PortlandOnline

POL Government Bureaus & Offices Environmental Services What We Do Combined Sewer Overflows
CSO Control Program
A River Renewed
View the CSO Program video narrated by Walter Cronkite
Rosie the TBM
Follow Rosie the tunnel boring machine on Twitter
Balch Consolidation Conduit
Construction is underway
Portsmouth Force Main Newsletter
Summer 2009 update
2008 CSO Annual Report
A report on progress made in 2008 on controlling CSOs
East Side Big Pipe Project
Construction will be complete in 2011
West Side Big Pipe
Environmental Services completed the West Side Big Pipe projects in 2006
West Side Big Pipe Video
Building the West Side Big Pipe
Columbia Slough Projects
Projects controlled CSOs to the slough by 99%
Cornerstone Projects
Downspout disconnection, sump installation, stream diversion and sewer separation are the cornerstones of the CSO control program
River Alert Program
Check to see if a combined sewer overflow (CSO) has occurred in the Willamette River
Sustainable Stormwater Management
Stormwater management that mimics natural systems

Controlling Combined Sewer Overflows

Almost every time it rains, Portland’s combined sewers overflow into the Willamette River. Combined sewer overflows (CSOs) carry raw sewage that pollutes water and threatens our quality of life.

How We Got Here

Older Portland neighborhoods have a sewer system that mixes untreated sewage and stormwater runoff in a single pipe. On rainy days, runoff from buildings, streets, and other hard surfaces fills these combined sewers to capacity and they overflow into the Willamette River.

 

CSO diagram

When it rains, the combined sewer system fills to capacity

and overflows to the Willamette

Working for Clean Rivers

Controlling CSOs is an important part of Portland’s efforts to improve Willamette River water quality. CSO solutions include projects to remove stormwater runoff from sewers and building new facilities to carry sewage and stormwater to the Columbia Boulevard Wastewater Treatment Plant.

Cornerstone Projects

Portland started the CSO control program in 1991 with a set of Cornerstone Projects that remove stormwater from combined sewers. Projects include installing street sumps and sedimentation manholes, building separate sewers for stormwater in some neighborhoods, encouraging homeowners in targeted neighborhoods to disconnect downspouts from the sewer system, and removing west hills streams from the combined sewers.

Green Solutions

Environmental Services promotes other innovative projects to manage stormwater onsite instead of piping it into sewers or streams. Projects include ecoroofs, pervious pavement, swales and stormwater planters.

Big Pipe Projects

Environmental Services completed the Columbia Slough Big Pipe in 2000. The 12-foot diameter pipeline reduced CSOs to the Slough by 99%. Construction of the Swan Island Pump Station and the West Side Big Pipe was completed in 2006. The 3.5-mile, 14-foot diameter tunnel carries combined sewage from the west side of the Willamette to Swan Island, where the Swan Island Pump Station pumps the sewage to to the Columbia Boulevard Wastewater Treatment Plant.

 

Also in 2006, Environmental Services began construction of the East Side Big Pipe, a six-mile long, 22-foot diameter tunnel to collect sewage from the east side of the Willamette. When the East Side Big Pipe is complete in 2011, CSOs to the Willamette River will be reduced by 94%.

CSO Milestones

1993

Work begins on project to divert stormwater runoff from the combined sewer system. The sump installation, sewer separation, stream diversion and residential downspout disconnection projects are known collectively as the Cornerstone Projects.

 

2000

Environmental Services completes construction of the Columbia Slough Big Pipe and other slough projects to reduce CSOs to the slough by more than 99%.

 

2006

The 14-foot diameter West Side Big Pipe and Swan Island Pump Station are completed, and work starts on East Side CSO projects.

 

2007

The Downspout Disconnection Program disconnects downspout number 50,000, and disconnections are removing more than one billion gallons of stormwater annually from the combined sewer system.

Community Benefit Opportunity (CBO) Program

In November 2007, the Portland City Council authorized spending $1.77 million on community projects to benefit neighborhoods close to the East Side Big Pipe Project. The city created the Community Benefit Opportunity (CBO) Program to add amenities to neighborhoods affected by CSO construction.

 

East Side CSO construction affects 11 neighborhoods between SE 17th and McLoughlin Boulevard and Swan Island. Community groups and citizens in those areas nominated 38 projects. A citizens advisory committee reviewed the proposals, and Environmental Services recommended 21 projects for funding.

 

Projects include bank restoration along the Willamette River, street tree planting, community gardens, and sustainable stormwater management facilities.

 

(back to top)

 

PDF Information
Some of the links on this page are to PDF documents. To open PDF files you will need Adobe Acrobat Reader installed on your computer, it is available for free from Adobe.com.
Download Adobe Acrobat PDF Reader
Questions & Comments
If you have any questions or comments, please contact our site administrator.