Tennessee Division of Water Resources (DWR) Permits Documents Permit Appeals Moratoriums Complaints Inspections Eng. Plans Hydrologic Det. Exceptional Waters Ambient Monitoring QLP Data Oil & Gas Wells FTC Operator Certification Water Wells Site IDParent SiteSite LocationCountyEFO 90690Nash Dairy Co.3983 Highway 41A North BedfordColumbia COMPLAINT Help Back to Previous Page Complaint Number71790Program AreaWPCDate ReceivedOCT-24-2019How ReceivedPhoneConcerningPollution / Spills / Illicit DischargeConcerning (Other)Assigned DateOCT-24-2019 Location based on SITE_ID Site ID 90690 Site Nash Dairy Co. Location 3983 Highway 41A North City Chapel Hill Description Dairy farm County Bedford EFO Name Columbia Site Owner Steve Nash Investigation Results Date InvestigatedOCT-29-2019StatusNo Problem FoundResponsible PartySteve NashResp Party Phone559-891-9032Date CompletedOCT-30-2019Referred ToDate ReferredPhotosLast updated30-OCT-2019 11:08AM Complaint Description and Writeup 10-24-19 Caller said Nash Dairy has a pipe across his property to creek.10/29/19 10:45am Called and then met Mr. Travis. He said a pipe was put recently installed by Nash Dairy and pushed his fence down to do so. A 12-inch diameter green pipe (see pic) about 1 foot off creek bed was seen. Pipe was coming from Nash farm and located right on property line. Fence was located almost above pipe end. 20 yards downstream there was an overflow channel tot he creek for a pond located on Nash. Pond was maybe 20 yards on other side of fence. No discharge was seen coming from either the pipe or pond, and no signs of sediment or discoloration from potential discharge points were seen downstream. Mr. Travis’ concerns were the pipe end was maybe 3-5 feet onto his property and the fence was down. It was hard to determine where the property line was due to a lot of brush growth. The fence appeared to have been down for some time but not recently done. It appeared down as a result of fallen limbs and erosion due to nearness to creek bank. Green Pipe appeared to have been in ground for a while.10/29/19 2:20pm Met Mr. Steve Nash. The 12 inch diameter green pipe was a way to capture water into a sump pit (see pic) located about 20 yards from creek. Water was then pumped to his barns as needed. Mr. Nash said pit has not been used in about 4 years and installed in about 2014. From the look of the equipment, it has been at least 2-3 years. The PVC pipe connection to the barns located in the pit was broken. (See pic.) The sump pump was on the ground outside the pit partially covered in dirt and brush growth. The pond appeared to be a farm pond not a waste pond. A man made channel had been dug to allow it to overflow to the creek. It was not overflowing or near that point on this visit. The channel had not been dug recently. It was explained that if water were to be drawn from the creek, a permit was needed. Suggested he consider plugging the green pipe.10/29/19 2:57pm Called Mr. Travis and explained that this was not an issue we could address at this time since no discharge or signs of such had occurred recently. Suggested he not plug the green 12 inch diameter line. Suggested he call TDEC if he sees a future discharge of coloration from either the pipe or overflow point of pond. Explained that neither were points of discharge for cattle waste as best could be determined at this time.
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