The city of Detroit is set to repair 9,000 faulty alley sewer lines for free by 2030, aiming to reduce sewage backups in homes and prevent alleys from caving in. This $184 million program is funded by a portion of the $346 million in federal grants the city received last year to recover from major flooding in August 2023.
Program Details
The effort will focus on repairing residential sewer connections, the area where the line from a home meets the city’s sewer in the alley. According to city officials, this program will help residents avoid expensive and difficult repairs that can cost $10,000 for homeowners to fix on their own.
Mayor Mary Sheffield stated, ‘This will remove a significant financial burden while also protecting families from future sewer backups and property damage. By repairing these critical connections, we are strengthening our neighborhood infrastructure, reducing basement backups, improving public health, and protecting housing quality and giving thousands of Detroit homeowners greater confidence that the place that they call home is safe and resilient.’
Pending approval of contracts from Detroit City Council, the work is slated to begin in October and is projected to end in 2030. Detroit has roughly 1,800 miles of alley sewers, and homes are connected through a private sewer line. However, most of Detroit’s housing stock is decades old, meaning those private sewer lines are failing due to deteriorating pipes, tree roots, shifting soil, and irregular maintenance, according to the city.
Impact and Next Steps
Data from the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) shows that one in three private sewer line connections are clogged, offset, or have fallen off, leading to basement backups. The funding will allow the city to help reduce these backups and alley cave-ins and sinkholes at no cost to Detroiters.
Residents don’t have to sign up for the program. DWSD will select locations and roll them out in phases. Federal funding also requires that low-to-moderate income neighborhoods are prioritized. Residents will be notified via door hangers before construction begins, and the water department also plans to hold virtual meetings and attend neighborhood meetings.
Original reporting: BridgeDetroit — read the source article.