The Official Website of the Town of Sellersburg: established 1846; incorporated 1890.
Unlike water pipes, always full because of the pressure used to deliver water into homes, sewer pipes are rarely full when wastewater is flowing from homes to the sewage treatment plant. When water pipes break, crack or are broken, they leak water out; sewer systems, on the other hand, allow groundwater and storm water to leak in.
When groundwater or storm water leaks into the sewer system, it takes up extra space that could be carrying wastewater. If the pipes become overloaded, raw sewage may overflow at points throughout the sewer system before it reaches the treatment plant.

Inflow and infiltration are terms used to describe how storm water and groundwater get into the sewer system.
Inflow is storm water that is directly piped into a separate sanitary sewer system to control runoff. These connections, which may include storm drains in streets, parking lots and driveways and roof gutters, exist in a combined sewer system because it is designed to carry both wastewater and storm water. Storm water should never be connected into a sanitary system designed to carry only wastewater.
Some examples of the way inflow affect the sewer system:
In some cases, homeowners or contractors have illegally attached roof drainpipes and basement sump pumps to the sanitary sewer.

Example of inflow: A downspout connected directly to the sanitary sewer system.
Infiltration is excess water that gets into the sewer system through open joints, cracks, and breaks in the pipes. These deficiencies may allow constant infiltration of groundwater. The average sewer pipe is designed to last about 20-50 years, depending on the material. In many cases in this region, collection system pipes and household laterals have gone much longer without inspection or repair and are likely to be cracked or broken.
Some examples of the way infiltration affect the sewer system:
Cracked or collapsed sewer pipes, caused by deterioration over time, or poor design, installation or maintenance, allow groundwater into the collection system
Sewer lines are installed beneath a creek or stream because creeks are usually at the lowest point in the area, and it is more expensive to install pipes under a street. These sewer lines are therefore highly susceptible to infiltration when they crack or break. In some cases, broken lines have been known to drain entire streams into the local sewer system.

Example of infiltration: A deteriorated house lateral that allowed water to seep into the sewer collection system.
Inflow and infiltration play a significant role in the sewage overflow problem.
Of course, wet weather magnifies the problem: Inflow and infiltration can add as much as 3,000 gallons of storm water per person per day to the sewers, instead of the average daily 100 gallons per person of water use that is typical during dry weather. That's an overload of 30 times more flow per day during rain or snow melt, which then causes sewage to overflow into creeks, streams and rivers at hundreds of locations throughout Sellersburg before reaching the sewage treatment facility.
When an overflow occurs in a separate sanitary sewer system, it is called a sanitary sewer overflow (SSO). This may occur at an overflow structure, into a street from a manhole cover or into the basement of homes. Overflow structures, which were legal at the time of construction, and unintentional SSO's both, are illegal in separate sanitary sewer systems under the Clean Water Act.
While every community is likely to experience at least a few overflows in their sewer system, the older communities located in the Downtown experience the most overflows due to their low location in the system. The sewer collection systems in these areas not only carry their own sewage (and in many cases storm water), but they also receive the wastewater flow from their neighboring areas upstream. The complex network of integrated sewer collection system pipes throughout the Sellersburg service area makes it critical for all areas to collaborate on and share the responsibility for developing and implementing long-term solutions to the overflow problem.