PEPC and Parkplanning will be offline Weds. May 8th starting at 7 AM MT for scheduled maintenance. Expected downtime is up to three hours.

Public Scoping Information - Boston Mills Sanitary Sewer and Treatment System


The National Park Service (NPS) is in the process of preparing an Environmental Assessment (EA) to upgrade the Boston Mills Historic District sanitary sewer and treatment systems.

In order to develop a permanent solution for providing sanitary services to park-owned structures in the District, the NPS is undertaking an Environmental Assessment to analyze feasible alternatives. For this assessment, the NPS has identified two feasible "Action" Alternatives as well as a "No Action" Alternative. Action alternatives would be constructed on NPS-owned land located east of Riverview Road between Interstate 271 and the Ohio Turnpike.

A detailed description of the Alternatives can be found in the Project Summary document available below.

A public scoping letter, Fequently Asked Questions (FAQ) document, aerial photo of the construction area, and schematics of the two action alternatives are also available below.

We cordially invite you to provide input regarding alternatives, environmental impact topics and the scope of this EA. Your participation ensures that we fully understand the interests and needs of our friends and neighbors as part of our natural heritage, cultural traditions, and community surroundings.

To submit comments, please click the "Comment on Document" link to the left.

We also invite your attendance at a public open house on August 11, 2009 from 7pm to 9pm at Boston Store located at 1548 Boston Mills Road, Boston Township, Ohio where we will discuss the project.

 
Comment Period: Closed        Jul 17, 2009 - Aug 20, 2009
Document Content:
Project Summary   (50.0 KB, PDF file)
Scoping Letter   (42.1 KB, PDF file)
Project FAQs   (38.0 KB, PDF file)
Schematic Alternative 1 - SSDI System   (44.1 KB, PDF file)
Disclaimer: Links within the above document(s) were valid as of the date published.
Note: Some of the files may be in PDF format and can be viewed using the Adobe Acrobat Reader software. You may download a free copy of from Adobe Systems.