BirdmanJ
Industrial
- Apr 17, 2018
- 2
I have a commercial construction business and at one of my properties I own a small clean fill dump site that we use to dump clean soil, concrete, rock, etc. The dump site is on a hillside that leads to a river. At the base of the hill, between our dump site, and the river, there's a 21" aerial sewer line owned by our local sanitation department. We recently discovered that the sewer line is broke, because one of the piers it's set on has shifted. I want to know if it's possible that the weight of the fill that I've dumped on the hillside could cause the peering below it to move.
Some additional facts:
The sewer pipe at the bottom of the hill is in a waterway that often floods. The river was over the sewer line about 2 weeks before we noticed the break in the pipe.
The closest fill to the sewer line is approximately 40 feet away. There has not been any rocks/debris fall on to the sewer line.
There is no sign of slippage between the sewer line and the fill site. There are trees between the sewer line and the fill site that are standing straight up.
The area that this sewer line is in is known for slipping. There is some kind of fault line that runs through our fill area.
Some additional facts:
The sewer pipe at the bottom of the hill is in a waterway that often floods. The river was over the sewer line about 2 weeks before we noticed the break in the pipe.
The closest fill to the sewer line is approximately 40 feet away. There has not been any rocks/debris fall on to the sewer line.
There is no sign of slippage between the sewer line and the fill site. There are trees between the sewer line and the fill site that are standing straight up.
The area that this sewer line is in is known for slipping. There is some kind of fault line that runs through our fill area.