“Environmental Health investigated the area and observed no signs of sewage in any publicly accessible areas,” county health department spokeswoman Elyn Garrett-Jones said in an emailed statement. “The overflow site is in a wooded area which is difficult to reach and mostly surrounded by fencing. The area is not easily accessible to the public. An elementary school with a playground and ball fields is adjacent to the overflow site, but is separated from the wooded area by a chain link fence.”