Council discussion continues on West Homewood odor litigation, Hickory Knoll sinkhole

by

Sydney Cromwell

Members of the city council's special issues committee entered a 40-minute executive session tonight with Volatile Analysis' Katherine Bazemore to discuss pending litigation.

The contents of an executive session are not public, but this is the third such session by council members in recent weeks, all of which have been related to discussions of a new odor ordinance. Bazemore's firm was hired by the city more than a year ago to test and find the source of odor problems at the Buffalo Rock and Barber plants in West Homewood, which have been ongoing since October 2015.

At the close of the executive session, Ward 4 Representative Barry Smith told attending West Homewood residents that a new odor ordinance with more "teeth" for enforcement, particularly regulating wastewater treatment facilities, is on its way.

Residents said there has not been any odor in about a week, though long absences of the smell have happened before. Noise issues at Buffalo Rock have not changed. Smith said a new carbon bed filter has been installed at Buffalo Rock's plant, and a new fan will be installed on July 18. Some odor may leak outside while the fan is being installed.

Though the sinkhole at Hickory Knoll apartment complex was not on tonight's agenda, the apartment complex's owner, Charles Strain, showed up to talk with city officials during the public works meeting. There was disagreement on whose jurisdiction the sinkhole falls under. Strain and his lawyer, Jesse Evans, said Homewood is responsible for fixing the sinkhole due to it being in the road right-of-way on a street the city maintains.

Evans said the project believed to have damaged a pipeline and caused the sinkhole, performed by Jefferson County, was contracted by the city and therefore their responsibility. However, city attorney Mike Kendrick said the project was initiated by the county and Homewood was only asked to contribute to the cost.

Though Kendrick and Building, Engineering and Zoning department employee Greg Cobb had said in last week's discussion that the sinkhole was on private property, Cobb clarified tonight that the sinkhole is in the city's right-of-way, but the pipe believed to be its cause is on private property.

Strain and Evans disagreed with the city on the source of the sinkhole. The public works committee took no action, but Strain said he intended to continue talking with Cobb and the city to find the sinkhole's cause and, therefore, the responsible party for repairing it.

Other items discussed tonight include:

Courtesy of Tim Ross

Courtesy of City of Homewood

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