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We're kicking up a legal stink in bid to beat Seafield stench



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Published Date: 12 May 2008
RESIDENTS plagued by the infamous Seafield stench are considering legal action in a bid to get the sewage plant's tanks covered.
Councillors have approved a £20 million plan which would see a series of upgrades remove about 69 per cent of the odour problem at Seafield Sewage Works.

However, campaigners and independent experts claim the measures do not go far enough because
they stop short of covering the sewage tanks.

The Leith Links Residents Association today revealed that it is in talks with lawyers with a view to bringing a court action against the city council and plant owner Scottish Water for the years of suffering caused by the smells.

The £20m package of improvements will not be in place until 2011, when council officials will assess the situation again and see if the tanks should be covered.

Local MSP and Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill today said he is pressing to see if his Government can speed up this process.

But Rob Kirkwood, a spokes-man for the residents' association, has accused Mr MacAskill and the SNP of going back on its election promises to sort out Seafield once and for all.

He said: "The council is condemning Leithers to at least another four years of smells and it will not stop there because until we have these tanks covered, then this awful stench will not be stopped.

"We have been approached by lawyers who have told us we have a very good case and are considering our position. The SNP told us they would cover the tanks, it helped get them elected here, and we are still waiting for them to deliver on their promise."

Among the proposed measures is that an "odour abatement plant" be fitted above the tanks to filter out the noxious smells. New screening and treatment equipment would be employed at the sewer entrance to the plant, and all the open channels between the different areas covered.

Covering the tanks is the most expensive option, thought to cost around £40m.

Independent sewage works expert Professor Robert Jackson said: "There are unique climatic conditions at Seafield, namely the haar, which make dispersal of smells difficult. The industry-wide practice is to cover the tanks and I am not clear why this is not being pursued for Seafield."

Scottish Water submitted its odour improvement plan to the council in April last year, just two weeks before a major breakdown saw 100 million litres of sewage released into the Forth.

The firm was then forced to revise its plans and came back with the latest version two weeks ago. Mr MacAskill said: "I can understand why the council has to take a cautious approach with this and I welcome the fact that if the first batch of measures does not work then we can proceed straight to covering the tanks.

"I have written to the minister for infrastructure to see if there is anything which can be done to speed up the timescale."

Robert Aldridge, the city's environment leader, said: "The proposals will make an enormous impact. It is not the ideal we want, it is not complete removal of the this smell, but it is a good start.

"But I can understand there will be a great deal of scepticism by people in Leith who might feel they have heard it all before."





The full article contains 568 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 12 May 2008 9:48 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Scottish Water
 
1

Wull The Champ,

Sunny Leith 12/05/2008 12:40:37
This story is Sh*t. Or you could just say The Cooncil are talking a load of p*sh.
2

SDRAWKCAB,

Edinburgh 12/05/2008 12:45:10
Cover them up! they stink real bad.
As long as they don't cover them with steal lids because the drain theives will come along from porty in their white van and steal them!

on a serious note... i was driving past the other day and i had to pull my t-shirt up over my face because the smell was so bad. if i had crashed, i would have blames the stench.
3

celtic4,

USA 12/05/2008 13:04:40
I have never in my life heard of a sewage plant that did not cover the tanks! My word. That is elementary. There isn't anything goes on here like that. The paper mills smell bad but they even have works to correct it.
4

Epicuras,

12/05/2008 13:18:26
sue the lot of them, council, councillors, MSPs, Scottish Parliament, Scottish Water and the murky set of dodgy PFI/PPP companies involved - this has been going on for far too long, and the best they can come up with is try another cheap option and look at it again in another 3 years. Everyone in Leith (5 mile radius) should just refuse to pay their council tax/business rates until it's sorted
5

Irn-Bruce,

Edinburgh 12/05/2008 13:21:10
#3 - Indeed!

And, in these days of dwindling and costly energy, aren't there clever things that can be done to encourage anaerobic digestion of sewage, so that the methane generated can captured and used?
6

ccDD,

12/05/2008 16:03:07
#5 - Gas-bag (yes, plenty of those in the EEN postings!) picture and explanation here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/elementalpaul/663258834/
7

Statsman,

Edinburgh 12/05/2008 16:36:22
It really stinks there now. It's the worst it has been in a long time. I had the dry boak driving past the place the other day.
8

madrab,

edinburgh 12/05/2008 18:50:16
Maybe local MSP and Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill should pull his finger out and do something about this rather than sinking pints of cooking lager at his local.
9

Not a taxi lover.,

12/05/2008 20:11:07
In the name of the wee man it's a sewage works what do you expect!

 

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