O m m w O hi W m f- ul Q CC r O w a w z > 3 Z ] H I H O CD J m r1 w w I CL O m O w 45 w = (n I O f- U) W in F- (0 w z ¢ 0- 0 w w u w i Q Q (m Y f- F Q w O ? Q H Q 3 (I m (n J O 3 Ul Q co z O H 3 H Q ? U z 3 O w U y c J 0 H L 0 V H x I W d 4 a a a a y N W H Q Q ? Q Q W Z 3 Z I H O Co J m H W I Q ? O W 45 (n I U) _ F- U7 W ? In W = d O W W O W a m y H Q O F Q Q 3 E co J ? 3 w L c` c ? a ? L I J ? ?If i c 7 URy U T W2? W z? ?a Lo z I a d t 0 G O UG"1 ? o II 0 0 1.1 J a o° V N V1 0 z c^ w U N w C ? (/1 Y W ? W m 1I W l ` W W Y+ N x $ W W ,({? y?J+l ? ? I i ? I I I I I I I I I I I iil I I ? I I I I I,I II I I u L J u <2 W S N yy ? ? G S S ¢ O S 2 O 44F 3 0< W W S 3 wO m N O W 2 O Ci p ?. a< z W 'O r. m Y 4 G z N 2 Z m < Vf {?iN1 N =? ? J ) u-_ ,O W> U O a W o z N F N 2 C Op0 J? 3NG?r.I< r„a ° W ? W ? 2 W < °o W ??<`° m= ???aum v12 Diu` J? ? z 2 vwi: O C ? u ¢ n W °- G?V1?? U~ Fv=zzWW =0032F QdVSO ?OZr CI, 2 (. W 3 i i 7j O a F 2 tt _ 1., Q N m 2 0? a V< O G J U C j W ° O _ U r 2 W 1 Q Vy ? 3 ? ? N z 3 L. w ,n o 3 ? r. n z a in ? G w Q, Q, ?, ? (. ? lC•`gll •cN? J?j -ozCy ?.,?'a ?n a?a ?? gc W -,a„c` ZI a .e ' G < ?i ?? < r U 3 2 .- O n •- w r¢ 2 i u V ? .y R CAPE FEAR RESOURCE CONSERVATION and DEVELOPMENT, INC. Brunswick o Columbus a New Hanover 0 Pender First Union Building • 201 N. Front Street, Suite 615 a Wilmington, N.C. 28101 Telephone (910)763-6611 Fax (910)763.8989 44 t July 7, 1997 f- Mr. Mike Taylor US Army Corps ofBngineers Post Office Box 1890 Wilmington, North Carolina 28402 Action TD#: 199701176 Dear Mr. Taylor, Your letter dated Juno 6, 1997, asks that we address the DEBNR-DWQ concerns as stated in the letter from Mr. John Dorney dated May 7, 1997. 1 have spoken with Mr. Eric Galamb about these concerns and J believe that we have come to an agreement. The following paragraphs define the points of our discussion. The Town will make plans to mitigate 2.5 acres of wetland impacts. As I discussed with Mr. Galamb, 0.3 acre of riparian wetland impacts are realized as well as 2.2 acres of non- riparian impacts. The Town will raise funds in order to enter the State Wetland Restoration program at a cost of $33,600. 0.3 x $24,000 for riparian = $7,200 2.2 x 512,000 for non-riparian = $26,400 $26,400 + $7,200 = $33,600 The Town is seeking to find other.mitigation opportunities but has been unsuccessful thus fax. Should an equivalent property become available for appropriate mitigation, the Town would like the opportunity to review the site and all requirements with the Corps and state officials. The inflow and infiltration study has been completed as I am assured by I& John Barlow, Manager of the Town of Lake Waccamaw. The Town recognizes that "gray water" entry into ditches is possible and will continue to correct any such practices. The area has sewer service and the residents are being charged for it. Town officials, as well as citizens, will A non-profit organization. ao •d 6868£9L a33a UVBJ 3da3 support eflbrts to improve these ditches for water quality and water management purposes. Other concerns were addressed about the sediment basin. The project is designed to divert stormwater to its actual "natural course," the Friar/Grecn Swamp. The swamp will adequately treat nitrogen and phosphorus with the vast-plant community there to utilizo what will be a diluted amount of nutrients. This is to nay that flows will be negligible once they enter the widespread area of the swamp. There will be some exposure to sunlight at the sediment basin which may kill some of the coliforms. However, the low pH of the swamp should adequately handle any remaining bacteria. Y am not aware of design criteria for sediment basins that address nutrient treatment or colifonm treatment other than what is required by a NPDES permit. This basin is designed to capture sediment loads and the Town certainly plans to maintain this basin. Please call if you have questions. Sincerely, Greg Walker Director `` , GW/pj cc: Eric Galamb, DVU'Q Bennett Wynne, WRC John Barlow, Town Manager, Lake Waccamaw F©'d 6868£9L Q33a UV3J 3dH3 . ? . CAPE FEAR RESOURCE CONSERVATION] and DEVELOPMENT, INC. Brunswick O COlultill1US o New Hanover o Pender First Union Building • 20i N. Front Street, Suite 615 • Wilmington, N.C. 28401 Telcphonc(910)763•6611 • Fax (910)763,898A FAX COVER SHEET T©'d TO:'?? (cl1q)7?53 FROM : Gre w n S, e `J I ?,?,- SUBJECT! pf ?)e (t PAGES: ?. > 1h ??. A non-profit organization. 6868£9L Q!33M UV3d 3dH3 R D CAPE FEAR RESOURCE CONSERVATION and ,J6,1 DEVELOPMENT, INC. e??on.t _2'' ?yyi Brunswick o Columbus o New Hanover 0 Pender First Union Building o 201 N. Front Street, Suite 615 e Wilmington, N.C. 28401 Telephone (910)763-6611 a Fax (910)763.8989 July 7, 1997 Mr. Mike Taylor US Army Corps of Engineers Post Office Box 1890 Wilmington, North Carolina 28402 Action ID#: 199701176 Dear Mr. Taylor, Your letter dated June 6, 1997, asks that we address the DEHNR-DWQ concerns as stated in the letter from Mr. John Dorney dated May 7, 1997. I have spoken with Mr. Eric Galamb about these concerns and I believe that we have come to an agreement. The following paragraphs define the points of our discussion. The Town will make plans to mitigate 2.5 acres of wetland impacts. As I discussed with Mr. Galamb, 0.3 acre of riparian wetland impacts are realized as well as 2.2 acres of non- riparian impacts. The Town will raise funds in order to enter the State Wetland Restoration program at a cost of $33,600. 0.3 x $24,000 for riparian = $7,200 2.2 x $12,000 for non-riparian = $26,400 $26,400 + $7,200 = $33,600 The Town is seeking to find other mitigation opportunities but has been unsuccessful thus far. Should an equivalent property become available for appropriate mitigation, the Town would like the opportunity to review the site and all requirements with the Corps and state officials. The inflow and infiltration study has been completed as I am assured by Mr. John Barlow, Manager of the Town of Lake Waccamaw. The Town recognizes that "gray water" entry into ditches is possible and will continue to correct any such practices. The area has sewer service and the residents are being charged for it. Town officials, as well as citizens, will A non-profit organization. support efforts to improve these ditches for water quality and water management purposes. Other concerns were addressed about the sediment basin. The project is designed to divert stormwater to its actual "natural course," the Friar/Green Swamp. The swamp will adequately treat nitrogen and phosphorus with the vast plant community there to utilize what will be a diluted amount of nutrients. This is to say that flows will be negligible once they enter the widespread area of the swamp. There will be some exposure to sunlight at the sediment basin which may kill some of the coliforms. However, the low pH of the swamp should adequately handle any remaining bacteria. I am not aware of design criteria for sediment basins that address nutrient treatment or coliform treatment other than what is required by a NPDES permit. This basin is designed to capture sediment loads and the Town certainly plans to maintain this basin. Please call if you have questions. Sincerely, Greg Walker Director GW/pj cc: Eric Galamb, DWQ Bennett Wynne, WRC John Barlow, Town Manager, Lake Waccamaw State of North Carolina Department of Environment, Health and Natural Resources Division of Water Quality James B. Hunt, Jr., Governor Jonathan B. Howes, secretary A. Preston Howard, Jr., P.E., Director May 7, 1997 Town of Waccamaw P.O. Box 145 Waccamaw, NC 28450 Dear Sir: Re: 401 Water Quality Certification Application for the Drainage Ditch Impact and the Stormwater Basin for the Town of Waccamaw DWQ Project #970073, COE No. 199701176 On April 22, 1997, Mr. Eric Galamb of my staff met on site with staff from the Town, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, Division of Soil and Water Conservation, UNCW and Coastal Environmental. The purpose of this meeting was to discuss the project's design and determine the impacts on the wetlands as well as the requirements of our 401 Water Quality Certification rules. The project proposes to widen and deepen existing ditches so that historical flow to Green Swamp can be restored. This project is expected to improve the water quality in Lake Waccamaw by using a stormwater basin and the Green Swamp wetlands to treat stormwater. The Division of Water Quality (DWQ believes that this project can benefit the water quality of the lake by using the wetlands to remove sediment and nutrients. However, as the project is designed, there may be inadequate treatment of fecal coliform bacteria due to the short residence time of the stormwater pond. In addition, the stormwater pond will need to have maximum exposure to the sun for coliform treatment. Based on discussions with our stormwater engineers, the pond will remove at most 30% of the incoming nitrogen and phosphorus. DWQ is concerned that wetlands will be impacted by the proposed project for minimal nutrient and sediment treatment and little or no treatment of fecal coliform. We therefore request (by copy of this letter) that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (COE) investigate avoidance and minimization efforts that would perform the same water quality benefits without impacting wetlands. One possibility would be to conduct a full inflow and infiltration study for the sewer lines in the town. Furthermore, a complete field inspection of the existing stormwater ditch network might be undertaken to identify possible "illegal" septic tank or gray water (washing machine, sink etc.) discharges. Mr. Greg Walker asked that I discuss available mitigation options. For DWQ to issue the 401 Water Quality Certification, the Town will need to restore or create an acreage of wetlands which is equal to the impact. The public notice states that there would be 7.6 acres of impact. If the COE does not require mitigation, our rules (15A NCAC 2H. 0506(h)(7)) require a 4:1 ratio of restoration for the wetland impacts within 150 feet of surface waters, 2:1 of restoration between 150 feet and 1000 feet of surface water and 1:1 restoration for the impacts beyond 1000 feet of surface waters. If the COE requires some mitigation, our rules (15A NCAC 2H .0506(h)(6)) would require at least 7.6 acres of restoration or creation. 1 i Division of Water Quality - Environmental Sciences Branch 4401 Reedy Creek Rd., Raleigh,.NC 27626-0535 - Telephone 919-733-1786 - FAX 919-733-9959 I . .t I believe that the Town has four mitigation options: 1) purchase credits from a private mitigation bank, 2) donate land that is consistent with the basinwide management plan , 3) perform your own mitigation or, 4) purchase credits from the State's Wetland Restoration Program. The DWQ is not aware of a private mitigation bank in the Lumber River basin. Therefore, that option would not be available. Land donation may be possible but the Lumber River basinwide report has not identified areas where restoration should occur. We would suggest that you focus on streams that are "not supporting" or "partially supporting" their uses to locate restoration sites. The Town could purchase a prior-converted wetland, and develop its own mitigation plan. This mitigation plan would have to have provisions for a reference site, groundwater monitoring wells, a soils map, a water budget, listing of tree species to be planted, and a water and vegetation agreement to be sampled for 5 years (see attached guidance). As discussed on-site, we would prefer that continuous groundwater wells be installed but we would agree to allow for daily water level sampling by hand for the first 30 and last 30 days of the growing season. The wetland acreage which would be required is described above. The last mitigation option would be to pay into the State's Wetland Restoration program. A rough estimate for your project is that approximately one-third of the impacts occur to riparian wetlands and the remainder are in non-riparian wetlands. The State's program has set riparian restoration at $24,000 per acre and $12,000 per acre for non-riparian restoration. Assuming that the COE requires mitigation, you would be required to buy 2.5 acres of riparian ($60,000) and 5.0 acres of non-riparian ($60,000). The total minimum cost would be $120,000 for 1:1 restoration of the lost wetlands. These calculations assume that the COE will require some mitigation. If they do not, then these costs can approximately be doubled. Please be aware that the Wetland Restoration Program may choose a site that will have the most benefits for water quality (not necessarily near Lake Waccamaw). Please copy DWQ with any correspondence the Town may sent to the COE so that we can be aware of any changes to this project so that we can respond quickly. As stated in my letter of 12 February 1997, this project will remain on hold until the Town selects a mitigation option. Should you have any questions, please contact Mr. Eric Galamb or me at (919) 733- 1786. Y, cc: Wilmington DWQ Regional Office Wilmington Office Corps of Engineers John Parker, DCM Central Files Mr. Greg Walker Ron Ferrell; Wetland Restoration Program hn R. orney 'ater Quality C cation Program q/,e ih Y?u? "?rJ new ® North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission 512 N. Salisbury Street, Raleigh, North Carolina 27604-1188, 919-733-3391 Charles R. Fullwood, Executive Director F? MEMORANDUM TO: Michael S.Taylor ?1ylq1 ??99J Dcpaiiinu-ni, ui `iC Army Corps of Engineers sC1F V ?oeo FROM: Bennett Wynne 5(.? Habitat Conservation Program DATE: June 4, 1997 SUBJECT: June 2, 1997 letter from you to Greg Walker re: revised wetland impact area for proposed Lake Waccamaw drainage diversion, Columbus County, North Carolina. Action ID No. 199101176 It is our understanding the reduction in estimated wetland impacts to 2.5 acres is based on the difference between the proposed excavation and the original ditch dimensions. The earlier 7.6 acre impact estimate was based on the difference between the proposed excavation and current (partially-filled) ditch dimensions. We do not contest the revised wetland impact estimate, but we do continue to recommend full mitigation for those wetlands lost to the project. We recommend wetland mitigation ratios of 10:1 for preservation, 3:1 for creation, and 2:1 for restoration. Thank you for the opportunity to further comment. If you have questions or need ad,'itional assistance, p':ease call me at (919) 522-9736. cc: s:\boatfish\habcon\coast\d4 (wac4043.doc) IN DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY WILMINGTON DISTRICT, CORPS OF ENGINEERS P.O. BOX 1890 WILMINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA 28402-1890 IN REPLY REFER TO June 2, 1997 Regulatory Branch Action ID 199701176 ?fl N Mr. Greg Walker, Director Cape Fear Resource Conservation and Development, Inc. First Union Building Suite 615 201 North Front Street Wilmington, North Carolina 28401 Dear Mr. Walker: 991 dry Reference your letter dated May 13, 1997, concerning the proposal to excavate and discharge fill material into 7.6 acres of wetlands to construct a sediment basin and deepen and widen 6,200 feet of drainage ditches to divert a portion of the storm water runoff from the Maple Avenue ditch to NC 214 at Lake Waccamaw, Columbus County, North Carolina. It appears that the data showing a reduction in impacts from 7.6 acres to 2.5 acres of wetland impacts is acceptable. The basis for this reduction is the consideration of the original as-built depths of the ditch versus the proposed depths. Since maintenance to original ditch depth does not require a Department of the Army permit, this method of calculating the impacts is valid. The new impact figure (2.5 acres) will be used in determining appropriate mitigation. Attached is a letter from the (NC) Division of Water Quality (DWQ) expressing their concerns for the project. You should address the issues they have raised and respond in writing at your convenience. By copy of this letter I am requesting comments on the revised data from NCDWQ and the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission. They received copies of this information at an earlier date. If you have questions please call me at telephone (910) 251-4634. Sincerely, Michael S. Taylor Project Manager Enclosure -2- Copies Furnished (without enclosure): Town of Waccamaw Post Office Box 145 Lake Waccamaw, North Carolina 28450 Mr. Eric Galamb Division of Water Quality North Carolina Department of Environment, Health, and Natural Resources 4401 Reedy Creek Road Raleigh, North Carolina 27626-0535 Mr. Bennett Wynne, Regional Coordinator Habitat Conservation Program North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission 901 Laroque Avenue Kinston, North Carolina 28501 i •uoumuegio i-,3o1d-uou d M-Jlqfl `uoogLD S11L'I 1Q DUM 'UiISM ))ODU3Q aM(J`quielu0 3Ug SD21N `13?301}I ulIN DMSQ'43u113;I u111 AICUIL'3311A1 W1L''I `JJ?L'l1L'I/?j'A101JL'Cl U110f :SJlnsolouo/JJ soinsoloug PAP 10)031rQ 13>(?? .?3J? `S131JOUIS '30uulslssu Jno,( 1oJ no,( 31uL11•1, 'S3i3113gL i11JG113IA3J f1Lssw3u oil) II)IA1 suuld 3)LUdoldde Jll) 3)luul um 3A1 )Lill os Sn)uls 1nU1Jd 1no 0) SL' 3SIApL 3SL'Jld 'S313L' S•Z 01 S31JL' 9'L ulol) poonpoj oq f1iM s)03JJ3 3?Lu1L1p Jnp 's8Ulpug 1no uo posuq suol)Lln0lL3 s,Sp3tn13m iu1 b '1wsl p31I0L))W '011op 3AL'11 3A1 SL' sq)d3p 1113s31d o111)ou 'llopp sill) Jo s11)dop 1cu13uo Dill uo pJsLq o1n91J )OLdurl sp iullom u )nugnsol 3m )Lill )sonb31 p1nom I'31oJJ1otl L '111dop A%ollegs )u3s31d s)1 u19u1)1ns31 `s1uJS snld Simp )sed 3ql 13,%o gunl2nols puu 1101)L')uoullpos )11LO)lu21s sJ)L'1)Suoujop tlO)Ip oil) 'pJ)3JdX3 3.11 sV ')JlIno Jill o) (s)11J111).ICd`J 39L'111A) £0+8V Uol)L')S u?oJJ sU01)3JS ssoJ3 pJ)JJlos )L sgtiiJoq )u3wlp3s loo) I p11L' `1JJUISim DMSQ `Sp3uuJ}I ullZ 'JhI `)slsoloJB 5?2II?I `1J?301}I UII?I '1hI ')3J?OI?I 1I01S13,1T(I 1J)C,11w10)S A1L'111L'J3CA? 3)[L"I 311) )L S1331J3 Z)guulL'Jp Jill Jo uopulnolL'3J1 9UIU133uo3 1J))3l 'L66I 'L SLNI Sw uo dii AiolloJ of s1 1Jl)Jl still :JOISL,j, -1I^I 1uQ 0681-ZOb8Z LUIIo1L,3 11110 `UM511IMPM 0681 xog 301110 )sod s133ulOug Jo sd1oD Sfl Jolhu 31m 'JNI L661 '£l hW 6969-OL(016) Xe3 • t 199-C9L(016) ouoild3pl e`y 10?9Z '3'I`I `uoik1uiwpjA • Sig o)InS'aaol)S auo13 -N IOZ e Iluippq uolun 1311J 'apuad 0 13AOUIC Mali , sngwnloZ) o jowsunig tea; •ONI `iNF11Ndo-19n9Q PUB NOIJLVn-dgSNOD E3-dnoSENd11VRq gdVD PEF 'T REQUEST ACREAGE FOR TH' DEPT. OF THE ARMY SECTION 404 PERMI T LAKE WACCAMAW DRAINAGE DIVERSION PLAN COLUMBUS COUNTY, LAKE WACCAMAW, N.C. COMPARISON OF ORIGINAL AND DESIGN CHANNEL DEPTHS FOR DESIGNATED AREAS CONTAINING REGULATED WETLANDS REACH STATION AVG. BANK ELEV. ORIGINAL BOTTOM ELEV. DESIGN BOTTOM ELEV. ORIGINAL DEPTH FT DESIGN DEPTH FT DEPTH INCREASE(FT) 1 13+00 45.0 43.8 41.3 1.2 3.7 2.5 FROM END OF BED. BASIN 14+00 45.5 44.0 41.3 1.5 4.2 2.7 TO N.C. 214 CULVERT 14+80 45.5 44.1 41.4 1.4 4.1 2.7 15+00 45.5 44.0 43.9 1.5 1.6 0.1 16+40 46.5 44.0 43.9 2.5 2.6 0.1 16+50 46.5 44.0 43.9 2.5 2.6 0.1 16+98 47.1 44.2 43.9 2.9 3.2 0.3 19+02 48.4 45.6 44.4 2.8 4.0 1.2 19+54 48.7 45.3 44.5 3.4 4.2 0.8 21+22 49.7 47.2 44.9 2.5 4.8 2.3 21+34 50.6 46.5 44.9 4.1 5.7 1.6 2 24+54 50.8 48.2 45.9 2.6 4.9 2.3 FROM BARN TO 25+52 50.8 48.1 45.9 2.7 4.9 2.2 ACCAMAW VILLAGE APT 30+56 53.0 49.9 47.9 3.1 5.1 2.0 34+56 55.0 50.5 49.5 4.5 5.5 1.0 36+50 55.5 51.3 50.3 4.2 5.2 1.0 37+59 56.7 52.2 50.4 4.5 6.3 1.8 37+88 56.2 54.2 50.4 2.0 5.8 3.8 38+83 56.1 52.0 50.5 4.1 5.6 1.5 43+97 56.0 52.2 51.0 3.8 5.0 1.2 48+03 56.5 52.8 51.4 3.7 5.1 1.4 2. ESTIMATE HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY (Ke) FOR EACH REACH FROM SOIL BORINGS TAKEN BY VINCENT LEWIS, SOIL SCIENTIST FOR THE DIVISION, ON 12/02/96. SOILS ARE IN THE PENDER-GRIFTON-MEGGETT MAP UNIT WITH MEGGETT BEING THE PREDOMINANT SOIL SERIES. Ke= EKt*Tt ETt Kt= HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY OF EACH OF EACH LAYER Tt=THICKNESS OF EACH LAYER UNIFIED HYDRAULIC REACH 1: LAYER CLASS. CONDUCT.(IN/HR) 0'-2' SM 4.0 2'-6' CL 0.1 ' 6'-8' SC-CL 0.15 UNIFIED HYDRAULIC REACH 2: LAYER CLASS. CONDUCT.(IN/HR) 0'-2' SM 4.0 2'-4' SC 0.2 4'-6' CL 0.1 ' 6'-8' SC-SM 0.4 IMPERMEABLE LAYER NOT REACHED, LAYER OF MARL ESTIMATED AT 10' DEPTH BY SOIL SCIENTIST. CLASSIFICATION FOR THE LAST LAYER ASSUMED TO BE CONSISTENT TO THE DEPTH OF THE BARRIER. Ke(1)= 0.90 IN/HR = 21.6 IN/DAY Ke(2) = 1.02 IN/HR = 24.5 IN/DAY l ? 3. DRAINABLE POROSITY= v. 12 FT/FT 4. DEPTH TO BARRIER= 10 FT 5. GROWING SEASON= 240 DAYS (MARCH 16 -NOV. 12) 6. 5% GROWING SEASON= 12 DAYS 7. v = DRAINABLE POROSITY • DEPTH OF DRAWDOWN AT MIDPOINT v = 0.12 FT/FT' 12 IN = 1.44 IN 8. q = DRAINAGE RATE = v/t q = 1.44 IN /12 DAYS = 0.12 IN/DAY 9. ELLIPSE EQUATION S = (((4Ke)' (m^2+2am))/q)^0.5 S = PARALLEL DRAIN SPACING OR WIDTH OF WETLAND HYDROLOGY AFFECTED ON BOTH SIDES OF A SINGLE DRAIN, FT m = VERTICAL DISTANCE; AFTER DRAWDOWN, OF WATER TABLE ABOVE DRAIN AT THE EDGE OF THE WETLAND HYDROLOGY AFFECTED, FT a = DEPTH OF BARRIER, IMPERMEABLE LAYER, BELOW DRAIN, FT 10. WIDTH OF WETLAND HYDROLOGY AFFECTED BY ORIGINAL DRAINAGE (ASSUME 0.20' OF WATER IN CHANNEL) REACH STATION a FT m FT S FT EST. WIDTH FFECTED FT 1 13+00 9.0 0.0 0 0 14+00 8.7 0.3 62 62 14+80 8.8 0.2 51 51 15+00 8.7 0.3 62 62 16+40 7.7 1.3 125 125 16+50 7.7 1.3 125 63 (c) 16+98 7.3 1.7 141 71 (c) 19+02 7.4 1.6 137 69 (c) 19+54 6.8 2.2 158 79 (c) 21+22 7.7 1.3 125 63 (c) 21+34 6.1 2.9 178 89 c 2 24+54 7.6 1.4 138 138 25+52 7.5 1.5 142 142 30+56 7.1 1.9 158 158 34+56 5.7 3.3 199 199 36+50 6.0 3.0 192 192 37+59 5.7 3.3 199 199 37+88 8.2 0.8 106 106 38+83 6.1 2.9 189 189 43+97 6.4 2.6 181 181 48+03 6.5 2.5 178 178 (c) CHANNEL PARALLELS N.C. 214, THE HYDROLOGY OF THE RIGHT SIDE WAS ALTERED BY THE ROAD FILL. THE DISTANCE WAS HALVED TO SHOW THE WIDTH AFFECTED ON THE LEFT SIDE 11. WIDTH OF WETLAND HYDR' GY AFFECTED BY PROPOSED DRAINAGE (ASSUME 0.20' Or WATER IN CHANNEL) REACH STATION a FT m FT S FT EST. WIDTH FFECTED FT 1 13+00 (a) 9.0 0.0 0 30 (b) 14+00 (a) 8.5 0.5 79 79 14+80 (a) 8.6 0.4 71 71 15+00 8.6 0.4 71 71 16+40 7.6 1.4 129 129 16+50 7.6 1.4 129 65 (c) 16+98 7.0 2.0 152 76 (c) 19+02 6.2 2.8 175 88 (c) 19+54 6.0 3.0 180 90 (c) 21+22 5.4 3.6 193 97 (c) 21+34 4.5 4.5 209 105 c 2 24+54 5.3 3.7 208 208 25+52 5.3 3.7 208 208 30+56 5.1 3.9 212 212 34+56 4.7 4.3 219 219 36+50 5.0 4.0 214 214 37+59 3.9 5.1 232 232 37+88 4.4 4.6 224 224 38+83 4.6 4.4 221 221 43+97 5.2 3.8 210 210 48+03 5.1 3.9 212 212 (a) ASSUME 2.5' DEEP SEDIMENT BASIN FULL OF WATER WITH AN ADDITIONAL 0.2' OF BASE FLOW (b) ESTIMATED WIDTH OF SPOIL, ALTHOUGH HYDROLOGY IS NOT ALTERED AT THIS SECTION, WIDTH OF SPOIL WILL ADD TO THE NET LOSS OF WETLAND HABITAT (c) CHANNEL PARALLELS N.C. 214, THE HYDROLOGY OF THE RIGHT SIDE WAS ALTERED BY THE ROAD FILL. THE DISTANCE WAS HALVED TO SHOW THE WIDTH AFFECTED ON THE LEFT SIDE 12. AREA OF WETLAND HYDROLOGY AFFECTED BY ORIGINAL DRAINAGE REACH STATION WIDTH FT AVG. WIDTH FT LENGTH FT AREA SQ FT 1 13+00 0 31 100 3,092 14+00 62 56 80 4,498 14+80 51 56 20 1,125 15+00 62 93 140 13,080 16+40 125 94 10 938 16+50 63 67 48 3,195 16+98 71 70 204 14,214 19+02 69 74 52 3,843 19+54 79 71 168 11,895 21+22 63 76 12 908 21+34 89 TOTAL = 56,788 ACRES = 1.3 REACH STATION WIDTH FT AVG. WIDTH FT LENGTH FT AREA SO FT 2 24+54 138 140 98 13,711 25+52 142 150 504 75,626 30+56 158 178 400 71,390 34+56 199 195 194 37,886 36+50 192 195 109 21,287 37+59 199 152 29 4,421 37+88 106 147 95 14,012 38+83 189 185 514 95,035 43+97 181 179 406 72,791 48+03 178 TOTAL = 406,160 ACRES = 9.3 TOTAL AREA AFFECTED BY ORIGINAL DRAINAGE = 1.3 AC + 9.3 AC = 10.0 AC. 13. AREA OF WETLAND HYDROLOGY AFFECTED BY PROPOSED DRAINAGE REACH STATION WIDTH(FT) AVG. WIDTH(FT) LENGTH FT AREA SQ FT 1 13+00 30 55 100 5,450 14+00 79 75 80 6,000 14+80 71 71 20 1,420 15+00 71 100 140 14,000 16+40 129 97 10 970 16+50 65 71 48 3,384 16+98 76 82 204 16,728 19+02 88 89 52 4,628 19+54 90 94 168 15,708 21+22 97 101 12 1,212 21+34 105 TOTAL = 69,500 ACRES = 1.6 REACH STATION WIDTH(FT) AVG. WIDTH(FT) LENGTH(FT) AREA SQ FT 2 24+54 208 208 98 20384 25+52 208 210 504 105840 30+56 212 216 400 86200 34+56 219 217 194 42001 36+50 214 223 109 24307 37+59 232 228 29 6612 37+88 224 223 95 21138 38+83 221 216 514 110767 43+97 210 211 406 85666 48+03 212 TOTAL = 502915 ACRES = 11.5 TOTAL AREA AFFECTED BY PROPOSED DRAINAGE = 1.8 AC. + 11.5 AC. = 13.1 AC 14. PERMIT REQUEST ACREAGE =13.1 AC -10.6 AC. = 2.5 AC SENT BY:Wilmington District 3-12-97 ; 9:03 USACE-Reg, Branch-? 919 733 9959# 1 FAC51f.11LE TAArj3r-.31T'AL H2=L:R SH211T Ftx w d if a Ipm, fa tai U-11; thi FCpX=M E",.-A? 0 C=4U moor-on NAME/ OFRCC TIELITHO IE FAX NO. .........w?,n? W. (AUTQVC;VCOmm.) Mt CLas :.-rroA=4 U & 19 Z'51- 540 4,$ 33- m- 7 RZ= G wql K? r !-bwuz 7r D) an-7071 2c? Nortror*? S?' S?u6iS 4!a) 7G 3r (o W?/V` ?' CPco WOW for C .....:s:.n(c .f'=l c. nazi U,;3 a:rh ------------ Ut(t- VJ qO:P'wtav'l fro3ec ?D DA FO;;U 3710;i, AW 12 Q O=V2 i ' zl- z3- i',1 )? IC RECEIVED APR 2 4 1991, ?L"l / vGr?r ? ? ? ?' c? G ? ? ENVIRONMEt TAI SGI-NyE? f'1 t r- Ccrt? MEMORANDUM TO: FROM: DATE: SUBJECT: John Parker Division on Coastal Management Bennett Wynne Habitat Conservation Program March 10, 1997 "404" project review for the Town of Waccamaw, Lake Waccamaw, Columbus County, North Carolina. Action No. 199701176 The Wildlife Resources Commission has completed a review of the project and associated impacts on wildlife and fisheries resources. A site visit was made on February 10, 1997. Our comments are provided in accordance with provisions of the Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act (48 Stat. 401, as amended; 16 U.S.C. 661 et seq.), Section 401 of the Clean Water Act (as amended) , and North Carolina Environmental Policy Act (G. S. 113A-1 et seq., as amended; 1 NCAC-25). The applicant is seeking a Department of the Army permit to excavate and fill 7.6 acres of wetlands. The project would involve excavation of a sediment basin and widening and deepening 6,200 linear feet of drainage ditches. The purpose of the project is to divert stormwater from the town away from Lake Waccamaw and into Green Swamp, thus improving water quality along the north shore of the lake. Turbidity and coliform counts from this area are reported to exceed state standards with as little as 1" of rainfall. Much of the "Area To Be Diverted" appears to be a large wetland north of town. We noted various signs of wildlife activity and good habitat in this area. We question whether potential wetland loss to drainage caused by enlarging ditches was included in the 7.6 acre wetland impact figure. We also fail to understand why the sediment basin is to be located in wetlands instead of on highground immediately upgradient of the proposed site. Based on these concerns, we recommend that alternative means be explored to address the water quality problem in northern Lake Waccamaw. For example, if septic tank failures are involved, installation of a sewage treatment plant or expansion of current treatment Waccamaw 404 PN 2 March 10, 1997 plant capacity should be investigated. As a minimum, the sediment basin should be relocated to highground and all remaining wetland impacts should be fully mitigated. We recommend wetland mitigation ratios of 10:1 for preservation, 3:1 for creation, and 2:1 for restoration. Thank you for the opportunity to comment on this application. If you have questions regarding our comments or need additional assistance, please call me at (919) 522-9736 or Albert Little at (919) 566-4116. s:\boatfish\habcon\coast\d4 (wac4042.doc) D CAPE FEAR RESOURCE CONSERVATION and DEVELOPMENT, INC. Brunswick © Columbus o New Hanover o Pender First Union Building 0 201 N. Front Street, Suite 615 O Wilmington, N.C. 28401 Telephone (910)763-6611 o Fax (910)763.8989 RECENED July 22, 1997 1 A '11991, Mr. Eric Galamb Etrv?ao??M?NtA^?ciL;.hcEs Division of Water Quality Environmental Science Branch 4401 Reedy Creek Road Raleigh, North Carolina 27626-0535 Dear Mr. Galamb, Please find a copy of the television inspection records of the sanitary sewer system at lake Waccamaw as requested. Town Manager, Jon Barlow, assures me that there are no gutters out-letting into the sewer system. If there is other information that you need, please call me or Jon Barlow (910-646-3700), or if necessary, call Mr. Tyndall Lewis of McDavid & Associates of Goldsboro at (919)736-7630. 1 will visit with Mr. Steve West in the Wilmington Regional office about any other concerns that he may have at Lake Waccamaw. I appreciate your assistance with this project. Sincerely, Greg alker Director GW/pj Cc: w/o attachments to: Jon Barlow, Town of Lake Waccamaw Mike Taylor, USCOE Roy Lowe, Cape Fear RC&D A non-profit organization. 0/&WZO wON THE SHORES OF NORTH CAROLINA'S LARGEST NATURAL LAKE P.O. Box 145 Lake Waccamaw, North Carolina 28450 (910) 646-3700 (910) 646-3860 Fax &I'r- & 1, ?ACGP Member N.C. League of Municipalities ?1GI0SP U IJ OI GoPV b- III-e 3/5 (?7LehVT I?PP, cl, Cop -? }t?_ {ClC +??SIU? ?,SpPC rec,o,f{S IWC (/-,Sr?C cfiJ? ?e c V f ?S Slta? ??l q?}J cf SLp - ),x ht l3 S d C' IM"1)4. Ifv? U d D L{ f 5, S, 1,1c 3 bey slip L0A /JV c( c/ 6c- k-1 r,e o o ?cr led , 4 ATTACHMENT A TELEVISION INSPECTION RECORDS LW9405 308 Lake %Vaccamaw 1994 CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 i f?• . F?•»+?f (II ?• : r -? is ? i ? ^ t , r^ t . ? ? S •• dom. ? ?.Mx`. ? Tq?/',o,. iK•,'t?yr.r *Y h a x.444 .. ????,?r• _ ? '„? ? .??, w1 ? I -viol !Iit: Ata ::,.::.? , eye • ,??_ fr:Y . ?a9 ..i?.:i . Z.. Y('_ ?' S 4 d Iv r III '. oil I ?;?E .ST ' (r ? ^ r _I :AST , .?„'a Z, ? f? r ???r/?, O rr100 ?r• r ? r '? s yy ?{}Jy??1 ?i• ' , V V I ?' !Pl ?• c= 31f or 3a0 yi ,y f H fr n' 07 (n . W ?V„I?C? i o bf I, ?r IA r t . LV19405 309 Lake I'Jaccamaw 1994 CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 o . OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENTLA45 1414CCRM 90) OPERATOR /in GB7--7L._-I.Il-lE SECTION RUN 793. PROJECT r&WtM INSPECT n- DATE LOCAT IONAJA?+fMLc' `(/ f° crS ?Arraa d?? STREET KR%? VIDEO DATA TAPING YES L5' NO O TAPE tt COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP ?EP p' PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD (R' YES Er RCP O FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR O DI ? TC Ea-- LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST B'? GOOD B- BRICK O FAIR O LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71/2',o PASS ? NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. # 0-- M.H. M - M.H. -o M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH- C? 9 ,co ' S iIV u ? Lo bE ' 1LM ' /c D V6 _ Tr?rs X28,3 _- LgT-;zALR 9 a'cIock o'clock At'onl P,wD;.rb 0.5 _- E r? of 7ir1?i•JLr rCA.4 IV L o'clock 559. m?N oIS 0.3 n 47.0 .f/%(L d? Gy r-xgL o'?coc?c aL o c.1.+cK (a 89.2 4cX? PP- / e c Zf 7. _ 7---)-L CU Q, 7/? 176 Tai. I ) awDL4& "regeoL o/LLo,K 7$f 3 Lgrw z / ca C-t -N ? AND G.B Or? M r CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES 2' MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO -? CENTER OF M.H.'S T ON LENGTH LF 310 O Lalce? vaccama v 1J! "CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 I ?1.? OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT ?E?Acc.9?nAw OPERATon Zrl?" 6Z-?7z_..__LINE SECTION RUN 34i/ PROJECT INSPECTOR _ DATE LOCATIO-4t/? `y///?k?r0i ) STREET Co,u.cL A•???E _ VIDEO DATA TAPING YES a NO C3 TAPE # --L-COUNTER TAPESPEED SPCILPOEPp' PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD 3- YES L9' RCP ? FAIR ? NO O VC ? POOR O DI O TC 9-1 LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST 2' GOOD La' BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL ? FT. YES O 71/2% PASS O NO ? FAIL ? Fl'. M.H. k 0__ M.H. N __ M.H. o M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH - ' 6 o?'S??S o./Di.??? oFF.fcT?yLs ' o SIG/ PO?Di.?b• orf : Es ' a T o'cLoc..?c s 3L Ff ET' ; cs ' 3ff 7 . o ?oi.?b Ff > i ss " / as .-4771eRRL P_ 1) o'GLocK ' G] ,SiB ?D;.?b'afr= eT i t Y . M J d CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUA'T'ION LOG SHEETS MAY K USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S ? jjf LENGTH?LF 311 1 ?'IEJ AMETER_ ily} C111 - SS Renovations 940530 L a :e accam aw m T-0iv F NORTH CAROLINA, INC. 'STRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR i PIPE-INSPECTION LOG :NT"?_?A?tAinA?l OPERATOR;., (:?tTe7z__"-LINE srcTION RUN 3S7/. _ )JECT S?wex INSPECTOR DATE III-h61Eai / .e ( jr ATION / 70 7 /3L EET Cleelc/L Arjwo,- VIDEO DATA ING YES El' NO ? E a _1! -COUNTER E SPEED SP ?LP ?EP Eg' PIPE DATA 'E COND. WATER ADD ? GOOD Er YES 13- 0 FAIR ? NO ? ? POOR ? ? Er 2R ? M.H. DATA 'E COND. :CAST C9- GOOD Er CK ? FAIR ? =R ? ' POOR ? BARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA STING S% PASS ? FAIL ? FT. 3 ? 71/2 PASS ? ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. # &__ M.H. a _ M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH- 4 411 ' ? yb, 5 vrD:?v' F : zA z r 7/ fo77 rD;? ,/ /. G -h //9 Bj,tA.4.' _,f&' ' Ex L e?p 0 e' Lo -k /fJ I'D 113 ' ?a 1.3 aor • 7 R. r5 A!.3 Lo c,C • r0 .? s9S7,$fe,?98 i?b'pF F1 .z.7 ifs gz __ rt?rvL ? 7 o c.?oc: K • 2. S ctvcxe w o tiv cj< _ /0 3S sxy? 9 O'eLa ?Zj :/ 'LfRAf''p.I Po aD:.?fr / Y M Y 1. J ERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION I.OG SHEETS MAY GE USED YES ? ASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S 312 fNjff LENGTH LF LRT WA&FfTiFiRw-4SU4 CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 0530 =fct o OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENTG4.C??/.nccn.n?? OPERATOR .?i•7 GETEn _•-I.IIIE SECTION RUN PROJECT TyV-146E' 12 INSPECTOR- -DATE, LOCATION 7r??A6Cr ?9 ?a '°?d t'R*?7 d/3? STREET ??•? A.-eHz" _ VIDEO DATA TAPING YES a NO O TAPE # -1--COUNTER TAPE SPEED SPOLPOEP[g-R. 411. Y 4A7-e?c.41_ t-d r PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC O GOOD C- YES Gil RCP O FAIR ? NO O VC O POOR ? 01 ? TC 19- LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Q, GOOD Er BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? • POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES O 71/2% PASS O NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. # M.H. It M.H. M.H. DEPTH DEPTH _ _._. CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTIO14 CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY DE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO O CENTER OF M.H.'S ?j?QN LENGTH LF 313 L' IAMETE Lake Waccamaw 1961 CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 41 V OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT 44*?e4e,54n,gw OPERATOR .,7,'?n6z-r&x -LIN[ SECTION RUN 333.0 _ PROJECT Tw,? ? ,-x INSPECTOR - DATE LOCATION /11a.i,Gl?9P ?' C? a/3) STREET ?? S,a.-zrr _ VIDEO DATA TAPING YES R NO O TAPE /-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP a PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD 9)- YES Cam}' RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC Q' LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Ca-- GOOD 93- BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES O 71/29e PASS O NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. 11 0-- M.H. K -- M.H. o M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH. . ee..u ? ..... f f A- .-z4 L Lo-=X i88.s No;N? f isp•St't r.?,Ac. ? coin • 3 s- ,f?,Ts g4eall ?Pc /? O GLoc.e ?,? S •n/fi LfRA i o.J • ?3 ?v ? oN0 :.r •11,%0' /° %°F • 8 if,6L?'? 6+D oBJnrvh - r ,f n ti r - -- N Y N r CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY OE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S ,Sa TI@44 LENGTH LF 314 Ctll - SS Renovations 940530 Lr?:JV D OF NORTH CAROLINA. INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT .? /!E !d'+u n.n.?? OPERATOR.?-,m <5?rT-?L-.-LINE SECTION RUN PROJECT _T??? ??n INSPECTOR- DATE LOCATION??''? r4? `?9A r!?i? ?°LGQ? STREET VIDEO DATA TAPING YES B- NO ? TAPE # -.L-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP ?EP E9• PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . O GOOD B- YES G- RCP O FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI O TC [3' LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST El' GOOD LR' BRICK O FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKSf?"'s?s?s R.cE?a °fn ?.?• DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL O FT.. M.H. # 0--- M.H. a M.H. -o M.H. DEPTH- DEPTH - • ' go,le - 1-4 rntAL O'cl,cj< ' o'cLvtK Z.4 L (P -7 ' .?? a s ;r •.a J • q 18 7 /?•}.?/fiLe ? .?? /S S .07 a ? Loc. " S. S - Q 1oJ.'e.? os _ .rnwn4LE ?. d S: 42Z y63 PO,JD; ?`. efictrY ",-I .. 6?_S >s?u[. ocLoc.e 7q,S O?J,?,({(sR q eBSt?7?A?`7 [L? v r F • Y • CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY OE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO -O CENTER OF M.H.'S SECTION LENGTH LF 315 LIX9 0(`31AMETER_IN Luke I'laccamaw 1994 CHI - SS RcllQVatlclllS 940530 0 m OF NORTH CAROLINA. INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT .CA?E?/Atc.o..xw OPERATORz?_» gjLec.__ur.,c SECTION RUN ja?,/ PROJECT 73ay /.Scaaed -INSPECTOR- DATE LOCATION?* •?•?Sy !b ?- STREET PrU.? VIDEO DATA TAPING YES Er NO O TAPE ll -LCOUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP [D- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC O GOOD 9- YES 9- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR O DI O TC a- LINER D M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST 9- GOOD 6' BRICK O FAIR O LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS Af17 DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES O NO ? 71/2',; PASS O FAIL ? FT. M.H. tI &_ M.H. N __ M.H. o M.H. DEPTH- DEPTH_ rp.w .r .,.?• ' iPO C r ' 71;7 cots • 8Y.7 ars ?'?h'c t?o,J ?oDFr•DiP:?P06 • y 4ra-rt vG 3 o' Lo c/C i iT o ?P s ?__ ?D.t?.?-. CEO ?oBSRt ? 'ol .r .r M Y J M CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUA"PION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S JAW L y LENGTHR_ LF 316 Lral:e Viaccamaw 1fi4 Ci11 - SS Renovations 940530 m C? 0 u 0 OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT, ZA<!E l?J?cL.M I OPERATOR:T%^?Ten- --LIN[ SECTION RUN PROJECT _72-ld SEt-c-x INSPECTOR- DATE // STREET 1+Plc _ , so ate,:, ,,,? VIDEO DATA ?8•? ors ' S ooT TAPING YES Er NO O TAPE N-.L000NTER Y8 Res TAPE SPEED SPOLPOEP[9- a.8 Xoo7s ' 8 ,2?Ts PIPE DATA P ooTs • 7 2- iQoo7 S TYPE COND. WATER ADD 77.E - rs PVC ? - .. da.y GOOD 6- YES Ea- RCP ? _97LJ??, 0„w6 FAIR ? NO Cl V C ? POO _ q?• y R O 01 0 _ ; ib oFfsFT /P?s TC p' LINER ? /? 8 T .tG, Y - Ro oTs M.H. DATA • dd?_- gco7-5 07-5 - TYPE _? .2 S/. a - hoar COND. 7/ o.?d:/b' oFf ET fs PR ' S. 3040 E007S ECAST Q GOOD Cam}- BRIC , 3/0.a moqo r5 l?Sipf,•o••1 rs :,16 K ? FAIR ? LINER ? POO O Roors, :/rtt?vofr'o.? R + IvlZO Pa,?D:n/,y REM 5'1^' zoors ARKS -/ /f A'Re'y /3 -' d ?G ?wT BLoc/c? J ii??Lt t, o,J - ?3S /loprs T :J 'L.-374 h'0A/ DEFLECTION TEST DATA S _ Roor3 woe /<q TESTING S% PASS ? - GG' E?4"°^ti6[F°'z c''Oa3Je'a'?trbr FAIL FT . YES ? 71/2% PASS ? - NO ? FAIL ? FT . M H # . . M.H. u Y M H M . . .H. DEPTH DEPT . H_ CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO CENTER OF M.H.'S JA, T? LENGTH LF 317 1 METER---, A CN1 - SS Renovations Lace acc CON1'INUA'fION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? NO -? 940530 ,am c Lf c OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT . 1-444V4z ,,l vt/ 0PERATOn T%n aq-T&7z.).INE SEC'rION RUN _4 70 4 _ PROJECT INSPECTOR DATE LOCATION STREET 0. cA? VIDEO DATA TAPING YES Q' NO O TAPE 9 -Z-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP p- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD 9- YES 19' RCP ? FAIR ? NO O VC O POOR O DI ? TC ll?l LINER ? M.H. DATA - TYPE COND. PRECAST C9- GOOD G- BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR O REMARKS/gZ" If/loas'll"*76w 'r/76•a"' Irit,4,14-2, ! /a. DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES O 71/20,. PASS O NO ? FAIL O Fl'. M.H.9 0- M.H. It --- M.H. -0 M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH_ • So b:,? ?na?/?zE ? ' wT3 oTs ifsCf fio.? » 1-472;"L o'cC ock ,f (e Zo73 9?ioY ft,.,rDiNb 09, b RooTS s --_ ,poor •,??? M.4 Y5 'a,/ Z? _ ,C,oT {? .J v?GGvGfC _ 9 T_s, ;•?Fi'C?ta 'owl _ s?. L ?' aru Fi2tic,rt,ba 417 297 /Z 4?6 ? 3 217 4ZL40sFD ±Ll79 P.vD:..s; of?SrfPY;'s 1. _?_ _r+fi'L?tofio.•? . . s _?L7Szo o.J ' all L7}Qijt/'bi! ? lrtJA? AJYa..? n.r. u of• ?fJB 7 : r b • i.??i'C?itA1?'I.I f P ?/ ? / ? IN fr'L?,Y Air/? . •' Go fa ?v S o.r .:?b CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION yia.v &4uW,o.. ?,E,oaBt r,/.a+ CON1'INUA'CION LOG SHEETS MAY OE USED 77-1 YES 0- MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S 318 LENGTH LF La aM ?i 9? CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 1 0 . 0 V OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT LOPERATon g'f_n I.-z-LINE SECTION RUN PROJECT Tzh???i,rc?z INSPECTOR _ DATE LOCATION ¢3g?°?dSC•?+"/7)_ STREET P«^/ VIDEO DATA TAPING YES B- NO ? TAPE a --L-r-OUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP C3EP [}- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD 19• YES C5- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC O POOR ? DI ? TC 8' LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST C9' GOOD Er BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS -ht"' sH•ws anEn '?i? OK7r Zr i_s d/.; DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. # 0__ M.H. It __ M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH- DEPTH_ .00..4 y rr ' S.u :r hbLE d ' .O ../Di??b' YE ' ? _ s.?/S'G fzo .J ' ?S ' !r'LfSaa h'o?/ ' S3 DTs 59 Gz• ? __ S.?Fi' eo b.J `JS /o //z °L_._ owls ;..fi'vhv?ie•/c,P?c,?e P,ft '• /?? J ^/F j 0?l a7, k 1 %?fitln b.J „ TZTZa L IcZ,c.C_ /.s XeTs ,1;16? {n.46lo d 70 " 7 G RacTs.?f?Gfiy? 'o./ ~ e7, DTs :rn' '? _ A L? ' [ ocK ?..iFi L1x.t/?'o.? ~ .1a S 16 Fs 'C a r?r'o..? ? / ? 1 s ?.•A;VV s - 4W5 v . L -fb.J .. 7t?la ?9L .rD:,rfs CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW OIRECTIO14 CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY OE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO -? CENTER OF M.H.'S ?? LENGTH LF 319 Lak a? ?}9S4 C141 - SS Renovations 990530 u,() OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT &,ee41fc4Vm4-1 OPERATOR,T--,6!5-T,::a_ LINE SECTION RUN 33r PROJECT _7ZVA/Sez/tfl INSPECTOR _ DATE LOCATION/?? 3.7 •? 7+ _ STREET 1°gcgj VIDEO DATA TAPING YES L9' NO Cl TAPE d -L-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SPOLP OEPC9- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . O GOOD C3- YES 6' RCP O FAIR ? NO ? VC O POOR ? DI TC LINER O M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST 19- GOOD 0- BRICK O FAIR O LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS Co?l%?wT/a?/ DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES O 7112eo PASS O NO O FAIL ? Fl'. M.H. a &_ M.H. # ___ M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH- ' ' ?C?oT?7to? 7 o?CLock ' a S?fiLfrtarSb,J ' G .r,,5G7?v,4 17'o,? L Z," b,? 1. M Y Y M M J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO ? CENTER OF M.H.'S T !LENGTH LF 320 940530 Lake Vlaccama y I?Y4 CNl - SS Renovations OF NORTH CAROLINA. INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT OPERATOR,91'%n6c57&--n- _ Uric SEC'fiON RUN //9,7 PROJECT 7-14? ? - INSPECTOR- DATE ,, ,,.a ., , d-- ?- - sr.-I %r IGO. Kf .--$ SjREET ? F - S o f:? ,rhGCF VIDEO DATA TAPING YES S NO ? TAPE It -1--]COUNTER ?g ocC/6 /-,;4; o,,z.,.k-r?pe TAPE SPEED SP ?LP ?EP C9- b Fi'C f,o•J PIPE DATA ' 6 S,r.Stfx.e'Sb•? TYPE COND. WATER ADD Q (,err e?0 oBS?rv?rbJ PVC O GOOD E3- YES S--' RCP ? - - FAIR ? NO O VC O PO OR ? DI ? - --- TC Er - LINER O M.H. DATA _ TYPE v - - - COND. PREC - AST C9 GOOD C? BRICK ? FAIR O LINER ? ' POOR ? „ Ic..' !. -s,9.Qc2 127 REMARK S DEFLECTION TEST DATA r TESTING 5% PASS O - FAIL O FT . YES ? 7 1120/; PASS O - NO ? FAIL ? FT . M H a . . M.H. ti 0----- 0 y M.H M H . . . DEPTH_ DEPTH _ CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW OIRECTIO14 L CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY DE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •O CENTER OF M.H.'S S4511 Q r LENGTH LF 321 E3PAMETE 940530 Lake Waccamaw 1994 CN1 - SS Renovations OES06G S1101113A01J01( SS - NO bJ?1 ii3i3wv ? ?i' ZZE dl H1JN3l Il? S.'H'W d0 831N30 ?• ON Ol a31N30 WObd 1N3W3unSV3V4 ? S3Jl 03sn 30 ?VVI S133HS 001 NOIj.vnNI.LN00 N01103>310 MOId 13AVH1 Vb3wv0 "-"H1d30 '-H1d30 .H'N 0 H w -- N 'H'W --o 4 'HI N '.Ld O liVd ? ON O SSVd %Z/1 L ? S3A '1J O IIVd ? SSVd %S ONUS31 VIVO LS31 N011031d30 SNbVW3b ? a00d . ? d3Njl ? i11Vd ? NOIdB -] 0000 -7 1SV0311d '0NO0 3dAl V.LV0 'HM ? U3NIl -D 01 ? 10 ? U00d ? OA ? ON ? UIVd o d08 fi7 S3A .Q 0000 ? - OAd 00V H31VM 0N00 3dA.L V.LV0 3did -h] d30 d10 dS 033dS 3dVl d31Nf100-7-- # 3dVl 0 ON -S S3A E)NIdVl r N4'?9oQn?B???7gy,vQv? ?'L'Z7 V1V0 0301A 6/p i79Y iwp .Zt- 03`- ooy j 133UIS NOUVOOl 31V0 - U0103dSNI 1031'oLld NnU N01103S 3Jdl'I '"ka139?,t+' UOlVd3d0 r+b »uj,? 1N3110 JOB N0I109dSNI 3dld U010 81N00 ONINV310 ivausnONl ONI 'dN1703d0 HltlON 30 o ,?L ii,,1?1 ?.''r?ii 0 ?mo OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT ?A.?CFtc/acc.yn?.1.? OPERATOR --7,-;Gf7-eqz.-?_?t•IC SECTION RUN .273.. - PROJECT 7aN'?SRrc? INSPECTOR _ DATE STREET-Zn 7Z?r 4-,-1° VIDEO DATA TAPING YES ET NO ? TAPE # --L-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP ?EP CO- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . O GOOD 1!1' YES Q' RCP ? FAIR ? NO O VC O POOR ? DI ? TC E?- LINER O M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Q-- GOOD ET" BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR O REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING So/. PASS O FAIL O FT. YES O 7112% PASS O NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. a &- M.H. n --- M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH_ rwr.u .. ' S, o .orJd -e /03 _ A O W& o ELock. Z27, 1/ 0 .? /110 At ' 8 Ea'? ??v..ifbCe: '? D oB3 Ezr nv f? v n n h Y Y r N J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO .? CENTER OF M.H.'S ?P,jI? LENGTH LF 323 I t:?`{j'IAMETER,99N Lake Claccamaw 1' J9 CTI1 - SS Renovations 990530 m M900 OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT .4g/lr" y?.au,v..,ArJ OPERATOR-22,n5?f7e7L__1.11•IE SECTION RUN 220,1 PROJECTS Sept INSPECTOR DATE ?LOU/? ?K roor.c. ??+• . ? xWC STREET - ,4 0 ?.,•..+ .?.r?hbCc ?i7 VIDEO DATA -T-2-- firlh%,-l TAPING YES [9' NO O /S. ya,? TAPE # -L-COUNTER ,moo i TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP M- PIPE DATA .7 r b,? ' &5 - .J TYPE COND. WATER ADD ?0, 7 F,Y PVC O GOOD & YES SI- RCP ? FAIR O NO ? VC ? P -= °s a6 OOR ? 01 O 0, 7 -- [ vWoW TC CY - Dm h4[t? sr?v a LINER ? M.H. DATA - TY +r - PE COND. ? P - RECAST Q GOOD 9- BR , - ICK O FAIR ? LINE ' , r R ? POOR O REM ARKS „ DEFLECTION TEST DATA " TESTING 5% PASS O -- - FAIL O FT . YES O 71/2% PASS ? NO O FAIL ? Fl' " . y M H 11 ? . . M.H. It 0---- o M H . . M.H. DEPTH DEPT ___. H_ CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW OIRECTIO14 MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO CENTER OF M.H.'S g ?jTI LENGTH LF L 1?g AMETI W j4 CP11 LaKe " accan a CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY DE USED YES O NO i:l 324 - SS Renovations 940530 m OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR LOCATION 7-° S ARC _ STREET?li- c"/ VIDEO DATA PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT4 e,-,Z4ctoilfAV OPERATOR .n •JE SECTION RUN PROJECT _Tv/? ?'?wr?2 INSPECTOR DATE ( 01a) TAPING YES E3 NO O TAPE # --J--COUNTER TAPE SPEED SPOLPOEPC9- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . O GOOD & YES 8' RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR O DI O TC L9--l LINER O M.H. DATA i _ ?. TYPE COND. PRECAST L?- GOOD Er BRICK ? FAIR O LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL ? FT.. YES ? 71/2% PASS O NO O FAIL O FT. M.H. N 0-- M.H. n -- M.H. o M.H. DEPTH- DEPTH_ Ioer.v ..r ?,.,. AW, ' ?z v/1'o,? 7-'17'L .? fiLttotio.? 774, E? fit?.,f//o.? ' l11r? -? 'o.J _ __ s? S.?FiLyk.Ifi•n? _ 176 _ T1Fi7fAa oi? Ir /O. _ _?Ly?Afloi? .? S T-?Fi%?fJo.J _..cZ?O _ .?_?EL?f%o.J A Y -" Y Y p 11 J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION I.OG SHEETS MAY OE USED YES ? ?- MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO. NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S SECTION LENGTH _LF 325 IMM UAMETER_IN Luke lVaccamaw 1994 CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR LOCATION - ct/ STREET-&L-z5 VIDEO DATA PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT 1-71<'E' War-c4m lpJ OPERATOR .,7/'a &rd-___LINE SECTION RUN _3_03.0 PROJECT ?2w,' S? rL INSPECTOR DATE TAPING YES Q' NO (D TAPE # I OUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP C`••3' PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD Q- YES Q- RCP O FAIR ? NO ? VC O POOR ? DI O TC C, LINER ? M.H. DATA _ TYPE COND. PRECAST Cll-' GOOD Q' BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER O POOR O REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES ? 71/2',; PASS ? NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. a &_ M.H. It __ M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH___. ' _ 2rFi. T 6,J ' FiZ b,•/ • •L o,J ' O • (LO Rao 3'""16 ;7,4 a I -- 117 eor fiL b,J .127 stn r ,' A o.J _ S .ter 7Yo,4 IV7 __ _?_? s i??fi'Lfx?th'? /82- c?xvL o IrLo ^ yz a s -";f 4 o,J ??68, a s :?Fi't?hAf io?J ,30 .o _ r'.vOr•?.eas?u??F D BJFavA b?/ - J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY DE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO O CENTER OF M.H.'S SECTION LENGTH LF 326 OYPPE AMETE 1c! 940530 Lake Waccamaw 1994 CN1 - SS Renovations 'A() mil m OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT ,?g?ECVAUA? OPERATORz7%+7657-,-7z- LINE SECTION RUN 63.0 PROJECT 7`acr,? Seaieyt INSPECTOR _ DATE LOCATION-2:2--am STREET f,* I _ VIDEO DATA TAPING YES CQr NO ? TAPE N -"COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP ?EP C9' PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD (9- YES & RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC a, LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Q' GOOD 9- BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS O NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. # M.H. It &---0 M.H. M.H. DEPTH- DEPTH-. 63 n w ,I CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUA'(ION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S 327 ?,?-pflft! LENGTH LF 1,&g Qj)y'd5jFPvA-WU4 CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 L/ OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT Z-41&544 14raW OPERATOR T?,65r-?x _LINE SECTION RUN J/o,S_ PROJECT ns/w -5aw&.. INSPECTOR DATE 3) LOCA I ION x.77 /0 ?.tzll. ?ellll STREET qRD _ VIDEO DATA TAPING YES CET' NO ? TAPE 4 -L--COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP ?EP C9- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD e- YES Q' RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? 01 ? TC E? LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST &- GOOD 9-? BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES ? 7 1/2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. q M.H. It M.H. M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH_ reer.u .....?? =NFfcfrza a/ ' a F, 14 ' ??Fi LfttArS b,? 0- r a s .P--7 /s/9.4 RcoTs ? .?coTs _ .ic1?fA.aYoLEd.ZS?x?o 5-mv4h-b-I .r M 1 Y Y Y Ir -- Y CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY DE USED --- -- YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S ?P,V?g LENGTH?_ LF 328 Lake Waceamaw 1 4 Cell - SS Renovations 940530 Tm- I() 0 OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT I Lyocca?nq../ OPERATOR_ZL7.i c t.__I.Ir•iC SECTION RUN _1/00•7 _ PROJECT 7?w,? 3ca•?+t INSPECTOR DATE LOCATIONm??'??G?`od>-tcai¢/3_ STREET VIDEO DATA TAPING YES (9 NO ? TAPE # --L-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP ?EP Cl- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD Er YES 6' RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC 21 LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST 2' GOOD Er BRICK ? FAIR O LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES O 7112% PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. a &- M.H. If -- M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH_ .1 ,00,.4 Mr.rO ' 0724 oa s ' q1. 9 IPov7-3 ? s ?h' .vhoN ' G Z• JO 1_ ' a9rs • h'c/nafi'o,J Z ?rl ?ooT " 2 iQvOrS " /_Z ?ATc?q a7 d'cLvc/? /SP s " ? A ? ,aL v? cK ,64 70r440 .3 dlceoc.?,- Ago j,54 y 'C T -l "V J -4 MZ? G gn',yI [s - A0 o? ' a 7 t fin/ 1?c?h41E? `/ rid aQ 'O J n w Y M Y Y M Y J 4 CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SIICETS MAY OC USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO ? CENTER OF M.H.'S ?$?j??N LENGTH LF 329 L I IAMETEF?? Lake ??laccamaty 11N CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 0 O L/ OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT. tdacc.o OPERATOR?'L-_._I.IIlCSECTION RUN 9;z,/(o_ PROJECT 7'yc- m/ -j`etwa7t- INSPECTOR _ N DATE LOCATION !r ?`??' 2 (Xk-cm'1?3) STREET VIDEO DATA 73 TAPING YES O NO O TAPE 9 -L--COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP OEP B- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC ? GOOD C- YES 0- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR O DI ? TC C? LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST C-' GOOD IlK BRICK ? FAIR O LINER O * POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING Sad, PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS Cl NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. b M.H. d 0----o M.H. M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH_ LL. i CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY OE USED YES ? NO -O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO CENTER OF M.H.'S fi)o LENGTH LF 330 La Q)ft ?gw--HU4 Crll - SS Renovations 940530 O a OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CL I ENT 44. ll,?P ce-4 .r79-? OPERATO f1 :/?p Gc7??2 __I.ItJE SECTION RUN PROJECT 2-Al/ .Ss-twee INSPECTOR- r DATE L0CAT10N/n*^??{°?° r-m'i3) STREET o iriw.?h6GF ,?? -S fiCtnafi°"? VIDEO DATA 97a z !_wTb-,e.oL P_ 4 v'cLvice TAPING YES Iff NO ? 1711 Fit e,+ TAPE u -JLCOUNTEFI Iaq 1"4-,VA4cr V'01 TAPE SPEED SP ?LP ?EP C}- ' 34 eo-pj?,CY PIPE DATA 37z 86.73. iIF,[}zafi'o.J TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . O GOOD Cs- YES ?- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC O POOR ? DI ? TC Lgl? LINER O M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST C' GOOD 01' BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES O NO ? 71/2% PASS O FAIL ? FT. M.H. N 0_ M.H. h __ M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH- DEPTH_ CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY OE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO -? CENTER OF M.H.'S ( N LENGTH LF 331 1 }IP?ISa;VAv-jyh Cell - SS Renovations 940530 M0 OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR LOCATION-w /?/?6 6 l FU i3) STREET?f VIDEO DATA TAPING YES C9' NO ? TAPE a--1-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP OEP Cg- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD C YES (9- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC 91 LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Q- GOOD [9- BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT.Gc.(?Elypcu,rmn<? OPERATOR Z _ I.It•1E SECTION RUN n-8 _ PROJECT T?•??'n- INSPECTOR- DATE d TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71/2",a PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT. 0--- - M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH_ IOOI.CI M..r? ?LO aN - I ' J? ? s77 ' vV //7 /59 72-eaL ?7tvL a? out ' ? 9G, g - ? L6 D iBSrxvlsfib? Y T F r r H M J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S §VQT(ZN LENGTH LF 332 Lf (c IXdbigTKRw-1-994 CN1 - SS Renovations 990530 OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT,,(??l- c.omw.? OPERATOR.7,/--6F73 __I.INE SECTION RUN o?,y'//_ PROJECT 72-1-5-2ye2t INSPECTOR DATE LOCATION/?1? 7x6 ?A¢c? /3) STREET-4aV _ VIDEO DATA TAPING YES F=r NO D TAPE # -L-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP DLP DEP a PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD E;- YES CL RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC Q-? LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Cg-' GOOD 14- BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING S% PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES ? 71I2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. # 0--- M.H. # -- M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH_ CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO ? CENTER OF M.H.'S N LENGTH LF 333 TER V/accara aw Luke 1,lacc=4j Ctll - SS Renovations 940530 0 . ?_ OF NORTH CAROLINA,'INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT.e4:2? Gc! gw OPERATOfI.:;/?,&-Vzx _-ur1E SECTION RUN Z-Zy?_ PROJECT 72-W -5c r INSPECTOR DATE LOCATION m /--ze -- 3y/3z_ STREET VIDEO DATA TAPING YES C' NO O TAPE # -1 COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP ED- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADO PVC . ? GOOD Q- YES & RCP ? FAIR O NO O VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC Ca' LINER O M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Q- GOOD El- BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES O 7 1/2 14 PASS O NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. # &- M.H. R -- M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH- IOOI.t. is v .a .,w/,4LE ? afW ' fiGt?ev fi o.+ -qT.I/ 7a7za L o 44 k 13 ? o ?cLa C 44izx4 1, r.., 3 oic_[.o _ v M Y Y M Y J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW OIRECTION CONTINUA'T'ION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO fl CENTER OF M.H.'S SECTION LENGTH LF LID940IAMETER-IN 334 Lake Waccamaw 1994 Cidl - SS Renovations 940530 f`. f Sq 7 .591 \ 1\ i °' ,r ?? ? P.6 0 in15 ch-mites 3l, \ 31 s f{1{ICS .. ?/ i'i. ,,- t?SO•,,i? \\ \?" 0.) ' ? . . ?F ,•{. 9'y ?,,a.0,' 1q5t , L119405 335 Lake lVaccamaty 1994 C111 - SS Renovations 940530 OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR LOCATION iv -m STREET t?/ooOA:?E VIDEO DATA PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT /laKE*94za#,? OPERATOR2_%n 6fT2f- _,I.INE SECTION RUN Yzj/s PROJECT _7P-J-' .Se-o-Zt- INSPECTOR- DATE ?? ? ( ass) TAPING YES (Er NO O TAPE N - 'it COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP ?EP CS' PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC ? GOOD C9- YES 123?- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC O POOR O DI ? TC IB' LINER O M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Q-- GOOD fD- BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. # 0-- M.H. It -- M.H. o M.H. DEPTH___. DEPTH_ - 7 aors a air ' ;?T l! • 3, ooT 46,1 voT /I i G v. 1 • p ?r7 Pow i?t>,off 0,&-5 • / _ G o ELoeK 78 .3"aS .?L1?/6 SCCfC?- ??ND o t>ifl,J n h A M Y Y Y r r „ M J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H: S L!pg6pN LENGTH LF 336 La :!f?&,M ,T&-j"JN CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 TE901-0 0 OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT ?Ew?U OPERATOR I.INE SECTION RUN 3a. PROJECT 7-0-4d-5-we7z- INSPECTOR- _ DATE STREET-A%- 7?n. ,P IS VIDEO DATA TAPING YES C!r NO ? TAPE M 2-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP OEP C9' PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC ? GOOD 9- YES 0- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC O POOR O DI ? TC 0-11 LINER O M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Cg-- GOOD 19" BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES ? 7112% PASS O NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. # 0-- MH. It -- M.H. o M.H. DEPTH- DEPTH- 4tdA, S7 4G ' Z_ u'c10 L 'd ' 33 Gritral o ELOc e. 7 to . "romiL 17 o -cLocK ,?pi,? • "'SST ifs o S o,?D,;?y Chi`s P.:°?s S E?S,ra,J i??il?x?'i o? ?S S__ T L o'c.Lc.C/G ?F3•?9 _ inaaf ?. ? 0&fl v o••/ N 1 N r w 11 M J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY GE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO O CENTER OF M.H.'S q N LENGTH LF 337 I,a7 e caccan zw4 NCNI - SS Renovations' 940530 V0 O OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT ?C u/?x w?? OPERATOR.T%slGcT?L_._._LlNE SECTION RUN PROJECT Zpui./z,iCn, INSPECTOR?? _ DATE LOCATION_ ,rAy.e -, J_'J STREET ?191AD VIDEO DATA TAPING YES CB?NO ? TAPE d -COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP ?EP (9- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC ? GOOD Cpl- YES E' RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC E., LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Q- GOOD CV BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. q &_ M.H. K __ M.H. _0 M.H. DEPTH- DEPTH. S '" FiG ?1ioA/ ' 14#4 fj'L q 1110AI ' Z%77'0 ?CIO 0 ? oN0 J of oc% .ss ,? G- 'PEs O f LG 3 6WD oB scu vaf? D r M J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO -? CENTER OF M.H.'S SECTION LENGTH LF 338 LIVAWDIAMETER_IN 940530 Lake Waccamaw 1994 CN1 - SS Renovations 0 .,o OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT ?'?W??-9?7A4? OPERATOn,--,, ".?rL._I.lr-JE SECTION RUN (Z,2/,-5_ PROJECT 7"own/ 6--- /e7L. INSPECTOR- _ DATE , LL, 391-t ztc STREET /244-72x -,v iQvat? VIDEO DATA TAPING YES Q' NO O TAPE H --k COUNTER TAPE SPEED SPOLPOEP[9- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC ? GOOD G1, YES G- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC 0- LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Q- GOOD 0- BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS 72dk u.r/.+?AIGEI) /J'?A//-?(tL.C,..yTr*r•o.?fi?LC?? DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES O 7 1/2% PASS ? NO O FAIL ? FT. M.H. # 0-- M.H. # --- M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH- _ 1pp1.G/ y?.r. J-7/ v tve- K kv7z7oi Z C9 .3- ' 1 if0 /fS ?Di•v P P? s 6G 6azE? ?. ?..c?:.b-• Fr 7P.F?s a1! _- ,?? 3? orfsE?P.?s - /iy ' ?.arFxo 3VL o/?Di/?ls ofr c iP?-s S/Z d57 ?..ll?//?b 983 _?Na;•/6-, oFryoTPif?S v /+D;r? s P s J8 G?vs/kD P' g-Nv L4rc-h?47 ?0^/ " ,;X l6s Y14 7 Fi' onl J N Y - u Y r r N N J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S dd,, N LENGTH LF 339 Lake aIAMETwR-7? JNCN1 - SS P.enovations' 940530 O -a () OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENTS u/Ae44m4w OPERATOR_:e c7_i?? Ge %c ?L I.It•1E SECTION RUN a97,E _ PROJECT ?4v.?aic?Tt INSPECTOR- DATE LOCATIONS F-. ? s-ew _ STREET W- tY $,Y VIDEO DATA TAPING YES Er NO ? TAPEN -COUNTER TAPE SPEED SPpLPOEPQ- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC O GOOD Q- YES 0- RCP ? FAIR O NO ? VC ? POOR ? 01 O TC C31, LINER O h1.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST 13-'GOOD @-' BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES ? 7I/2% PASS O NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. d 0-- M.H. M -- M.H. o M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH_ • _ /Zo L o'?Luc.? a o w ?? • 0, Sfo/o S U.? waT? T G b,4 a o? .. mr? 'G afio.? 0 cov? C'o /2 A: 551W /< -- rfi'Gt uyYYo.d ZR f'o /JZ ?o,??/.? ? _ T??c+G Q 4 o'cLocx 47 o'cLocK n s D ink D eTt y v n Y F Y Y M Y J 4 CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •O CENTER OF M.H.'S SECTION LENGTH LF 340 LIVPPE5 DIAMETER- IN - Lake Cdaccamaw 1994 C111 - SS P.enovations 940530 % o =`-OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT 1-4KF 41-<4Am.4-/ OPERATOII71;.Gq2w-.-I.INC SECTION RUN 194,1 PROJECT 7`d?N SJG INSPECTOR - DATE LOCATION 8?'0'?9 SjREET C'R%?vTa- VIDEO DATA TAPING YES Lam}' NO O TAPE d -2-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP (9- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . O GOOD (- YES 0- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI O TC 0-1 LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST &` GOOD 9- BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES O 71/2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. a &- M.H. H -- M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH_ ? on'lj„?b O'7?sc?? cs cv '' L.rTc`KaG ' Aboz? • ?_ flTs sefol-zz 1/5 - ? 4 7FZ. u^?c-xw ,? 743rA ibJ 1&,A 9 - 70 oor b,J _ 8o --- 8 ./ .?v4n?a?A4alf °o b.J Y Y r Y r Y J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO fl CENTER OF M.H.'S LwFfp ON LENGTH LF 341 La]:2 aaccamaEv?PjU9 NCN1 - SS Renovations' 940530 m Llr OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT 1-AZ &4;L- 4-a OPERATOR -;,7,-;,, ?Tr?Z_ -I.It1E SECTION RUN 1701 PROJECT INSPECTOR _ DATE LOCATION -: ? 9'/o /s? STREET JL.t7z"I?Q.%? VIDEO DATA TAPING YES a NO ? TAPE tt COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP G- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD B- YES 5- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR O DI ? TC all LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST 0-' GOOD &--' BRICK O FAIR ? LINER ? • POOR O REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. tt &- M.H. it --- M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH_ reo?.u .,...mss ' Gg ,? 'rfr u wg7?2. .S 3 -77 b.J ' ' a6,S a ? b.J .ter ;r-S' fb„/ ' S s ' FGfxo 'v.?LATFxaG • ?? ?oTs ;,,?FiZtkoyS6?I a. r?,s?NkE Rio, ?DoBse?zua ' v h r » h J t CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION ?? CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO 'Cl CENTER OF M.H.'S SS §?$N LENGTH LF 342 accamap--MV CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 Lake L F NORTH CAROLINA. INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG SMOO° CLIENT, IWL4 /.,acL-«n OPERATOf1?m6e7d-9z --LINE SECTION RUN _6V PROJECT T.??x- INSPECTOR DATE LOCATION e=-/r- rV cc?s /5) STREET?°v?L?'I?r•: VIDEO DATA TAPING ES (Sr NO O TAPE MOUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP Ei- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC ? GOOD (!I- YES 0- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC C31, LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST 8' GOOD 0--- BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING $% PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES ? 7112% PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. # 0-- M.H. II -- M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH____ DEPTH_ So :/ a? Lcd/O • •?F+[.?W 'or1 All 6e"7 I-1r74-bWHVlj ' 5 RaoT :?nLfta o,? ?aDT3 r/Fj'L /ioA?'o,J FS S? Div _ /QS Gl? v T O o?cGoc.? • l L 3 o'CLoc4 ?- ,¢o ii?lr ?aTac.4L -= ?8L- d?7a-.v - aBsr-nva b.J Y M u u -- N J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY OE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO fl CENTER OF MA'S SON LENGTHH LF 343 Lake VaeeamTa Fw 19J4NCtII - SS Renovations 940530 m 0 OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT 44? a/.?cA*?? ! OPERATon --=m(5c_-mz- __ LINE SECTION RUN y7/. z PROJECT 7•0-?^/ -T &-z-z?-Z- INSPECTOR _ DATE LOCATION LL .,-xy L-- ;e.- ,) STREETSTJec-zr VIDEO DATA TAPING YES La' NO O TAPE If -1-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP C}- , PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC O GOOD (Y YES C;- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC 21? LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST e?- GOOD L9' BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS O NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. # 0-- M.H. H -- M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH.- DEPTH-. s,o ? d ' S 7'0 -79 41X,19ZW..4Cr6ZL ' {2 7A ; ' ? FiG b^t .ensio..! • .? y? V? '. G9??7L rrd? .. 9 .f E- _ o2?n ?1pG U-? - 7f,?__ Om bhL.Ea o sr-? b.J h M ¦ Y M M J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW OIRECTIO14 CONTINUA*nON LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO ? CENTER OF M.H.'S CT ION LENGTH LF 344 LC?i Lake Waccamaw 1J'J4NCt71 - SS Renovations 940530 m V OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT. .CAllEC?hcc.?+n.?W OPERATOR rn-_-LINE SECTION RUN PROJECT _???n INSPECTOR- DATE LOCATION/??0?? ?7a,.?r*L STREET VIDEO DATA TAPING YES Er NO O TAPE n -COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP a PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD 0- YES - RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC 21 LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST L- GOOD LR' BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING S% PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES ? 71I2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. a M.H. n M.H. M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH. SYlo 69 Ll ?yazw4T??z ' ?T.B TFZ.oL?7 /? v?Loc.?? cfr gas wp ' o v /Fi( q 17i'd .. LtE?/89 d ?. y - Y Y r r 1. J 11 CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY DE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO ? CENTER OF M.H.'S SE TI N LENGTH LF 345 109V VNIETER._IN 940530 Lake I9accamaiv 1994 Ctll - SS Renovations Ju. 07 h VV . Inch-miles 1 P 4.51 1 J !ll) :? .• X39 . ' hM °, v , h.o'i a 0 % A-L 17 y F S•g 1.3 Inch-miles • /i f ° ' • v ?t. .. ; IN O ```t l< 0 ' LVI9405 346 940530 "' Lake Waccamaw 1994 CPI1 - SS Renovations cr:r? L? ? OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENTI-4ke- e-*c-4,9w OPERATOR --70," f??. -LINE SECTION RUN .??3 PROJECT s?'-n INSPECTOR- DATE Z' ,.*-:t /,Atr?i?/`L LOCATIONS °?rL STREET_??43 VIDEO DATA TAPING YES ['r NO ? TAPE d -+I-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP OEP G - PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC ? GOOD COY YES 9- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC 0- LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Er GOOD R- BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING . 5% PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. d M.H. d M.H. M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH- ' T3 ?fi• yy'oi? i•O eT1? ` Go7?'?z?vG ` Rr?l't9GSE1? Go-++r?L4 ?`o .e ..? /??.n .3 ? .Z s T s ;IE?o7-s 9 y- _` rj?Z._ o•¢ - ? ?CLoCK ?vl?aaTs o ? cam' O bd n A r r H Y CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S SECTION LENGTH LF LWg4l gIAMETER-IN 347 Lake Waccamaw 1994 CN1 - SS Renovations s!Oa • L A 940530 0 V OF NORTH CAROLINA. INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPEINSPECTION LOG CLIENT, .Gy C!E u/,vcc a g?./ OPERATOR .-v';;nlxTE7Z- _I.It•1C SECTION RUN PROJECT INSPECTOR _ DATE LOCATIONZ&L/fs¢3 c?+/6)_ STREET --Z---5 _ VIDEO DATA TAPING YES Q' NO ? TAPE b --+5-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP OEP p- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC ? GOOD 13? YES 14- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC ®' LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Q-- GOOD 19' BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES ? 7 1/20,o PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. u 0-- M.H. It -- M.H. o M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH IOp1.4( y rr. ' Xcc Ts • 4.4 l5? 4- o ' 93 ?xaL o%tnc ' o /33 Cacr-? _ 13') c+T • /So I- 47z;wL. t z a 14a,075.1 -//7 .. a $ _ %r?Zrfzahb? _ s •• a2??-- ?Zfxss/ib?1 hbd ?. o.S_. .Zo ?.L L ?F,Cf„QAyr,J ? ?frZr`n,?i3,? ?? N/S?G1FtA7?j 0 ? 977 r cr1",i" fj0 ?? - . A bIV » 0 & 414 b,./ » Y CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION (-? CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED L-- YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO -? CENTER OF M.H.'S J?CT]gy LENGTFH?,? LF 348 Yfild Lake t?Waccama v 19' 4 Ctll - SS Renovatioins 940530 ? m T OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. Ts INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT?Ea4d::? -OPERATOR/7-'- SECTION RUN 396:/_ PROJECT 76-1,y z? INSPECTOR- DATE "y STREET -I VIDEO DATA -- TAPING YES 0' NO ? S?`f F;?,x,4fio.? TAPE #-•d---COUNTER ;?ti'Gfxob;114 TAPE SPEED SP ?LP OEP CD- S.V ,Z r7iG ow ' -Jylt,?g 'r?r?D„'6 PIPE DATA o'GLQc-/< TYP E COND. WATER ADD " ? ?'Lfrtalyo.J PVC ? - ai r?nrvL J o'ctvt.?C GOOD L9 YES 0' RCP ? FAIR ? J?-['f7 ?o.?A%?F NO Cl VC ? PO = ny* L- ??v4- OR ? 0 TC all _ 17S AwD,.v6 LINER O n__ ?.QO/E?id rtL • At!Loc_fM 1>0 o OV 716 Yt 73 M.H. DATA _ z:--r Z: z 1 L TYPE -- I COND. 1 PRE ' CAST Q GOOD Er BRICK , ova. ? ,? S•e,',u o,? ? FAIR Cl LIN Po.?J)? i? ER ? POOR ? r ,b 62 D,?? REMARKS _' 3 ?CA7taz?.L 13 0' / ot C' _ r -- /o A4veG Liz /S?v_ _,?D?' r. DEFLECTION TEST DATA = /Y;x ?fiG o.J TESTING S% PASS ? -- SG gTc?toL c? FAIL O FT . YES ? 7 1/2PASS ? 82 ?Tbrvl o'tlc? NO ? FAIL CFT ? '/ ?'+ c7vt)of . M H 11 M 1. . . .H. It M.H M H . . . DEPTH___ DEPTH _ ._ UAMEHA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO CENTER OF M.H.'S SECTION LENGTH LF 349 W JOFAMETER_..IN Lake Waccamaw 1994 CN1 - SS Renovations CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY OE USED YES ? NO -O 940530 Inm m OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT LAlIElc7,g?cnm cl OPERATOR im(zJOL LINE srcTloN RUN 371, _ PROJECT 7Z-IN.-kZvc7t. INSPECTOR _ DATE L7 •? ""' ? STREET // VIDEO DATA ' O fjoi? TAPING YES L9' NO O C ? v' L TAPE # --J-COUNTER .3 7, /0 TAPE SPEED SP OLP ?EP Q- 44zG PIPE DATA 67(, G?Se b,J T YPE COND. WATER ADD 77, r7t1"a11>10 .? PVC ? ?5?93 GOOD Ei- YES 6- RCP ? FAIR ? -?-- ^? G,seafnJ NO ? VC ? POO R ? DI ? /z , iFi'Lfn b,J TC B' f3?_ Fi2 o7ic, / LINER ? 3?_ [75ro f' 0"1 ' 7?-- h'L?ngfioJ M.H. DATA _ ?3 _ rFiLYStq}1'v,J TYPE COND. /l?P h' f?7'io,J PRE ' CAST E? GOOD &- BRICK ? ? 3 s' FAIR ? LINER fd?d ? POOR ? LL REMAR KS DEFLECTION TEST DATA - 'aNo?? TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL O FT . YES ? 71/2°x: PASS ? !?cs?7Yo? NO ? FAIL ? FT d'a . " 3,1W? iL7 V ' M H # aot ' 1f? . . M.H. # s 374E 47vr 04PcR,*,- 3 D ??O A3 y' M H M . . .H. DEPTH__ DEPT __ H CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO CENTER OF M.H.'S S,E,?IQ LENGTH LF 11pp?1p '(?? $METER_?9 C1I1 .ake accamaw CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY DE USED YES ? NO -Cl 350 - SS Itcnovations 940530 m ti OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. ' ' J10 INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT. W7Cc ";W-1 0PERAT0 Rn7:%n G?TErL _I.ItIE SEC'(ION RUN 36 z-_ PROJECT Tc??? ?c??- INSPECTOR DATE LOCATION mA•`?'?6? Cyr/?) STREET -d VIDEO DATA TAPING JES 0' NO O TAPE # -COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP C9' PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD D- YES 8- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC CQ1? LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Er GOOD C` BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR O REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71I2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. # 0- M.H. # --- M.H. o M.H. DEPTH- DEPTH- ' ' fi Lf?Y,a 'oi./ ' FAG Afj bi? ' Z'.? FiLfr.•gfi b,J G3 '" Fi'G 'o.J 7?rt a'ctoe& ~ ? yyo 1:5 -- FiC?i2A?1a^? gas ?^,.. , o,? w4l .?Q.L_. ?r_frGrhgfioi? n ,. 'oto3uo ;,, „ ,:L ?D 3la7 r Y Y N J r CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY DE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO ? CENTER OF M.H.'S I LENGTH LF 351 METER?r??4 CN1 - SS Renovations sake accama? 940530 O V OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT..?ictCCGc?iccomhtw OPERATon,7,-,,(5;F7&-.-I.II.lE SECTION RUN _-yo0_ PROJECT -/-ZL^' -5621E L INSPECTOR DATE LOCATION /j ?,u,GE?'4/ S /6) _ STREET VIDEO DATA TAPING YES a NO 0 TAPE # -" COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP ?EP [a PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD B' YES 2- RCP ? FAIR ? NO Cl VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC 6r LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST C' GOOD BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING S'/o PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71/2% NO ? PASS FAIL ? ? FT. M.H. a 0- M.H. a -- M.H. o M.H. DEPTH. DEPTH_ ' _ ,;r 1n'qw1&L'-'a-54 ' W7_ 7/ fu 1. /Fi b,J -61A . -^'FiGT32.afi • !Oa '? Fi[a5eo?i?c.J /Jsfo _5/3 4D-;V6- - A'Z&44b11 G0f9/V7 WDiV6- r 76 A, _/8Z • / 9 9 _ L O ?cLac e ate.- ??[?5eofib,J - _ w i ?G ., - Sd?iCxofi o.J " S G b,l ' 311 -/b 3SO ?.?Di !s .Cgl?esL o cL /k'v. ?Virtr,,,?Eyf ??, Br0 a8s?t v»?1on1 Y M J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHECTS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S SJ;Q lp%LENGTH LF 352 Ejf Dft 7?i?n4 CPI1 - SS Renovations 940530 m smg-c OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE.INSPECTION LOG CLIENT. /?KrkACYAm?4u/ OPERATOR :y,ir?6Z-/Z3L__I.INE SECTION RUN c7o6,3 PROJECT -n-W "n- INSPECTOn - DATE LOCATI%.j114 G ?aS cx?/6? STREET ,rg?65 _ VIDEO DATA TAPING YES E3' NO ? TAPE k -d-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP ?EP C9- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . O GOOD L?' YES - RCP ? FAIR ? NO O VC ? POOR ? DI O TC [a- LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST 0?GOOD 0- BRICK ? FAIR O LINER ? ' POOR O REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL FT. YES ? 7 1/2^,; PASS ? NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. W 0- M.H. If - M.H. -0 M.H. DEPTH____ DEPTH_.. _S'o ? m ,?6t6s 88.E G?z?r 'a,/ QA f/ • 9j2- aaG r ?eT rL •• D/rirr/ Ca ? sf?.?X??v,J v M M M J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW OIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO -? CENTER OF M.H.'S SECTION LENGTH LF 353 ITt1'rW UAMETER_ IN Lake Waccal7aly 1994 CPI1 - SS Renovations 940530 AM, ' ?• ' 3S Z3bg ?'...?.` ? , . .Lim .. . 17 :?: ' f GG./ : 83 vim, `> h9 ,' ?yc •• Xo soS,.y a77 ! • 17?' _ . P g #? l7 J 5o ?qo? ?°.,' s,o,, ;? i ' • ' ' ?.? } C>%' "al•k 1 ?\? ` ??w ' 9 ,, ?t ii'i' y ,? f 'A. a o • t't P . ? ? ?) J , ??+? ? ? v ` ','< O ° ? ` et 4 T7 t, ' I T • t i ` .... ' ' i L 4 ` JO pt? ta ,., i ? • ? J,44b • ; ' t ? -; 3 3 ?? ? . ?,S a ? ,x, ?•.?. ? t fry t ?•a , 111.11 V 4'ir 003 l7]?.StLr ;. "Ar•a»x 11I"ra ' ire 0 1 1??r aa?9p .; 1 .r a??94 JAS tip fG3 LVI9405 354 Lake Waccamaw 1994 C1.11 - SS Renovations 940530 m Am OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT _/.i9Kc'4,4CCWVOPERATOR,,,?l,,m.?F?_I,It-ic SECTION RUN _3Zgy PROJECT 7A"4 Sc'wc?Z I SPECTOR _ DATE LOCATION a/??_ ?QC? _ STREET VIDEO DATA TAPING L1.YES L? NO CI TAPE # ---COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP ?EP (D- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC O GOOD 9- YES 04- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC @- LINER O M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST M- GOOD S-' BRICK O FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES 0 7 1/2% PASS O NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. &- M.H. n. -- M.H. -0 M.H. DEPTH_... DEPTH_ S o ,?? /rla r L? ' /L moo? ?_.[? :atr - s - P,?s ' [O/ i2 / //0O &-XlD rn.7.//rEaCC `z,2 ' d Ta R T?ltrr%yta.+ miiT/h6CE a 7`v _Zi??3_ Po,?Di;?!r o _ cwc /°,X _ cKr7?r°,f? ri?T .n 9N/r6 Lr °13 c O BFQ3s b v N h „ r Y r s r J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO ? CENTER OF M.H.'S SECTION LENGTH LF 355 IAPL40AMETER_IN Lake t9accamaw 1994 CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 130 m ml-() OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT /-46? C44?cc r7,9 J OPERATOR -okZ/-m GaJE)Z _I.I(dC SECTION RUN PROJECT 7 ?r? oSa -INSPECTOR DATE LOCATION1r;l-4keC'`t4t1vd1 Cam'/'7) STREET ?-ecf/ _ VIDEO DATA TAPING •YES ET NO O TAPE # --L-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP Cl- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD L9- YES Cg-- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? 01 ? TC W-? LINER ? h1.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST Q' GOOD C3-" BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING Sep, PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES ? 71I2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. # M.H. N 0-- - -o M H M . . .H. DEPTH DEPT _.. H CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY DE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO -? CENTER OF M.H.'S IT, LENGTH LF 35G I} ?'a?,fcT&&n }Y44 C111 - SS Renovations 940530 m smou OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT 1z/4g-c w,,,w OPERATOR %nC?r7c--7LSECTION RUN _-377 9 PROJECT rb??SEt.az INSPECTOR DATE LOCATION -k# STREET dM41'-(:W VIDEO DATA l s TAPING YES L? NO ? Pc, /D F??- TAPE COUNTER -37P9 t?/> ??/+G?-/?./Dt?t?s??jb,l TAPE SPEED SP CLP OEP Q- ' PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD 13-? YES C?-' RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC Hl, LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST El- GOOD C4' BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? • POOR ? REMARKS r DEFLECTION TEST DATA " TESTING 5% PASS ? - FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71/2°x: PASS O ` NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. # M.H. It N M 0----o M.H. M.H. DEPTH- DEPTH- CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY 13E USED YES 0 MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO 0 CENTER OF M.H.'S !LENGTH LF 357 JAIV ?VJM?TgPrw-1-04 CN1 - SS Renovations -V I? - 940530 m D ? 0 ,o OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. i INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT 4', cy,,74u1 OPERATOR AVM6? 674_--LIr•lE SECTION RUN -M PROJECT ?^/ oSR??L -INSPECTOR- DATE LOCATION 44, 0,-c- /'7) STREET /ncu^!T-?%o?? _ VIDEO DATA TAPING YES [B' NO Cl TAPE a -=-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP ?EP E• PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD M- YES 0- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC C9? LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST 3-- GOOD 9' BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES ? 7112% PASS O NO ? FAIL O Fl'. M.H. a 0- M.H. u --- M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH- DEPTH____ Ippl.t. y rr1 '_ 71 vIJ o -? Ryzi • !S fv 7o ti? iN • /9'/ ?.? i Gl?f c'TP?c.S b y_Z ?o,rd? P' • .z r3 01CLoc/L 3!s gr?,3 ?? 9 dc1?.?c ;E?,07, 3?i ,r?1,?? v? : Es .?ATb"71a L ? 9 0 ? Lv c GfvGo?! ?D ??F? so/vGGO ?n,?/D,:dlr Fr=.?TO'iPs r Y N J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTIO14 CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO :-O CENTER OF M.H.'S S I jjl LENGTH LF 358 ake ??J JH4 Ctll - SS Renovations 940530 0 OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT 4<?,4mW d OPERATOR m ?E ._I.It•1C SECTION RUN o7+/.7 _ PROJECT Tocdy ?r"z?EIZ. INSPECTOR- _ DATE LOCATION,,Z ,' a?? ?odi5 r, yi f STREET 112L-a„9-Z"0,? -- VIDEO DATA TAPING YES D' NO ? TAPE a -Y-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP OEP 0- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD C- YES L4--- RCP ? FAIR ? NO O VC ? POOR ? D TC L? LINER O M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST GOOD 13" BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR O REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5"/o PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS ? NO O FAIL ? FT. M.H. a &-- M.H. a M.H. -0 M.H. DEPTH___. DEPTH - s o toez- /rl? Cc / ' GSA 7G r'3.?D?:,?? ol?sn" ,f GL7 S .GaTExaL ? o?rLc?.t ' O ?a AI8 . ^'? oFi? c? f,S Zs3. G'Q'q--?D A; = e tzoC/G ,2c/, 7 Ea??isl ,6b ?/D UB uvo„! - n F Y Y M J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO -O CENTER OF M.H.'S SE TI W LENGTH LF 359 iP` ?I METE Lake Waccamaw 1A4 CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 m m"Foo OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT IWL- AX-41"-W OPERATOR '"6M7 -- _I_I1•I[ SECTION RUN 3s,-I(,- PROJECT^/W INSPECTOR DATE LOCATION ?r/7J STREET nEd-h- 4le-W _ VIDEO DATA TAPINGS Er NO ? TAPE# --M-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP ?EP El- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD L9' YES LzY RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? T c l LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST C" GOOD CY BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. N 0- M.H. It -- M.H. o M.H. DEPTH.- DEPTH_ rOOr.4 M rr? • s,o fj?%??.?••rfbtf a ' (aS roT? ' `?7r' T ' C a • .J DSO 612-Id N6- /70 9o ivk/o co .? i S , _-- `? /rlnti./I!o lc' ? ? D Gf3s?trhfj. F Y Y M J 4 CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S q€{W4gU LENGTH LF 360 fAT? FcQI?StFeTiTi JU4 Crjj - SS P.enovations I 940530 m U OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT CJACC!>rn.QcJ OPERATOR -LINE SECTION RUN PROJECT 7d-11? c5f?f7& INSPECTOR DATE LOCATION ??11) STREET P-- ?.h?E VIDEO DATA TAPING YES ff NO ? TAPE d -COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP G ? PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD L?- YES B- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? DI ? TC 21 LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST CF- GOOD 6' BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL O FT. YES ? 7112% PASS O NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. rl &- M.H. It -- M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH____ DEPTH_ IpO1.U wI rr, ' / 7fL:T0 D ' roc q o c1cc.? 26 S'f?a7 ib.?d ? FF.s?'?°fFs -- c!,?,?r? ate _ 96 4650 OwXwe- ?G? ?'7/I y _. (?' Ac:K6 i d ??0 lny,.11,6Lf ai 6'H9 o sr/frb? n y M i Y M II J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY DE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S SS T ?1 LENGTH LF 361 La}:c?( ac?Ta?t l{??4 CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 tf mt/ a OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. i INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT 1,4kE AIL} cnmf-l OPERATOR -,,",?'6;rL .-I•IriC Sf_C'fION RUN ?0?,?7•_ PROJECT 7`a?.? ? z. INSPECTOR DATE LO CATIONm?''?S?d// ??7) STREET a=. VIDEO DATA TAPING ?YES Ua- NO ? TAPE k /COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP ?EPp- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD &- YES G- RCP ? FAIR O NO O VC O POOR O DI ? TC (11-? LINER O M.H. DATA ' TYPE COND. PRECAST 19' GOOD C3' BRICK O FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR O REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES ? 7I/2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL O FT. M.H. # 0- M.H. U --- M.H. o M.H. - /Sfv CAR w1olv6- • a So ?.? - ' 8of.83 ?•r•?? ' • /a?tv ,? /A%??n/? 54?? 0 Sr i/E5 ' /e?r`? /irv _ • ;,? a.vD off c7 i c.Y • ?a?o L#r.?n ',/?offsET?P 3zSz3GO b o ??r ?PEs SG __ C:eace?0 c:? /;1 vttoce +lav sr - 9 ?/ v,?/?, S1040 so to ? d%?6- ?o ?? 7SfuSvzB avoozmord7Y /r4-WD OBSrb n r M b Y N N N J DEPTH_ DEPTH CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY GE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •D CENTER OF M.H.'S IWJfM LENGTH LF 362 CNI - SS R0110vatio is 940530 OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT. 141e:7 a1;W-.4MlgW OPERATOR;r'C&-IZ7_? __I.ItJE SECTION RUN -774 PROJECT TZ--,A/ 3rcwc? INSPECTOR- DATE R 6zG S f"! a" yrr. EET c41 T VIDEO DATA Q- o'cto -0 z4l W6- TAPING 'YES 8' NO O .27"0 ?On/Dl.?G- offs0' ,'C TAPE # ? 000NTER b/io TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP 19- /117,'0 aq %/G o /PEs PIPE DATA 1v?7A .?di,?Es TYPE I c+'?b?!°G /?Di.?b Ofi?SvT iPEs COND. WATER ADD PVC ? G - OOD Q-- YES Cg- RCP Cl FAIR ? - -- NO O VC ? POO R ? DI ? - -- TC L5? -= - LINER O M.H. DATA TYPE - COND. 7 - PRECA C n ST - GOOD BRICK ? - FAIR O LINER ? ' . POOR ? „ REMARKS „ DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O - - FAIL ? FT . YES ? 71/2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT . M H X M H . . . . 11 0--- M o J M.H. M H . . DEPTH_.__ DEPTH - t:ANItHA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO CENTER OF M.H.'S q,ApyjgU LENGTH LF 363 LP;?glfFCT?it1r-}?1?34 C111 - SS Renovations CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? NO ?O 990530 m OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT ?Ji+G rd OPERATOR in 6?--rf7- .-IJNE SECTION RUN PROJECT 77-ld -5--7?c72 INSPECTOR DATE I?Ihbl•C`C??/ sill/7_ LOCATION STREET ?c%cGL VIDEO DATA TAPING YES C?rNO ? TAPE a -%-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP DEP CD-- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . O GOOD OYES E?- RCP O FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR O 01 O TC pa--, LINER O DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL O Fl'. M.H.1< M.H. It 0----0 M.H. M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH_ CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTIO14 CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY 13E USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S SECTION LENGTH LF 364 IMOd UAMETER_ IN Lake %Vaccamaw 1994 C111 - SS Renovations M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECASTED GOOD B" BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS 940530 (D ?I OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT . i?EWA?QirliJcJ OPERATOR 7/ -)Z3L _I,INE SECTION RUN J?L? _ PROJECT 74?W-?567,JV77- INSPECTOR DATE I LOCATION?????'`?? ?¢?G?i?) STREET vinFnnATn 3Cs?IrP ?/D?aG.u?Oc?z?rsTr,nF?= TAPING YES R NO CJ TAPE b .-6L?OUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP OEP [a' PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD 9- YES 9- RCP O FAIR O NO ? VC O POOR ? 01 O TC Q' LINER O 1-71 n ?PF oFr= ET M.H. DATA ` TYPE COND. PRECAST ?- GOOD 9-' BRICK ? FAIR O LINER C l' POOR O REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING Sep, PASS O - FAIL ? FT. YES ? 71I2% PASS ? NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. # M.H. K M J M.H. M.H. DEPTH. DEPTH_ CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S S I?LENGTH LF 365 e ?Q C qi)4 CN1 - SS Renovations 940530 C7 - m OF NORTH CAROLINA. INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR LOCATION _ _?•?'?^f STREET VIDEO DATA PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT. ?,y, li/ACC.vn?w OPERATOR.%"6c-7a?I.It•!E SECTION RUN PROJECT 77WV -TclA=w- INSPECTOR - r DATE TAPING YES C}- NO 0 TAPE a -COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP?LPOEPE- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC ? GOOD 6' YES 0- RCP ? FAIR ? NO O VC O POOR ? DI ? TC Q' LINER O M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST 04-` GOOD Er BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? , POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES ? 7112•,; PASS Cl NO ? FAIL O Fl'. M.H. k 0- M.H.# --- M.H. o M.H. DEPTH_ DEPTH_ S, 0 ?ih??fiGLd ? ' 104-115 Cr o P:fP?s ' 1)i?b ScT i%?_S vfu/O o?/Di^/Er 6" rT/°i s ' /,Z,t/- /W v.?D;NCr ' -Z4 & p'G?c,GC • /x/69 o./Din?G o 'scri°/Pr • Al ?x/8'1 ,?d6r o,, 0, a i L G0 0 'clock • v'o _A • „'Di N Fi a?G ?o77nv L,1..iFiL?ivA?i'o.? .. ? 8(0 0.?A?.d6 iyf? S ??PrS • o y? ?O?%?b OFFJcT n;u • /?__ 0 G? AS "Ong Sr7Q vah „ r Y i Y J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY GE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •O CENTER OF M.H.'S SE I ? LENGTH LF 3Gg '??IIIMETER-_ Lake Waccamaw 1664 CN1 - SS renovations 940530 m 1.I OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT1,4A,-A-1Mcr-4nf'J OPERATOR '?%?(5?--7?_I.II.lC SECTION RUN / PROJECT fb??Na`?i?t7t. INSPECTOR- DATE LOCATION STREET Dirol VIDEO DATA TAPING ?YES E- NO ? TAPE # --2L-COUNTER TAPE SPEED SP ?LP ?EP D, PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . O GOOD B- YES ®' RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? 01 ? TC Gs l LINER ? M.H. DATA ?. TYPE COND. PRECAST Q' GOOD C" BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR ? REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES .0 7 1/2% PASS O NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. # 0-- M.H. 9 --- M.H. 0 M.H. DEPTH____ DEPTH_ ' _ ?RT? A O?LoCX ' SOOT ' 7 0 :?L ? 'off • Rio, EJ?D q.+n6L?^'' ??D vc3s ?x v r n h r r N J CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY OE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •O CENTER OF M.H.'S SECTION LENGTH LF 367 14V19d VIAMETER_IN 1.111r,c 1Vuccammv 1994 CN1 - SS RcIlOviltio ll'; .w 940530 m OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR 4 PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT. OPERATO(1, (S 7I-e L_,__ur-!E SECTION RUN PROJECT ZINSPECTOR DATE, _ LOCATION !?t'''' 72¢/o P<--9/7) STREET ?2??r ?-?- _ VIDEO DATA TAPING YES [9' NO Cl TAPE #OUNTER TAPE SPEED SP OLP OEP (K?- PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC . ? GOOD Q' YES 19- RCP ? FAIR ? NO ? VC ? POOR ? 01 O TC C1-11 LINER ? M.H. DATA TYPE COND. PRECAST D- GOOD 2,' BRICK ? FAIR ? LINER ? ' POOR O REMARKS DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS O FAIL O FT. YES ? 71/2% PASS O NO ? FAIL ? FT. M.H. # M.H. N 0----0 M.H. M.H. DEPTH- DEPTH_ CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION A S/.S _ CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY OE USED YES O MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO -? CENTER OF M.H.'S SEC,,zzI,, LENGTH LF 368 1P`P'? METE Lake Waccamaw 16& C111 - SS Renovations 940530 O ??tju OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. INDUSTRIAL CLEANING CONTRACTOR PIPE INSPECTION LOG CLIENT 44A• OPERATOR-,2Z; '?C-?T __ I.If-JC SECTION RUN PROJECT 7D../i? 4s- e7t INSPECTOR- DATE I.V VI111VI14111-11 -O iwrv-- y ? mcrn ?'u '0- -// IftO1.C1 -1 - -c STREET _ S a il7.r? VIDEO DATA 1 2,0 C/?Oekw.v7&--x ' _ ? ' .QS ?D.n?1+fkGF' O6 v.J TAPING YES C9' NO ? R6gc-" Zrl TAPE # `?OUNTER ' TAPE SPEED SP?LP?EP(9- ' I PIPE DATA TYPE COND. WATER ADD PVC ? GOOD C9-- YES El- RCP O FAIR O NO O VC O -- POOR O DI ? - - TC c9_1 - - LINER ? M.H. DATA _ T - - '- - YPE COND. ? - PR n ECAST a GOOD I? BRIC - K ? FAIR ? LINE ' . R Cl POOR ? n'?/// l fne REM R APE ?'E«cr , a a? A KS - .?u??r20.•>' 14;?T.sTit?S'orlfa 1br?i? /?1c DEFLECTION TEST DATA TESTING 5% PASS ? - - FAIL ? FT ` . YES ? 71/2% PASS ? - NO ? FAIL O FT ` . M H b . . M.H. It 0---- M 0 J M H M . . .H. DEPTH DEPT y _._._ H_ CAMERA TRAVEL FLOW DIRECTION CONTINUATION LOG SHEETS MAY BE USED YES ? MEASUREMENT FROM CENTER TO NO •? CENTER OF M.H.'S SAWrd f EcETE ENGT H LF 369 Laake ?1 mRwa11JY94 CN1 - SS Renovations 940530.