Residents ask sanitary district for reimbursement
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- The city and sanitary district both deny responsibility
for sewage spills that flooded a Drake Street home, but the homeowners
say they think they should be reimbursed for some of their expenses.
Erin and Jeff Locke, who have lived at 2718 Drake St. for about a
year, say their lives have been upheaved by the two spills that happened
in December and June and filed a letter Monday asking the district for
reimbursement.
“My bed is in the living room, and all the baby stuff is out here
too,” Erin Locke said. “Every time I use the bathroom, I’m afraid it’s
going to flood again. This is so frustrating.”
The first spill happened while Locke was pregnant with her second
child and the second happened six days after her son was born.
A cleanup valve to keep sewage from coming into the house in the
future was installed in a pipe under their driveway this week and the
family expects that redoing the walls, tiles and floors of the house will
take at least another month.
Not including the repairs to the house, which the insurance company is
helping to pay for, the spills have cost the family between $6,500 and
$7,000, said Elaine Stuckey, Locke’s mother.
Stuckey said plumbers said tree roots under the sidewalk area caused
the first spill.
The city removed a nearby tree, but denied a claim filed by the
Lockes, stating that most tree roots don’t damage lateral sewage lines
but instead grow into pipes that are already damaged.
The cause of the second spill is still unknown because plumbers
excavated pipe up to 80 feet from the drain and didn’t find any blockage,
Stuckey said.
The letter filed with the sanitary district Monday asks the district
to pay for some of the expenses caused by the second spill and for
further excavation work to analyze the problem and prevent another spill.
But sanitary district representatives say the district is not at
fault.
Rob Hamers, general manager for the district, said property owners are
responsible for keeping their sewer laterals running smoothly because the
laterals are installed by the original home constructors, not the
district.
Laterals are pipes that run from the district’s main pipeline to the
homes.
“Generally speaking, if the problem is in the homeowner’s lateral, it
is the homeowner’s responsibility even though part of the lateral is in
the street because we have no control over the trees the property owners
plant, what they put down their lateral, whether they maintain the pipes
properly or whether the original constructor constructed the pipes
properly,” Hamers said. “In this case, the problem was clearly the
[lateral] because we checked our main line and the main line has been
running fine throughout this whole process.”
Hamers said the district sent people to try to help the Lockes figure
out what the problem was, but Erin Locke said she doesn’t think the
district has been helpful.
“They just keep saying ‘It’s not our fault. You’re just going to have
to deal with it,”’ she said.
Hamers said the Lockes should have kept the line maintained better to
avoid the spills.
“It’s unfortunate they had a backup, but they needed to do a little
more maintenance on the line,” he said.
Inexpensive compounds to kill roots and take care of grease can be
applied regularly to prevent problems, and it’s also inexpensive to have
sewer laterals videotaped to check for problems, Hamers said.
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