Stuarts Point Sewerage Scheme

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Stuarts Point Sewerage Scheme will service Stuarts Point, Grassy Head and Fishermans Reach and provide a modern and reliable means of treating sewage and disposing of treated effluent.

Project update: Winter 2025

The EIS process is in the final stages of completion. Discussions with NSW Department of Planning and Environment (DPE) and key agencies are underway for initial submission and feedback before the formal submission is made via the NSW Planning Portal in July 2025.

Next steps:

The Department will carry out a high-level check of the EIS, which includes reviewing the Registered Environmental Assessment Practitioner declaration before putting it on public exhibition. Applications must be publicly exhibited for at least 28 days. The exhibition provides an opportunity for the community to have their say.

During the exhibition period, anyone can make a written submission on the DA. These submissions should be submitted to the Department on the major projects website. This will allow submitters to save submissions in progress, view a history of any submissions made and stay up to date with the progress of the application via electronic alerts.

If anyone is unable to use the major projects website, they can still send a written submission to the Department by post (Locked Bag 5022, Parramatta NSW 2124) or hand-deliver a submission to one of the Department’s offices.

Once the EIS is submitted, the NSW Planning Portal will be regularly updated as the project progresses.

Community Information

One of the frequently asked questions at the April 2025 community sessions was what to do if your septic tank is failing. Here’s the answer from the KSC Environmental Health team.

Engage a qualified plumber or contact the Environmental Health team for advice. Additionally, there is information about septic tanks and how to keep your system operating well on our website. Our Environmental Health team also undertake regular inspections. They can be contacted on 02 6566 3200 or via email ksc@kempsey.nsw.gov.au during our normal operating hours - Monday to Friday, 8.30am to 4.30pm.

Timeframe

Stuarts Point Sewerage Scheme Timeline as of March 2025

Funding

We are excited to confirm that the Australian Government has recently announced that Stuarts Point Sewerage Scheme is one of several critical infrastructure projects to receive funding from the Housing Support Program.

We applied for and will receive $45 million to complete the project and are waiting to receive further information about the deed and milestones for the project.

Background

The Stuarts Point Sewerage Scheme project will service Stuarts Point, Grassy Head and Fishermans Reach and provide a modern and reliable means of treating sewage and disposing of treated effluent.

The existing on-site sewage management systems (OSMS) that service both business and residential properties are aged and under unsustainable sewage loadings, with most properties served by septic tanks with absorption trenches or pump-out systems. The current method of treatment and disposal is no longer suitable and regular failures are occurring with untreated sewage leaking into the environment causing contamination, odour and water quality issues.

The project will involve the construction of a pressure sewer system to service approximately 520 properties, a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) to treat the sewage and dunal discharge for disposal of treated effluent (similar to South West Rocks).

The pressure sewer system is made up of an underground tank and pump at each property which collects sewage and discharges it through a network of pressure pipes to the treatment facility.

Planning and construction of the Stuarts Point Sewerage Scheme is highly complex and requires state government environmental and planning consent called a State Significant Development (SSD), involving the preparation and public exhibition of an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS).

 

June 2022

Geotechnical investigations at the site of the sewage treatment plant and dunal discharge site east of the Macleay Arm were completed. 

May 2022

Geotechnical investigations at the site of the sewage treatment plant and dunal discharge site commenced. This was behind schedule due to Council waiting on permissions from other government agencies to begin the work.

November 2021

Stuarts Point collection network masterplan capacities and flows - input into the sewage treatment plant design phase.

September 2021

September 2021

A Stuarts Point collection network Master Plan design was completed including a concept design. The report was prepared by PSS P/L for internal use as a guide for detailed design and use in construction tenders.

 

April 2021

Proposed environment protection licence concentration limits were agreed with the NSW Environment Protection Authority.

March 2021

NSW Department of Planning and Environment - Water granted collection and treatment options assessment section 60 endorsements.

 

Your questions answered

What are the scheme’s main objectives? Is development being prioritised over flood contamination issues?

The key driver for the Stuarts Point Sewerage Scheme is addressing the issues with existing treatment systems in use in the villages. Council is focused on providing the most sustainable sewerage service to benefit and meet the needs of the whole community.

The modern wastewater management system resulting from this project will have numerous benefits for the entire area, including a positive environmental impact by reducing onsite system leakage and eliminating odour and water quality issues.

All the properties in Stuarts Point, Grassy Head and Fishermans Reach presently rely on onsite sewage management systems to treat and dispose of effluent. The majority of residences are served by septic tanks provided with absorption trenches or pump-out systems.

Many homes in the area are about 40 years old and their sewerage systems do not comply with modern standards for treatment quality and disposal area conditions. These systems risk groundwater contamination and associated public health impacts via overflow events and ineffective treatment.

Construction of a sewerage scheme means these properties will avoid significant costs in the future to bring their individual systems up to compliant standards.

While development is not the driving force behind the delivery of this scheme, it will provide opportunity for growth in the area, and there is land surrounding Stuarts Point already zoned for potential residential subdivision.

It is also anticipated that the sewerage scheme will improve property values in the area, based on increased land value, development potential and improved social benefits. The sewerage scheme will also help the area cater for visitor populations in caravan parks and allow for additional property development. The scheme is also anticipated to improve estuary health for oyster growers in the area.

How did Council settle on the planned discharge point as the best option?

Various options for methods of discharging the treated effluent were thoroughly assessed. Council has worked closely with the NSW Environment Protection Authority and NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment in this regard.

Dunal discharge was selected as the endorsed option of treated effluent discharge, similar to that in place at South West Rocks. Other options were considered, including subsoil irrigation to the west of the Sewage Treatment Plant site; however they were not suitable due to the ground conditions at Stuarts Point, particularly during periods of wet weather.

Modelling has been undertaken to ensure there is no impact on the environment in the area where the discharge will take place.

Could the discharge be used as a water source for the avocado farms near the planned treatment plant?

Use of treated effluent discharge as a water source for irrigation can still be pursued and is an ongoing consideration.

The Stuarts Point Sewerage Scheme had to be designed to ensure a sustainable and complete sewerage service that would benefit and meet the needs of the whole community into the future under any circumstances.

As such, the system design needs to allow for the full quantity of treated effluent to be disposed of in the dune area, as there will be periods where irrigation is not required, such as following wet weather. The capacity to dispose of the full quantity in the dunes does not make it compulsory.

The option of irrigation of safe, treated effluent from the scheme may exist and this idea will be further considered as the project is developed.

Will property owners be responsible for ensuring their collection tanks are sealed and, if so, could the events of March-April 2021 happen again? Is improving stormwater drainage the key to prevent flooding?

Like many coastal communities in NSW, the Stuarts Point, Grassy Head and Fishermans Reach communities rely on ground infiltration, where the water on the surface seeps into the soil, to manage stormwater.

Stuarts Point, Grassy Head and Fishermans Reach are all low-lying areas. This means the water table levels, which essentially reflect the height of water saturation in the ground, are hugely significant in the efficiency of stormwater management. A high water table level prevents the water from being absorbed into the ground.

The recent floods revealed unexpected groundwater issues, with water table levels well above those seen in the past 20 years, which in turn resulted in inundation of low-lying properties.

Kerb and guttering works may be an option for stormwater drainage improvement; however many properties sit lower than the roads. As one could imagine, this has the potential to worsen stormwater impacts in such locations.

Further investigations into the recent events are being carried out. These will allow Council to better understand stormwater upgrade needs and evolve a more informed maintenance plan of key drains in the area. These investigations will need to take into account both the impacts from heavy rainfall and associated flash flooding, as well as the complications of rising water table events.

A shire-wide goal is to improve stormwater drainage management. Council will consider the needs of these villages in the context of other locations across the shire that also experience stormwater and flooding issues.

The good news is that the high water table levels will not impact the proposed pressure sewer scheme. Tanks will be appropriately sealed to mitigate any such impacts and this process will be operated and maintained by Council.