Water-Related News

Cracked pipe causes 4M gallons of raw sewage to flow into Pinellas neighborhood

Last month’s spill was the third to occur near the intersection of 53rd Avenue North and 110th Street North since 2021. Officials say improvements are on the way.

According to Pinellas County, crews responded to the 53rd Avenue North neighborhood, near 110th Street North, around 7:30 a.m. on Aug. 28. The spill was caused by a crack in an aging 24-inch sewer line. Over the next few days, more than 4,400,000 gallons of sewage spilled, enough to fill roughly six Olympic-sized swimming pools.

Nory Hancock, the county’s deputy director of utilities, said the spill was under control by about 1 p.m. on Aug. 28. The county used vacuum trucks to collect about 874,000 gallons of wastewater, and overflows over the next few days were directed to a stormwater ditch using sandbags, Hancock said.

About five or six homes were affected by the spill, Hancock said. Medlock’s home was the only one to have sewage reach the garage. The other homes had sewage that crept up as far as their lawns, Hancock said.

Wastewater did reach surrounding coastal waterways, the county said.