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modified to say within 10 years of 1989, so we need to go back and that should not have a drop <br />date on it. This is standard practice anywhere in the country. When you are in the service area, <br />and try to dig up the road. That would become as costly as Plehu. He wanted to <br />see what commissioners think. As you navigate through the policies, we may find that one size <br />fits all may not be adequate. We may need to have different strategies about how to connect <br />the dots and be able to do it early in the game, rather than late in the game, and figure out who <br />is going to pay for it. The County cannot continue picking up the tab forever for everybody. It <br />gets very expensive. <br /> <br />Chair Adams said that as she understands it, the current County Code had set up a requirement <br />that new subdivisions had to put in sewer lines that would connect to a sewer treatment plant, <br />even if the treatment plant had not been in place yet. They had set this hard date of 1989 and <br />and time within 10 years. Well, we are way past that time so it seems like there should be <br />modifications, so it seems like it makes sense that when you build a new subdivision, you put in <br />personally any <br />problem with that for new developments. And there may be some rare exceptions to that rule, <br />but you deal with it as an exception rather than as a general requirement, unless there are <br />those who think of some reason that we wouldnt want to go to sewer treatment. <br /> <br />Commissioner McIntosh asked the Director to clarify the question. <br /> <br />, and <br />treatment unit or some other approved option. Ms. Pruder was saying that subdivisions will <br />need to have their own treatment systems, because they cannot have clusters of septic tanks. <br />regulating our sewer system and our wastewater treatment plants with regards to subdivisions <br />and new developments. <br /> <br />Commissioner Burns said a really important consideration. Unfortunately, rare that <br />government action plans adopt any form of a pragmatic approach, but considering the budget <br />constraints and the realities with retrofitting a lot of these systems, itbe difficult and it <br />might be unrealistic. But there needs to be sort of priorit <br />investigations but can rely on common sense. We have a lot of soil in Council District 1. The <br />issues we have with contaminants going into groundwater or out into ocean waters is <br />dramatically different from areas in South Kona or areas near the coastline. In the Kona Coast, <br />he has been involved in a lot of res <br />flow of water from the mountain through our very dynamic subterranean water system. But we <br />know that the closer you are to that runoff area, the more you have an issue of contaminants. <br /> going to be nearly impossible on an island of this size with the different environments <br />that we have to make a one-size-fits- <br />like reaching for the stars, go into this, adapting unique <br />21 <br /> <br /> <br />