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![]() JimH wrote: wrote in message ups.com... JimH wrote: You can't. http://www.boatus.org/onlinecourse/R...ect/info4c.htm Jim, you just posted a link to a site that *contradicts* your point! Direct quote from your link: Type One MSDs are treatment systems that reduce bacteria and discharge no visible floating solids. (Not legal in some state boating areas as well. Check local laws before installing. Type One MSD systems, such as a head coupled with a Lectra-San, are legal on vessels less than 65 feet that boat in an area not declared a Federal No-Discharge Zone. The fact is that *properly treated* waste can be discharged in any waters not designated a no-discharge zone. You are correct regarding untreated waste. It cannot be discharged in inland waters or less than three miles offshore. Sorry if I misinterpreted it. I read the table under Sewage System Options to say that it was illegal for Type I or II to discharge even treated waste in inland lakes. Perhaps I need a lesson from Peggy on the fine art and operation of Type I and II systems. I have always had either Type III or portable systems. I have never discharged my waste water tank in the past regardless of how many miles off shore I was. Regardless, I would not think it would ever be advisable to dump treated or untreated waste into the water systems in inland lakes. Part of that depends, I think, on the inland lake in question. If you're going to create a brown haze with even a legal discharge in a 1-acre duck pond, I'd personally recommend not. Same with dockside in a marina, regardless of the body of water in question. But Lake Superior? Maybe a different matter. Riddle me this, (since you live back there in lake country). When the local sewage utility collects and treats flush water from houses (and boats) in your community, what does it do with the liquid volume following treatment? If you don't know, you might want to look into it. I'd personally be very surprised if your sewage treatment plant doesn't drain right back into the same body of water upon which a lot of people boat. (Sometimes back into a stream of water from which people downstream actually drink!) The only difference between waste that is properly treated on board to meet the federal standards and then dumped back into the waterway and waste that is pumped out, directed to the municipal sewage plant, treated to meet the federal standards and then dumped back into the waterway is where it's treated- not whether. |
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