I convinced my wife that a disposal was bad for septic systems, and the septic guy agreed. One LESS thing to repair! We compost all plant matter, and meat byproducts go out in the trash.
It's interesting that so many cities, counties, and states have required pumping intervals. That's new to me.
From what I understand, our neighbors in Wisconsin have mandatory pumping intervals.
I personally think that from a public health standpoint that’s a good idea, even though it would add cost to me.
What is especially bothersome is that I have neighbors two places down the lakeshore that still have only a couple of fifty five gallon drums buried for their sewage. It’s been like that since the house was constructed in about 1969 or 1970.
A friend had, until recently, a pipe buried under the gravel county road leading to an open ditch that lead to a creek.
To say that the Health Department wasn’t pleased when he applied for a septic permit would be an understatement. They thought stuff like that was resolved decades ago.
Ten or twelve years ago the septic haulers were still dumping the sludge on county owned land near / on the lake shore on what is called stamp sands, made up from the rock that contained native copper. In the late 1800s through the 1960s the mining companies would crush rock from mines, some over a mile deep, into fine sand as part of the copper extraction process, then dump the residual sand in the lakes. Basically environmental terrorism. Those tailings eventually became Superfund sites.
Now the sludge haulers have to process the sludge through municipal wastewater treatment plants.