Frozen septic systems are emerging as an unexpected consequence of climate change in Minnesota — one that is bedeviling homeowners across the state and could soon cost taxpayers more for the repair and maintenance of fragile rural roads.
The cause is a dramatic long-term decline in insulating snow early in November and December. Combined with still-freezing conditions, that drives the frost line deep underground — well below septic pipes and drain fields.
As a result, thousands of the half-million Minnesotans whose homes, cabins or businesses rely on underground septic tanks are facing a costly solution: pump their tanks more often and use their showers, washing machines, dishwashers and toilets less. And this year isn't the worst in a recent history of freeze-ups, septic haulers say.
The problem grows especially acute in March and April because Minnesota imposes local road weight restrictions for heavy trucks like the massive septic "honey wagons." That can leave homeowners stranded as they watch their septic tanks fill up with nowhere for the liquid to go. Except back in the house.
"We tell people, pretend like you're camping," said Lori Ende of Ende Septic Services in Rogers.
Over the years, the increasingly aggravating problem has prompted Minnesota governors to issue annual executive orders giving septic trucks an exemption from weight restrictions. Now the Legislature is considering a bill that would make that exemption as permanent as Minnesota's woefully inadequate early winter snow cover.
"If we aren't given the exemption, do we consider breaking the law to do what we know is in the best interests of the health and safety of our customers with raw sewage backing up into their homes?" Cindy Tiemann, co-owner of Fiedler's Your Pumping Specialists in Royalton, wrote in a recent letter to legislators. "Or do we tell them there is nothing we can do until we receive authorization?"
This winter, Tiemann's company serviced more than 450 residences with frozen lines or drain fields, and half lived in areas with seasonal road limits, she said. Without the governor's exemption, that means 225 would have had to wait until thaw for a pump-out.