But despite a flurry of last-minute phone calls, the Accomack County Planning Commission failed to achieve a quorum.
The commission adjourned its regular monthly meeting without conducting any business.
The plant also could be used to treat sewage from Chincoteague, 9 miles away, according to a principal with the company.
About 140 people have signed a petition sent to county officials opposing the facility.
Some who came prepared to speak during a public comment period wondered aloud afterward whether the lack of a quorum happened purposefully.
Jack Waterfield, who with his brother owns a farm on the north side of the proposed plant, spoke after the meeting about a July 13 memorandum from Accomack County zoning administrator Dave Fluhart to interim planning director Tom Brockenbrough.
In the memo, Fluhart stated that in his opinion, the conditional use permit application "should not be accepted or processed" because the plant, as a remote, private facility that is not replacing a failing facility, does not meet requirements of the county zoning ordinance for the agricultural district.
Waterfield had planned to speak to the Planning Commission about his concern about a pond on the property where the facility is proposed, which he said flows into White's Branch and then into Watt's Bay.
"Seven hundred thousand to 1.5 million gallons of sewage per day won't stop coming and has nowhere to go but into Watt's Bay in any of these scenarios," he said in a prepared statement.
In his prepared statement, he said he did not know a wastewater treatment plant was planned for less than a mile away from his home until he read about it in the newspaper.
"Like many who live in Atlantic, I felt blindsided and disrespected," Paige said, also citing the developers' "unusual decision to apply for the permit to construct before first applying for (a) Virginia Pollution Abatement" permit from the Department of Environmental Quality.
Hoppe said he is also con-cerned about a decline in property values if the sewage plant is built, which would affect tax revenue.
Source; http://www.delmarvanow.com/article/20110717/NEWS01/107170304/-1/7daysarchives/Residents-speak-out-against-septic-plans