October 2016
October 2016
October 2016
A prison teams
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PAGE 40
tpomag.com
OCTOBER 2016
TECH TALK:
Performance
in Paradise
PAGE 20
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contents
October 2016
top performers:
WASTEWATER: PLANT Page 42
Pulling Together
A major plant upgrade didnt keep the team at a Tulsa clean-water plant from
meeting permit limits and earning a Platinum Peak Performance Award.
By Trude Witham
OPERATOR Page 30
30
42
on the cover
20
12
In the Loop
Rob Scott and his team make sure the UConn Reclaimed Water Facility
lives up to its role in sustainable water use on a fast-growing campus.
By Ted J. Rulseh
WATER: OPERATOR Page 12
Crisis-Tested
Performance in Paradise
Full Circle?
A Haunting Experience
Lofty Goals
The Twin Cities Metro Council looks everywhere for opportunities to save energy and
deploy renewable energy sources.
IN MY WORDS Page 52
By Ted J. Rulseh
By Ed Wodalski
True Believers
An Aid to Digestion
By Doug Day
By Craig Mandli
By Craig Mandli
Inmate Ingenuity
People/Awards; Events
CM
MY
CY
CMY
BOOTH #2729
ovivowater.com
bioleNz
lets be clear
Full Circle?
CLEAN-WATER PROFESSIONALS HAVE LONG LOOKED
AT STORMWATER AS AN ENTIRELY SEPARATE ISSUE.
IMPORTANT SIGNS INDICATE THAT IS CHANGING.
By Ted J. Rulseh, Editor
WHOS RESPONSIBLE?
That being the case, just who should take care of stormwater? A separate utility? A utility somehow connected with
the wastewater side? The latter idea makes a certain amount
of sense, given that treatment plants increasingly look
toward nutrient trading and adaptive management upstream
as alternatives to costly new processes (see In My Words,
August 2016 TPO).
The thing about stormwater is that it doesnt observe
municipal boundaries. The waters flowing through or bordering Any City, USA, arent affected just by the rain that
falls on the cities. Watershed approaches to the problem are
essential that isnt news.
As the WEF report observes, the common approach to
stormwater used to be carrying runoff away as fast as possible. Now the emphasis is shifting toward handling as much
runoff as possible right where the rain falls. How exactly to
do that is the subject of the report.
SETTING A VISION
The WEF report tacitly acknowledges that stormwater
has traditionally been treated as the poor stepchild of wastewater and drinking water. It hasnt received nearly the attention or the funding as those other two components of the
urban water system.
Suppose that were to change. Suppose that, as the WEF
report envisions, stormwater were managed at the watershed
scale. Suppose that stormwater governance were rigorous
and the programs and agencies responsible fully funded.
Suppose that best practices in managing stormwater were
aggressively researched, selected and deployed.
ANOTHER RESOURCE?
Can stormwater become a resource to be used, instead of
just something to be managed? That idea was planted in my
head by Melissa Meeker, CEO of the new Water Environment and Reuse Foundation (see In My Words, September
2016 TPO).
Imagine a community where water is scarce capturing
and reusing not only its wastewater but the rain that falls.
There are logistical issues involved, of course. We surely
dont want to go back to the days of combined sewers. There
would be challenges in getting the stormwater to a place
where it can be routed into treatment.
And of course, treatment itself poses issues. First-flush
stormwater is pretty nasty stuff, full of gasoline, oil, tire dust
and other pollutants from vehicles, plus traces of herbicides,
pesticides, pet waste and who knows what else. On the other
hand, todays treatment technologies can do remarkable
things (albeit at a price).
The point is that it behooves society, and people in the
water professions, to bring stormwater into the tent as something to be handled with the same caliber of concern and
investment as drinking water and wastewater. Stormwater is
not something thats off to the side. Today more than ever, it
is front and center in its impacts. It deserves our full attention. Were past the time when any water professional can
look at stormwater as just someone elses concern.
@tpomag.com
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OPERATOR HEROES
MOSQUITO CONTROL
10
11
top performer
water: OPERATOR
CRISIS-TESTED
JUSTIN MAUGHAN LED A TEAM EFFORT TO MEET A WATER-CONTAMINATION CHALLENGE, EARNING
PRAISE FROM LOCAL OFFICIALS AND CITIZENS AND WINNING A WATER OPERATIONS AWARD
STORY: Jack Powell | PHOTOGRAPHY: Sallie Shatz
ENGINEERING SKILLS
12
JUSTIN MAUGHAN
Justin Maughans fast action and creative solutions to a diesel truck spill
won him the 2016 Water Operator of the Year award from the Rural Water
Association of Utah. Hes shown checking the oil on a well pump motor
(US Motors Nidec Motor Corporation).
13
TEAMWORK HELPS
When Justin Maughan won the Operator of the Year award,
he gave credit to everyone while downplaying his role in
responding to the April 2015 water contamination crisis. I truly
believe that the award belongs to the entire Cache Valley community, certainly not me alone, he says. Everybody did a fantastic
job during the water contamination crisis.
Indeed, the surrounding communities took the good-neighbor
concept to the next level. From the start of the emergency, teams
from other the Cache Valley communities in northern Utah
pitched in: Logan City, Hyrum City, Paradise, Providence City,
Richmond and Hyde Park.
They provided filling stations for Nibley residents to fill water
containers. They brought in tankers and moved them throughout
the city to dispense water. They helped flush contaminated
waterlines, offered advice to city engineers on the cleanup, and
took on tasks to relieve exhausted work crews. Moreover,
grocery stores and businesses donated bottled water, and some
neighboring residents even made their homes available for
people to take showers or wash their clothes.
We needed everybodys help for those six days, says
Maughan. The Nibley Public Works Department has only seven
employees. After so much work, we got pretty tired and needed
to rest. For example, we had to drive our water samples to Salt
Lake City, which is nearly an hour and a half away, and we sure
didnt want guys with an hour or so sleep going that far. So we
asked workers from other communities, and they were happy to
drive. Their support meant so much.
and ultimately leak up to 25 gallons of diesel oil from its fuel tank into the
spring. It happened on a Saturday, and it was late Monday night before Maughan
and his Sewer and Water Division team got their first funny water complaint.
They went to the home, tasted the water and noticed a film on it. At first,
they thought the problem was the homeowners water softening system, so
they took samples, sent them to the lab and did some precautionary hydrant
flushing. End of story, they believed.
But early Tuesday morning a second complaint came in. After taking a
14
sample, the team visited the collection-area box next to the spring, popped
the hatch and saw the bad news. It looked like a parking lot had spilled into
our drinking water system, says Maughan. Immediately, we notified the
state that we had a major contamination issue. Then the city issued a no-use
order to the public. We told everybody we could by any means possible: social
media, local radio and personal calls to schools and businesses.
Nibley residents were told not to drink the water, wash with it or use it
to clean their clothes. Other communities brought in trucks filled with water
and donated bottled water. Still, two local schools closed. Day care facilities
were hit hard because of all the water they use, and so was a convenience
store, which lost thousands of dollars in business when it couldnt sell coffee,
sodas or meals.
CLEANUP PLAN
Before moving to the cleanup phase, Maughan, like any good engineer,
sat down with city engineers and Sewer and Water Department personnel to
investigate options. Such thoroughness distinguished Maughan during the effort,
according to Justin Pope, department manager and 10-year Nibley veteran.
Justin is an awesome boss the best Ive ever had, says Pope, a Grade
IV water operator. He did a great job handling the contamination event.
Hes different than your typical public works type because of his background
as an engineer. Across the board, he knew where to get resources to help. It
was his broad spectrum and experience that was so effective. Were a small
city with very limited experience in this sort of thing. He knew who to call
to get us what we needed, from booms to soak up oil to folks who could drive
our samples the hour 20 minutes to Salt Lake City.
Rod Elwood, parks division manager and 15-year city employee, was
TIMELY RESTORATION
With the help of the county fire department, Maughans crew turned on
the two wells, since there was no problem with them, and flushed 72 hydrants,
about half the number in the system. At the same time, the citys three connected water tanks had to be decontaminated.
Instead of deploying skimmer pumps, Maughan decided to overflow the
tanks, but that posed problems because the overflow elevations werent exactly
the same for all three tanks. Since the team couldnt get in enough water to
spill from the tanks, they had to use a core drill to
punch holes in the tank sides to skim off as much
oily water as possible.
While that was happening, Public Works crews
were cleaning the spill site, using oil-absorbent pads
to make sure the diesel fuel didnt go anywhere. Meanwhile, Maughan sent samples to the lab to make sure
the system was, in fact, cleaned up. It was pretty much
around-the-clock for the first three days, with maybe
a few off hours for naps. The first night brought no
sleep whatsoever. Finally, the water was declared safe
to use. Maughan and the rest of the Public Works
staff could relax, but only a little.
When the decontamination work was completed,
we asked Nibley residents to flush their homes, says
Maughan. While we didnt max out our sewer system, we put a lot of water into it, which was pretty
nerve-wracking.
All of our sewer water flows through one lift station that goes to Logan City, so I had guys at the lift
station during the flushing with tanker trucks standing by in case something went wrong. Our normal
sewer flows are normally about 350 gpm. When this
event was taking place we were pushing 1,500 gpm.
In the end, we gained a lot respect for our 10-yearold sewer system and the importance of maintaining
our lift station and pumps.
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LEADERSHIP QUALITIES
As for the normally low-key Maughan, he gained
the communitys respect and top marks from his boss,
David Zook, city manager. Zook calls Maughan,
whom he helped hire, a good leader, who leads by
example. Justin has done an amazing job in terms of
handling emergencies and in his everyday role as
Public Works director.
Zook says Maughan didnt know about the Water
Operator of the Year award until notified that he had
won. When we had a City Council meeting and formally presented Justin with the award, he invited all
of his team and recognized them for their efforts, as
well as all the office staff who worked throughout the
event, Zook says. And he has given credit to teams
from the other communities who pitched in, and to
our residents and local businesses who came together
to get the issue resolved.
Despite such accolades, Maughan, father of two
young sons and a daughter, remains laser-focused on
overseeing Nibleys water, sewer, roads and parks sysFREE INFO SEE ADVERTISER INDEX
15
HEARTS
AND MINDS
A Haunting Experience
ZOMBIES, GHOSTS AND GHOULS TAKE OVER LOUISVILLES CRESCENT HILL
WATER TREATMENT PLANT, AND LEARN ABOUT TREATMENT IN THE PROCESS
By Craig Mandli
HISTORIC TREATMENT
16
A TWIST ON TRICK-OR-TREAT
CONSTANT OUTREACH
Louisville Water engineers and scientists served as the tour guides for a
continuous flow of superheroes, witches and zombies. Plant employees
talked about the citys award-winning water and the plant that recently
received a Phase IV Excellence in Water Treatment award from the Partnership for Safe Water.
Tour guides escorted visitors on a behind-the-scenes tour of the plants
laboratory, control room and filter gallery. Other activities included Frankensteins laboratory, complete with slimy, squishy body parts to feel; a Wizard
of Oz-inspired Good Witch who read children stories; a visit from Tapper,
the Louisville Water mascot; and a bloody handprint-making station.
We didnt market this as a traditional trick-or-treat experience, but the
kids all got a nice snack and went home with a little bag of goodies, says
Dearing-Smith. That didnt seem to matter, though. The kids loved seeing
the mascot and getting the chance to play in the water.
Marketing for the event proved to be a success as well. Local media outlets were happy to grab on to the feel-good story. TV stations and newspapers helped us promote it, which was a really great partnership, says
Dearing-Smith. The idea that it was a different twist on something that
happens every Halloween helped us a lot. I think combining kids in costume with a facility that everyone in this area recognizes is a pretty good
recipe for a fun story.
18
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top performer
wastewater:
PLANT
Performance
in Paradise
1976
POPULATION SERVED: |
4,000
6
FLOWS: 2 mgd design, 1.5 mgd average,
3.75 mgd peak
TREATMENT LEVEL: | Tertiary
TREATMENT PROCESS: Activated sludge,
tri-media filtration
RECEIVING WATER: | Big Thompson River
BIOSOLIDS: | 164 dry tons a year, land-applied
ANNUAL BUDGET: | $3.3 million
WEBSITE: | www.utsd.org
GPS COORDINATES: Latitude: 402223.43N;
Longitude: 1052855.34W
EMPLOYEES: |
21
22
The operations staff worked around the clock for the first couple
of days and ran the plant in manual mode during the flood. This is
a lost art for most operators, Creaghe said. After two days,
Creaghe worked out a schedule providing continuous staff coverage
until normal operations could be restored.
The flood wiped out our rainy day fund that I had worked so
hard to build up, said Chris Bieker, district manager. But the district
has now replaced its emergency operations fund and is continuing
with its asset management program. Bieker says, A lot of the
upgrades youll see out in the plant are happening now because we
identified the needs and made plans to address them.
OPPOSITE PAGE: Joe Creaghe and team members Jerry Schrag, Clinton
nation before discharge to the Big Thompson River, which serves as source
water for downstream users and provides recreation.
Waste activated sludge goes from the clarifiers to the aerobic digesters,
where it is treated to Class B biosolids standards for land application. A centrifuge (Centrisys) dewaters the biosolids to 16 to 22 percent solids. A contractor collects the material weekly for application to cropland or for hauling
to landfill. Production is 164 dry tons per year.
NO MAINTENANCE DEPARTMENT
The treatment plant has no separate maintenance staff; the four operators work maintenance and operations on a rotating schedule. This way, we
dont get bored, says Schrag. They also spend a week each month in the lab
with Taylor, who has been with the district for 36 years. She manages the lab
and keeps up with ever-changing analytical and reporting requirements.
UNIQUE PROCESS
The plant has an unusual design, Creaghe notes.
There are no primary clarifiers; influent enters through
three lift stations that also collect and screen out the
non-treatable solids. Combined flow from the lift stations goes into a flow equalization (EQ) basin that
also provides grit settling and inf luent f low
metering.
Wastewater exiting the EQ basin goes to the four
aeration basins, where a single 250 hp ABS Turbocompressor HST 20 blower (Sulzer) supplies the oxygen. Because the bar rakes in the lift stations dont
JOE CREAGHE
23
PERMIT
BOD
5.4 mg/L
30 mg/L
TSS
3.0 mg/L
30 mg/L
NH3 -N
2.1 mg/L
7.7 to 38 mg/L
(varies by month)
24
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Lofty Goals
SUSTAINABLE
OPERATIONS
n 2007, the Environmental Services Division of the Metropolitan Council in Minneapolis/St. Paul set a goal to reduce its fossil fuel purchases
by 15 percent by 2010. After achieving that goal, the division aimed for
a 25 percent reduction from the 2006 baseline by 2015.
The division came up just short, according to Sara Smith, sustainability
in operations manager: We came to a reduction of 23.6 percent, so we didnt
meet the goal, but we were very close. It was a good goal.
It was close enough that the division has challenged itself with a new goal
of a 10 percent reduction from 2015 levels by 2020. The idea is that well
keep that goal rolling and reduce our purchases by at least 10 percent every
five years, Smith says.
AERATION OPPORTUNITIES
The Metropolitan Council is a regional body serving the seven counties
and 181 cities and towns in the Twin Cities area. The Environmental Services Division operates and maintains 600 miles of regional sewers and eight
wastewater treatment plants that process on average 250 mgd. The council
also coordinates mass transit, community development planning, water supply planning, lake and river monitoring, regional parks and trails, land use
planning and affordable housing.
A cross-functional Energy Team meets quarterly to work on projects
across Environmental Services. We initiated the team in 2007 to bring
together maintenance, operations, people looking at process efficiency, and
technical services where capital projects are designed
and implemented, Smith says.
Aeration accounts for 30 to 60 percent of the treatment plants energy costs. Weve done a lot with optimizing our aeration systems and saved about 30 million
kWh per year, Smith says. One of the biggest efficiencies was switching from coarse-bubble to fine-bubble
diffusers. All the efficiency work was on the diffuser and
setpoint side of the aeration process. We did look at our
blowers a few years ago and determined that they were
efficient and a good match for our system.
28
RECOVERING HEAT
The Metropolitan plant, the agencys largest wastewater facility, has
two large fluidized-bed biosolids
incinerators that create steam for
heating and to produce about 20 percent of the plants electrical needs from
240 dry tons of solids per day. In
2015, our steam turbine averaged
more than 2 MW of generation that
resulted in $1.2 million in savings
for ratepayers, Smith says.
Normally, the turbine generator
had been used more in summer, but
low natural gas prices changed that
strategy. There are times when
weve decided that it was better to
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PERFORMANCE
PERFORMANCE
NEW LEVELS OF EFFICIENCY
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IN AERATION BLOWER SYSTEMS
10
mgd
1.22
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29
top performer
OPERATOR
IN THE
LOOP
ROB SCOTT AND HIS TEAM MAKE SURE THE UCONN RECLAIMED WATER FACILITY
LIVES UP TO ITS ROLE IN SUSTAINABLE WATER USE ON A FAST-GROWING CAMPUS
STORY: Ted J. Rulseh | PHOTOGRAPHY: Sean D. Elliot
30
Rob Scott and his team have built a sound and award-winning asset
management program in the Reclaimed Water Facility.
31
SUSTAINABLE SUPPLY
The University of Connecticut consistently ranks with the
greenest schools in the country. Among its sustainability
initiatives, UConn works to limit water use on campus and
protect the flow in the Fenton and Willimantic rivers during
seasonal dry periods while still meeting its water needs. The
UConn Reclaimed Water Facility is a key part of that endeavor.
The university operates the only public water supply within a
five-mile radius, providing water for its campus and for more
than 100 other users, including a town hall, a high school and the
growing downtown Storrs Center. The two main water sources
are the Fenton and Willimantic River wellfields.
During a drought in 2005, part of the Fenton River ran dry, and
the cause was attributed partly to the universitys withdrawals
from the Fenton wellfield. New management protocols were put
in place requiring the university to reduce its potable water usage
by about one-third, or 1 mgd. Needing an alternative strategy to
meet its water needs and preserve local water resources, the
university built the Reclaimed Water Facility.
Now, instead of sending all of its effluent to Willimantic River,
the Water Pollution Control Facility can divert up to 1 mgd to the
Reclaimed Water Facility. Water reclamation expands and makes
better use of the water supply; it extends drinking water
resources by about 20 percent.
On top of that, the university follows sustainable practices in
construction and renovation projects to conserve water. That
includes installing low-flow showerheads and low-flush toilets.
The university has also moved aggressively to find and repair
water main leaks.
FINE FILTRATION
The Reclaimed Water Facility is designed to treat an average of 1 mgd
and to handle peaks up to 1.5 mgd. Average flow at present is about 0.5 mgd.
We have three redundant treatment trains, each capable of treating 0.5
mgd, Scott says. Each treatment train includes a Goulds vertical turbine
pump with an ABB variable-frequency drive.
The water is pumped through a 500-micron Eliminator (Fluid Engineering) self-cleaning auto-strainer before delivery to Pall 0.1-micron microfiltration membranes. The membrane permeate goes through a two-pass
TrojanUVFit disinfection system before being stored in a 1-million-gallon
tank. Water from the storage tank is sent to the CUP, again using Goulds
vertical turbine pumps with ABB variable-frequency drives.
The treated water is dosed with chlorine or chloramines throughout the
process to prevent pathogen growth in the treatment, distribution and storage systems.
The CUP provides electricity, air conditioning and heat to campus buildings. It previously used 250,000 and 450,000 gallons of potable water daily;
reclaimed water has replaced most of that demand. The university is exploring use of the water for campus irrigation.
CONSISTENT QUALITY
Since startup, the reclaim plant
has produced extremely high-quality effluent. Weve recorded zero
fecal coliform colonies, says Scott.
Weve recorded
zero fecal coliform
colonies. BOD and
TSS average less than
1 mg/L. Turbidity is
less than 1 NTU. Its
really clean.
ROB SCOTT
(continued)
32
GD
GD_Robuschi_TPO_7-5_9x10.875.indd 1
7/5/2016 12:06:19 PM
ROB SCOTT
FACILITY COORDINATION
Communication among the three critical facilities
The facility team includes (from left) Scott, project manager, and Ray Mott and Sean Hetherington,
is especially important. To keep continuity and consislead operations and maintenance technicians.
tency in service, staff members from all three facilities
and the related university departments meet as needed
for coordination meetings, says Scott. We have viewing access to each othWINNING TRUST
ers SCADA systems. That provides instant feedback about actual operating
Scotts supervisor, Frank Cavaleri, senior area manager for operations
parameters and water use requirements.
and maintenance with Woodard & Curran, calls Scott a trusted adviser to
Furthermore, water-quality sample results from all three facilities are
the university staff. They come to Rob for myriad reasons, Cavaleri says.
placed in a Hach Water Information Management Solution (WIMS) dataWe do engineering work for UConn as well as operations. Rob is involved
base, where all parties can track and trend parameters. All facility operain many of those meetings and in discussions on how to get things accomtional information is placed on a shared university network, to which all
plished. He helps derive solutions by engaging many disciplines and services.
affected parties have access, Scott says. When operational issues or mainHes excellent in terms of involving his staff in decision-making. He
tenance tasks arise that might affect others, we discuss them clearly. We
takes excellent notes and documentation and communicates that back so that
schedule responses so that all parties can act appropriately without unnecI can see what is happening on the project. What really sets Rob apart, along
essary problems.
with his experience, is his ability to listen. He listens to the client, to his
The facilities make efforts not just to improve their own performance but
team and to company leaders, and he comes up with plans that work well.
to help the other facilities as well. For example, Scott and his team have taken
Thats why he has been able to implement Woodard & Currans manmeasures to reduce conductivity in the reclaimed water, enabling the central
agement tools and help the university implement its programs, as well. He
utilities plant to increase yield and reduce reject water in its RO process.
is a great asset to have on our side.
34
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TECH TALK
Floc structure
Pay attention to floc shape and density. Is it uniform in size? Is it small
or large? Is it round and granular-shaped, or large and irregularly shaped?
Does the floc look like a piece of fluffy cotton or like a BB? Does light pass
through the floc easily, or does it seem dark and dense?
Round, granular floc that resemble BBs most commonly point toward a
higher sludge age, where the MLSS has become overoxidized (that is, it has
been through the aeration process many times). These floc particles usually
36
settle rapidly in the secondary clarifier and settleometer. You might also find
the five-minute settleability reading to be very close to the 30-minute reading, and the sludge volume index (SVI) may be low.
Irregularly shaped, fluffy particles normally settle more slowly and compact less in the secondary clarifier and settleometer. The resulting SVI may
be higher than normal. Fluffy floc particles could mean a younger sludge
age (under-oxidized MLSS), or possibly a filament bulking sludge, discussed
further below.
Clarity of the liquid around the floc
When the floc settles in the clarifier or settleability test container, the
liquid that rises above the settled sludge blanket (supernate) becomes the
secondary effluent. Is the liquid around the floc particles full of tiny particles, or is it relatively clean and clear? Are there very small pieces of round
floc dispersed throughout the liquid?
If you have a phase contrast microscope, be sure to use the phase or darkfield settings to get a good look at the liquid surrounding the floc. You may
be surprised at what you see. Phase contrast microscopes have special objectives, along with a substage phase contrast condenser that looks like a round
turret mounted directly under the stage. Under this objective, the turbidity
is much easier to observe, and tiny motile bacteria suddenly appear where
(continued)
37
swimmers expend energy while moving about, gulping bacteria as they swim.
They are common due to the abundance of bacteria available as food. This
abundance of bacteria also contributes to elevated BOD results in the clarifier effluent or final plant effluent.
As the abundance of free-living bacteria declines with rising sludge age
and bacteria begin to form durable flocs, the population of bulk-liquid freeswimmers declines, giving rise to crawling free-swimming ciliates. These
creatures have specialized cilia (cirri) that they use as scrapers to dislodge
bacteria from the floc particle they are crawling on.
As they crawl on the floc, they graze on surface-level bacteria. The numbers of free-living bacteria in the bulk liquid decline or vanish, and bulkliquid free-swimmers slowly disappear.
During this process, the effluent
e have become reliant on SCADA systems, yet there are times when
quality is improving, and BOD and
turbidity are decreasing.
that information comes too late the plant is already upset, and we
Carnivorous free-swimmers are
missed the clues along the way.
just as the name implies: they capture and consume the innards of
other protozoa. Still other protozoa, like the large Spirostomum, are conRemember, filaments are essential to good, strong floc formation and
sidered by some to be omnivorous, consuming algae, bacteria, fungi and
structure. Mixed liquor that contains no filaments will usually settle very
small protozoa.
rapidly, leaving a turbid appearance in the supernate. Secondary effluent
As the numbers of free-living bacteria in the liquid around the floc conquality can be reduced as the small, suspended particles flow over the weirs.
tinue to decline and the floc continues to build, the available food value in
Floc is more durable when it contains some filaments, since sticky bacthe water also declines. Ciliates become more specialized in how they obtain
teria can attach to and grow along the filaments. Filaments are a nuisance
their nourishment and energy. Stalked ciliates attach themselves to floc parwhen they become excessive, causing inter-floc bridging or slowing the rate
ticles and use a stalk to extend themselves into the open liquid. Once there,
of settling and sludge compaction. This condition, known as bulking, can
they use their cilia to move the water about in a circular motion and toward
be detrimental, especially if solids wash out of the secondary clarifiers. If
their gullet, consuming bacteria caught in the current. They expend less
this occurs, the filaments should be identified and their root cause uncovenergy overall to get their food as compared to motile free-swimmers.
ered. This information can help operators eliminate or reduce the cause and
improve settling and effluent quality.
GETTING CLUES
38
OUR MOTORS
HAVE MET
THEIR MATCH.
INTRODUCING THE ACCU-SERIES LINE
OF VARIABLE SPEED DRIVES.
wastewater:
HOW WE DO IT
Inmate Ingenuity
OPERATORS OF THE WATER RECLAIM PLANT IN A CALIFORNIA PRISON DEVISE A CREATIVE SOLUTION
TO PROVIDE DENITRIFICATION AND MEET EFFLUENT STANDARDS FOR OFF-GROUNDS DISCHARGE
R.A.S.
By Ted J. Rulseh
DECLINE IN FLOW
W.A.S.
Influent
Four diffusers
Effluent
he four inmate operators of a water reclamation plant at the California Correctional Institution in Tehachapi faced a dilemma. Working
with plant flows and influent BOD well below the
original plant design levels, they could not denitrify
well enough to meet a 10 mg/L total nitrogen permit
limit for discharge to customers off the facility grounds.
Working together, and under the supervision of
three state-employed operators and a contract chief
plant operator, they developed a creative solution to
the problem that enabled the facility to resume delivering reuse water to customers during a severe drought
when demand for reclaimed water was high.
Blowers
40
each with 12 arrays. On each array were five separate perforated tubes that
created the fine bubbles for oxygen transfer.
Our plan involved converting some of the 12 diffuser rows into mixers.
The theory was that if we removed the perforated tubes from each array of
an entire row, that section of the system would mix the basin contents without significantly increasing the DO level. Large bubbles would help mix the
contents but would dissipate to the atmosphere before being absorbed in the
system.
The team decided to test the theory with one diffuser row. They tested
the DO level in the first section, and then removed all the perforated tubes
in the first row. The first thing we noticed was the increase in mixing, says
Fredrickson. The row being tested was capable of mixing not only its section but also the section next to it on both sides.
The best news, however, was when we tested the DO and saw that it had
dropped significantly. It worked we had finally found something that
would allow us to control our DO levels despite the oversized blowers.
I
re
e
Wh
on
ati
ov
nn
ws
Flo
Chemical Feed
EXERTING CONTROL
Next they had to decide which rows to convert to mixers and how many
should be converted. They decided to convert four of the 12 diffuser rows to
mixers by removing the perforated tubes. We created one mixer in between
each two diffusers to allow for a uniform balance between mixing and diffused aeration throughout the system, says Fredrickson.
The Parkson Biolac system then allowed them to control the on/off
sequences for the mixers and air diffusers directly from the PLC. The sequence
that worked best involved running the eight remaining air diffusers for one
hour while the mixers were off, then running all four mixers for one hour
while the diffusers were off.
Running the mixers every hour kept all of our solids in suspension without transferring much additional oxygen to the basin, says Fredrickson.
See Us At
WEFTEC
Booth 519
This allowed for a time period where the microorganisms could lower the
295 DeKalb Pike
surplus DO while the basin remained uniformly mixed. The increase in
North Wales, PA 19454
Contact your authorized
USA
kinetic energy created by the mixers also kept biological activity high despite
P: +1 (215) 699-8700
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All the manuals say the operators of an activated sludge plant must have
control over three factors: the air rates, the waste activated sludge (WAS)
rates and the return activated sludge (RAS) rates, Fredrickson says. Although
FREE INFO SEE ADVERTISER INDEX
WAS and RAS control was never a problem, we finally found way of controlling the air rates in our basin.
had a job that allowed me to contrib16-NEPT-0441 Neptune - Treatment Plant Operator - October 2016.indd 1
Share Your Ideas 8/2/16
The new sequences allow us to make adjustments when necessary to
ute something significant to the instiTPO welcomes news about interesting
maintain continuous control. We are now able to create a complete anoxic
tution and its community. The plant
methods or uses of technology at
zone for total nitrogen removal. We also no longer experience short-circuithad a legitimate problem. My coyour facility for future articles in the
ing, as the mixers keep all solids in suspension during denitrification. This
workers and I were asked to think
How We Do It column.
prevents any plug of raw wastewater from passing through untreated.
like operators. We poured our heart
Send your ideas to editor@
and soul into finding a solution, and
tpomag.com or call 877/953-3301
then it finally came.
IN COMPLIANCE
Fredrickson notes that he and
Fredrickson reports that the teamwork paid off: As of last summer, the
his fellow inmate operators all expect to be paroled by the end of 2017 or
plant was meeting its requirements for discharge off the grounds and was
sooner. He says, We are all excited about the prospect of starting our own
meeting the needs of water customers. There is no greater feeling than knowcareers in the water and wastewater industry.
ing we were able to come up with a solution together, Fredrickson says.
As an inmate, this is the best job I ever had. Most prison jobs involve
performing menial tasks, such as preparing food or basic janitorial work. I
tpomag.com October 2016
41
3:58 PM
top performer
wastewater:
PLANT
The entrance of the City of Tulsas Lower Bird Creek Water Pollution
Control Facility.
Pulling
Together
A MAJOR PLANT UPGRADE DIDNT KEEP THE TEAM AT A TULSA CLEAN-WATER PLANT
FROM MEETING PERMIT LIMITS AND EARNING A PLATINUM PEAK PERFORMANCE AWARD
STORY: Trude Witham
PHOTOGRAPHY: Brett Rojo
42
DOUBLING CAPACITY
The Lower Bird Creek plant, in northeast Tulsa on a bluff overlooking
the Port of Catoosa, is one of four wastewater facilities owned by the Tulsa
Metropolitan Utility Authority (TMUA). It serves 13,000 people. The 2012
expansion included:
Bar screen and continuous self-cleaning in-channel screen (Parkson
Aqua Guard)
SHAWN GLEN
43
INFLUENT
EFFLUENT
15 mg/L
<2 mg/L
TSS
30 mg/L
<3 mg/L
Fecal coliform
200 c.f.u./100 mL
<1.0 c.f.u./100 mL
Ammonia
7 mg/L
<0.2 mg/L
pH
6.5-9.0
Compliant
Plant operator Tom Collins fills a tank truck with biosolids (rolling ladder
from SafeRack).
44
Eric DeAlba, right, plant mechanic, checks the oil in a clarifier drive as Kenny
Friend, operator, assists.
GOING PLATINUM
HIGHLY EXPERIENCED
The team has 143 years of collective wastewater
treatment experience. Glen and Briggs hold Class A
(highest) wastewater operator licenses. Their team includes:
Operators IV Kenny Friend and Manny Verges,
both Class B license holders
Operators III Tom Collins and John Hines,
also both Class B
Mechanics III Eric DeAlba (Class C) and Al
Parker (Class D)
STORMY WEATHER
Operators at the Lower Bird Creek Water
Pollution Control Facility deal with some
extreme weather, including hot summers
and bone-chilling winters. Were prone to
ice storms, and that causes problems,
says Shawn Glen, plant superintendent.
We have power outages almost every
other year. One year a small tornado just
missed a lift station.
Fortunately, the plant has a dual power
feed. That works well, says Zane Briggs,
operations supervisor. It would take something major to disrupt both those sources.
The staff was tested during a major ice
and snowstorm in 2011. It caused hazardous conditions around the plant, unpassable
roads and intermittent power outages,
recalls Glen. It was an opportunity for the
staff to step up and show their dedication.
The team worked after normal hours and
stayed around the clock to make sure the
plant operated successfully.
TM
45
The team at the Lower Bird Creek facility includes, from left, back row, John Hines, operator; Falan Versaw, storekeeper; Tom Collins, Kenny Friend and Manny
Verges, operators; and Eric DeAlba, mechanic; front row, Shawn Glen, plant superintendent; and Zane Briggs, operations supervisor.
This was due to short circuiting, which caused a higher-than-desired effluent TSS. Operators and mechanics worked together to design and build a
polymer feed system with storage tank, mixing system and peristaltic pump
to help the solids settleability until the new clarifier was brought online.
FUTURE IMPROVEMENTS
46
With the plant expansion in the rearview mirror, the teams biggest challenge is biosolids management. Operators haul the solids 10 to 15 miles by
tanker truck to the Northside plant for processing. We have to do this every
day, and its hazardous, says Glen. We had a tanker truck roll over, and the
driver was injured. It also takes an operator away from plant operation.
A 10-mile force main under construction as of last June is designed to
allow solids to be pumped to the Northside plant. We had talked about
doing this, but the accident forced the issue and reminded us how dangerous and time-consuming the hauling is, says Glen. The main was to be completed in summer 2016.
In May 2016, the plant installed a UV disinfection system (TrojanUV
3000) to satisfy the state Department of Environmental Quality requirement
for year-round disinfection. Says Glen, We were previously required to disinfect from May to December only. We used bleach and bisulfite, but we
decided that UV was the best technology for our facility. We visited another
plant that had that system, and the staff there was very excited about it.
A primary clarifier is on the wish list, along with an updated holding
basin for diverting flow during heavy rains. The plant is designed for 8 mgd
peak flow, but when it gets to 6 mgd, we need to divert the flow, says Glen.
When the water subsides, we slowly bring the flow back to the plant.
For now, the plant is in great shape. The expansion gave us a final clar(continued)
Booth 3911
47
Booth 2163
www.adedgetech.com
1-866-823-3343
Kenny Friend (left) and Manny Verges check the dissolved oxygen level in the
oxidation ditch.
ifier, which we didnt have before, says Glen. And now we have the UV system and were working on the new force main. So we feel very fortunate.
He is also thankful for the operations and maintenance team: Their
greatest success is the ability to communicate. They talk in the morning and
make sure they help each other with projects. They all pull together to get
the job done.
Booth 5339
Grainger
PureAir Filtration
Grundfos Pumps
SafeRack
913/458-2000
www.bv.com
847/535-9255
www.grainger.com
800/921-7867
us.grundfos.com
(See ad page 51)
Hydro International
866/615-8130
www.hydro-int.com
(See ad page 61)
Nasco
800/558-9595
www.enasco.com/whirlpak
(See ad page 86)
Parkson Corp.
888/727-5766
www.parkson.com
FREE INFO SEE ADVERTISER INDEX
48
913/371-5000
www.fairbanksnijhuis.com
678/935-1431
www.pureairfiltration.com
866/761-7225
www.saferack.com
TrojanUV
888/220-6118
www.trojanuv.com
IN MY WORDS
True Believers
OVER NEARLY TWO DECADES, NED BEECHER AND NEBRA HAVE HELPED ELEVATE PUBLIC DEBATE
ABOUT BIOSOLIDS AND BRING RECYCLING INTO THE MAINSTREAM OF FARMING PRACTICE
By Ted J. Rulseh
or almost 20 years, Ned Beecher has led the Northeast Biosolids and
Residuals Association (NEBRA) as executive director. The organization has seen turbulent times, dealing with public controversy, local
bans on biosolids application, and various regulatory initiatives.
Through it all, NEBRA has served its members with research, workshops,
technical advice and public outreach, all aimed at gaining acceptance for
recycling of biosolids and other residuals as a beneficial practice. For his
role, Beecher received the 2015 Biosolids Management Award from the New
England Water Environment Association.
Beecher, a native of Concord, Massachusetts, was always interested in
the outdoors and environmental affairs. He earned a bachelors degree in
geology from Amherst College and a masters in resource management from
Antioch University New England. He started work life as a teacher and naturalist with Tin Mountain Conservation Center in Albany, New Hampshire,
and later worked for Resource Management, a company in the same state
that manages municipal biosolids programs.
NEBRA was formed in late 1997, when permitting of farm fields for land
application of biosolids often led to public uprisings. Beecher became its first
and only executive director in February 1998. NEBRAs roughly 90 members include clean-water facilities, biosolids management companies, engineering firms, and some septage haulers and paper mills. Its service area
includes the New England states and Canadas Maritime Provinces and Quebec. Beecher talked about NEBRA and its accomplishments in an interview
with Treatment Plant Operator.
Ned Beecher
You have to listen to people, figure out where they are, talk to them
: What was the climate like for biosolids recycling when NEBRA was formed?
about their concerns, and learn from that. Its a two-way discussion.
Beecher: It was pretty rough. There
were a lot of public issues, especially in
Its not just about educating people.
New Hampshire where 30 or 40 towns
NED BEECHER
adopted bans or very severe restrictions on
biosolids use. Even in Maine, which has long recycled about 90 percent of
(WERF) put out a request for proposals for a social-science look at public
its solids, some towns were trying to ban biosolids from use on farms. There
perceptions of biosolids. We assembled a team and met with leaders in the
was quite a lot of local public upset, mostly generated by odors.
field of environmental conflict people who understood the social science
around the siting of environmental facilities.
: How did NEBRA make an impact?
Beecher: Our biggest contribution at first was getting people in the
: What was the outcome of that exercise?
industry to be on the same page, networking together and sharing consistent
Beecher: We learned a lot. We got a good sense of why biosolids were
information. We held conferences and workshops that helped everyone think
so concerning to some people. Then we worked with WERF to put on a
about how utilities could do a better job and avoid creating the upsets. We
research symposium with diverse stakeholders, including some dedicated
also did a lot of outreach. For example, every few years we held a set of open
opponents of biosolids as well as leading researchers from around the counhouses, tours and field days for the public over a week or two. Legislators,
try. Everyone debated what the research priorities should be. It was a fascimedia people and others came. It helped get the word out about biosolids
nating process, working toward consensus. It wasnt wholly successful, but
and what was really going on. We still do outreach in different states dependit did get us talking to people rather than at people doing a better job of
ing on the current need.
communicating.
(continued)
52
aproviding
more sustainable
a more sustai
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Were dedicated to meeting the needs of your community now and in the future. Thats why SUEZ
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TreatmentSolutions_Municipal-Ad.indd 1
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TreatmentSolutions_Municipal-Ad.indd 1
5/2/2016 8:32:35 AM
53
: From the social-science perspective, what did you learn from all this?
Beecher: A good tagline would be: Not public relations, public relationships. You have to listen to people, figure out where they are, talk to them
about their concerns, and learn from that. Its a two-way discussion. Its not
just about educating people. Its about building relationships, developing
two-way communication and allowing public involvement in biosolids programs. I think many in this profession have learned to adapt to the needs of
stakeholders and continually improve our practices. There are public utilities and biosolids managers that really get this, and others that still dont.
: Can you give an example of where NEBRA has made an impact
on regulations?
Beecher: Massachusetts had an old standard from the 1980s on the
level of molybdenum in biosolids applied to soil. It was based on concern
about molybdenosis in cattle. It was 25 ppm, or 10 ppm if being applied to a
forage crop. The standard made it impossible for Bostons biosolids pellets
Bay State Fertilizer to be used in the state to any great extent. In 2015,
we organized a workshop involving state regulators and researchers who had
done risk assessments on molybdenum. The Massachusetts Water Resources
Authority also weighed in and had considerable impact. The state Department of Environmental Protection has now proposed a new standard of 40
ppm that we recommended, and we expect it to be adopted later this year.
: What would you say are the biggest issues facing biosolids recycling today?
Beecher: The two biggest technical issues are emerging contaminants
of concern, which are trace chemicals from household products, and phosphorus. On emerging contaminants, weve tracked the research and provided
updates, and I think weve helped our stakeholders see that the likelihood
of any significant risk from those chemicals in biosolids is very low. These
chemicals are in our daily lives at much higher concentrations than in
biosolids.
: What is the issue with phosphorus?
Beecher: The phosphorus issue is more challenging. Phosphorus occurs
in biosolids often at levels higher than the crop needs. If you apply biosolids
based on the nitrogen needs of the crop, which is the common practice, you
end up applying more phosphorus than needed. Some states in our region
have laws that dont allow any phosphorus fertilizer to be applied to lawns
or turf, and sometimes in agriculture, if a soil test does not show the need.
Thats fine for commercial fertilizers where you can keep the phosphorus
out, but with biosolids, or with compost made from food waste, phosphorus
is a part of it and you cant just delete it.
What this points to is that biosolids is unbalanced as a fertilizer, and if
we can get more phosphorus out in the form of struvite at wastewater treatment plants, then well end up making a more balanced product. NEBRA
recently worked with the University of Massachusetts Extension to create a
symposium on how best to manage phosphorus in organic residuals applied
to soils.
54
TECHNOLOGY
DEEP DIVE
2
1
1. The Pondus process uses caustic soda for pH change along with hot water to hydrolyze
sludge efficiently and improve the digestion process.
2. The process uses a circular reactor built for 2- to 2 1/2-hour detention time depending on
the feed-material characteristics.
An Aid to Digestion
PONDUS PROCESS FROM CNP HELPS ANAEROBIC DIGESTERS PRODUCE MORE BIOGAS
WHILE ALSO IMPROVING DEWATERING EFFICIENCY AND REDUCING POLYMER CONSUMPTION
By Ted J. Rulseh
56
THREE YEAR
WEAR PARTS
PERFORMANCE
GUARANTEE
When you upgrade an existing installation to
SEEPEX pumps with the award winning Smart
Conveying Technology (SCT) you will get a
three year performance guarantee. This is the
only guarantee that includes wear parts:
rotors, stators, seals and universal joints.
If they wear out, SEEPEX will replace them.
CONVEYING CAPACITY
UP TO 500 USGPM
PRESSURE
UP TO 120 PSI
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Booth #1351
SEEPEX Inc.
sales.us@seepex.com
T +1 937 864-7150
www.seepex.com
Scum Separator
WIDE DISCHARGE,
IMPROVED MATERIAL BREAKUP
Booth 4017
Dewater Clarifier Skimmings.
Enhance Digester Operation.
Small Footprint Effective Operation.
Manufactured in Aurora, IL USA.
INVEST IN QUALITY
57
: Does this process work on both primary and waste activated sludges?
Forstner: The process uses only waste activated sludge, because that is the
sludge that is much harder to digest. We then blend the hydrolyzed material with
primary sludge and feed the mixture into the digester at about 100 degrees F.
: How exactly does the hydrolysis process work?
Forstner: We first thicken the waste activated sludge to 7 to 10 percent
solids. We then dose that with about 1,500 parts per million of 50 percent
caustic soda. Next we mix one part of that fresh sludge with two parts of
hydrolyzed sludge recycled from the PONDUS reactor. That reduces the viscosity by 80 to 90 percent. This material passes through a heat exchanger
and enters the reactor.
: What happens inside the reactor?
Forstner: Its a circular reactor built for two- to 2 1/2-hour detention
time depending on the characteristics of the incoming material. About 10
inches inside the outer reactor shell is a smaller ring. We feed the sludge at
the lowest section of the reactor, about 5 inches from the bottom, between
the inner and outer rings.
The sludge rises toward the top of the reactor bed and is heated to 150 to
170 degrees F. After about 1 1/2 hours, it overflows from the outer ring into
the inner ring, where there is another half-hour of detention time. During
this process, the caustic soda disintegrates the cell membranes, releasing
organic acids and neutralizing the pH from 11 to 7. After another half-hour,
Do It Once!
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Sales, Rentals,
& Leasing Options
Booth 6347
58
61
product focus
from the center feed well to the effluent weir located around the periphery of the tank. 630/837-5640; www.lakeside-equipment.com.
Tanks, Structures
and Components
By Craig Mandli
Baffles/Booms/Weirs
SMITH & LOVELESS
OPTIFLOW 270
The OPTIFLOW 270 baffle system
from Smith & Loveless addresses the
OPTIFLOW 270 baffle system
numerous 270-degree vortex grit chamfrom Smith & Loveless
bers that are installed throughout
North America and elsewhere. It is a simple retrofit baffle system that
allows 270-degree grit systems to achieve improved removal efficiencies. Vortex grit removal systems designed to meet previous standards
can be upgraded to remove 95 percent of grit down to 150 microns with
the retrofit. The baffle system achieves improved efficiencies by directing the flow toward the hopper for an additional pass along the chamber floor, reducing the weir effect at the outlet and ensuring ideal velocities
at all times. The retrofit system is available not only for flat-floor vortex
grit chambers, but also as a conversion system for sloped and coneshaped grit chambers. It can be installed for new systems requiring
270-degree layouts. 800/898-9122; www.smithandloveless.com.
Buildings/Structures
GLOBAL TREAT
FIBERGLASS SHELTERS
Fiberglass shelters from Global Treat can be
used to protect chlorination and dechlorination
equipment from environment elements, enhancing
equipment life. They are corrosion-resistant, weatherproof and low-maintenance. Prefabricated buildFiberglass shelters
ings are made of fiberglass-reinforced skins with 1
from Global Treat
inch of isocyanurate foam-insulating core and a
white, UV-protective gel coat both inside and out. Standard building
sizes range from 2 by 4 feet to 12 by 12 feet. Custom dimensions and
door sizes are available. 800/370-4410; www.globaltreat.com.
Clarifiers
LAKESIDE EQUIPMENT
CORPORATION SPIRAFLO
Influent enters the periphery of the
Spiraflo peripheral-feed, center takeoff
clarifier from Lakeside Equipment Corporation, with the flow moving to the center for removal by a centrally located effluent
trough. This flow pattern is the opposite
of a center feed clarifier, where the
Spiraflo clarifier from Lakeside
influent enters at the center of the
Equipment Corporation
tank and moves radially out ward
SCHREIBER PERIPHERAL
DRIVE CLARIFIER
Peripheral drive clarifiers from Schreiber
are designed for applications such as stormwater and primary and secondary clarification. The peripheral drive system uses
leverage rather than center-drive torque to
Peripheral drive
rotate
the scraper and skimming assembly,
clarifiers from Schreiber
resulting in a simplified mechanical system. All
the equipment necessary for the continuous removal of floatables and
settled solids is suspended from either a rotating bridge or, for smaller
units, a lightweight rotating beam arm. The rotating skimming equipment removes floatables regardless of wind direction, and the helical
scrapers transport settled solids to the center of the basin in a single revolution. The design allows for the lifting of equipment above the water
level for inspection or maintenance without having to dewater the basin.
205/655-7466; www.schreiberwater.com.
Digesters
LYSTEK INTERNATIONAL THERMAL
HYDROLYSIS SYSTEM
The thermal hydrolysis system from Lystek International optimizes
digesters and biological nutrient removal systems, contributing to diver-
62
Grating/Handrails/Ladders
FIBERGRATE COMPOSITE
STRUCTURES DYNARAIL
Combining corrosion resistance, long life and a lowmaintenance design, Dynarail fiberglass reinforced plastic ladder systems from Fibergrate Composite Structures
are designed and manufactured to be easily installed
with no guesswork involved. Components are lightweight
and easy to fabricate. Combining its
Dynarail ladder systems from
low cost of installation with low mainFibergrate Composite Structures
tenance and long life, it offers a low life
cycle cost. The line includes ladders, standard walk-throughs and safety
cages. Ladder rungs with heavily serrated flutes ensure slip-resistant
footholds, increasing worker safety. The ladders are useful in applications such as manholes, pits, pump stations, wet wells and other access
points where covers are used. 800/527-4043; www.fibergrate.com.
Mixers
FLYGT - A XYLEM BRAND 4320
The 4320 low-speed, submersible wastewater mixer from Flygt - a Xylem brand has builtin speed regulation to optimize control over the
mixers thrust for continuous process results and lower energy consumption. Coupling an integrated drive
4320 wastewater mixer
with a synchronous motor, the mixer elimfrom Flygt - a Xylem brand
inates the need for an external variablefrequency drive. Once installed, the mixer thrust or speed can be altered
to that facilitys specific conditions, reducing energy consumption. Applications include activated sludge treatment, sludge holding tanks and
digesters, as well as biogas applications. Mixers have a variable speed
of up to 70 rpm and are available in two- or three-blade models with a
range of propellers from 4.6 to 8.2 feet in diameter. The backswept design
ensures clog-free operation. Speed controls can be adjusted using a small
operator panel mounted tank-side or in the control room for easy accessibility. Remote communication enables the mixer to be accessed from
a central control system. 855/995-4261; www.xylem.com/treatment.
(continued)
63
product focus
Storage Tanks
TIDEFLEX MIXING
SYSTEM (TMS)
VAUGHAN COMPANY
TURBO MIXER
The Turbo Mixer propeller mixer from Vaughan
Company is mounted vertically inside an 18-inch elbow.
It can mix a pit with only 1 foot of liquid above the floor
and incorporates an upper cutter above the propeller to
stop wrapping and fibrous material binding and to protect the mechanical seal. It can be belt- or gearbox-driven
and can be used in anoxic zones, oxidation ditches and
mixed liquor applications. 360/249-4042;
Turbo Mixer propeller mixer
www.chopperpumps.com.
from Vaughan Company
WESTECH ENGINEERING
EXTREME DUTY
Extreme Duty sludge mixers from WesTech Engineering provide vigorous mixing of digester contents
to prevent stratification and improve the anaerobic
process. They reliably speed gas production while
reducing foaming and scum accumulation. They were
originally developed to reduce the high service costs
of egg-shaped digester mixers, but are now used for
maximum efficiency and durability in
Extreme Duty sludge mixers
all digester-mixing applications. 801/265from WesTech Engineering
1000; www.westech-inc.com.
Skimmers
PARK PROCESS SKIMPRO
The SkimPro floating skimmer from Park
Process is designed to be used in backwash
receiving tanks to skim clear water and recycle
it back to the clean-water flow. The unit is constructed of 316 stainless steel with a skimmer head
that is designed to handle whatever flow is
SkimPro floating skimmer
required for the particular application. 855/511from Park Process
7275; www.parkprocess.com.
HAWKINS DOUBLE-WALL
STORAGE TANKS
Double-wall storage tanks from Hawkins are
available in a variety of sizes ranging from 10 to
12,500 gallons, in a variety of shapes and styles.
Their tank-in-a-tank design provides total containment protection with the big space-saving
advantage of a double-wall tank. The units conStorage tanks
sist
of a primary tank with a secondary outer
from Hawkins
containment tank with the capacity of 115 to 120
percent of the inner tanks capacity, exceeding EPA standards. A variety
of tank accessories are available. 800/328-5460; www.hawkinsinc.com.
64
Tank Inspection/Repair
HAWK MEASUREMENT SYSTEMS
CENTURION GUIDE RADAR
The Centurion Guide Radar from Hawk Measurement Systems uses time-domain reflectometry, passing concentrated radar pulses through a rod or cable
from the sensor to the material being measured. The
dielectric constant of the measured material causes a
change in impedance that
Centurion Guide Radar from Hawk
in turn develops a wave
Measurement Systems
reflection. That reflec-
tion is sent back up the probe to the sensor, where the transit time is
translated into distance using time of flight and time expansion. It is
able to measure extremely low dielectric (1.5) to provide precise and
continuous measurement. Since pulses are directed via a guide, factors
like surface turbulence, foams, pressure, dust, vacuum, vapors, temperature, dielectric constant or tank obstructions do not influence the measurement. It offers auto-calibration to any dielectric constant greater
than or equal to 1.5, adjustable sensitivity and simple setup. 978/3043000; www.hawkmeasure.com.
65
product focus
Tanks
AMERICAN FIBERGLASS
TANK REPAIR
LINING AND REPAIR
SERVICES
Fiberglass lining and repair services
from American Fiberglass Tank Repair
can help extend an FRP tanks useful
life. The lining systems use todays resin
Fiberglass lining and repair
and veil components to upgrade existing
services from American
tanks beyond their original factory stanFiberglass Tank Repair
dard coatings, as technicians work with
resin manufacturers to pinpoint the latest resin and veil formulations
compatible with existing tank substrates. Techs use custom-blended
isophthalic and terephthalic polyester, vinylester, and epoxy resins, as
well as over 45 fiberglass mat, chopped strand, Nexus, Harlar and carbon veil laminates. They offer tank linings, repair, inspection, insulation, and nozzle repair services at the facility, adapting to existing
schedules. 877/427-0090; www.americanfiberglasstank.com.
Connect with us
66
PRINT NAME:
Tank Inspection/Repair
Hawk Measurement Systems Centurion Guide Radar
Nasco Sludge Judge
Tanks
American Fiberglass Tank Repair fiberglass lining and
repair services
Imperial Industries one-piece silos
Superior Tank bolted steel tanks
TITLE:
FACILITY NAME:
MAILING ADDRESS:
CITY:
STATE:
PHONE:
CELL PHONE:
FAX:
EMAIL:
ZIP:
O1016
Facebook.com/TPOmag Twitter.com/TPOmag
Plus.google.com Youtube.com/TPOmagazine
Linkedin.com/company/treatment-plant-operator-magazine
The Triton Screw Centrifugal Pump combines the benefits of Vaughans UNMATCHED
RELIABILITY with the advantages of highly efficient, non-clog performance. Tritons screw
centrifugal impeller is ideal for handling thick sludges, large solids, shear sensitive fluids
and delicate or highly abrasive material.
Booth 1516
67
case studies
Problem
The city of Dickinson, North Dakota, faced difficulty with its reservoir
water system. As the community grew, low water pressure threatened to
impair fire protection and became an issue in the developing areas.
Solution
RESULT:
The issues of reservoir capacity, low water pressure and fire protection capability were rectified. 715/235-4225; www.ameristruc.com.
By Craig Mandli
Problem
Solution
DN Tanks Concrete
Tank Services (CTS) evaluated the tank and failed previous repairs, and developed
a plan that included applying
an elastomeric waterproofing
material on the interior floor,
floor joints and column bases,
along with structural repair
to the inlet pipe. CTS also cleaned and restored the deteriorated concrete,
applied a high-performance decorative coating, designed new hatch curbs
and installed two new aluminum roof access hatches.
RESULT:
The city now enjoys a refurbished tank that will have an extended
life and comply with Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
requirements. 800/662-8486; www.dntankscts.com.
Problem
In the past 10 years, the village of Huntley, Illinois, has grown from
6,000 to more than 23,000 residents. The villages two activated sludge
wastewater treatment plants needed covered storage for biosolids. We get
charged by the cubic yard, says Steve Zonta, utilities superintendent.
When stored without cover, it would get rained on and grow in mass.
Solution
RESULT:
With a 77- by 96-foot building, the village can store up to 13,000
cubic yards of material under cover. The warranty and the fact that
the building could be engineered to specific snow and wind loads were
important, says Pino. It proved that this wasnt going to be just a temporary solution. 866/643-1010; www.clearspan.com.
68
Problem
Solution
RESULT:
The turnkey solution was provided under a tight timeline. Downtime and maintenance issues were eliminated, and the systems
increased solids removal efficiency. 800/524-6324; www.evoqua.com.
Problem
Solution
Geomembrane Technologies designed and fabricated two structurally supported covers for
the 8- by 33-foot grit tanks. The
retractable covers consist of a
high-strength,
UV-protected,
coated fabric tensioned over a
low-profile aluminum arched
frame. Foul air from below the
covers and inside the grit building is withdrawn and treated in
a carbon system.
Problem
Solution
RESULT:
The new design is much more efficient and effective. 800/264-7005;
www.kusterswater.com.
RESULT:
The covers have helped the plant make progress against odors and
improve relations with neighbors. The covers control odors and easily
retract, meeting access requirements. One person can open the covers
for routine inspections. Covering the grit tanks was one of the most
effective things we could do to further reduce the potential for odors,
says Wendy Derjugin, plant operations supervisor. 506/449-0993;
www.gticovers.com.
Problem
The city of Madison (South Dakota) Wastewater Treatment Plant operated an anaerobic digestion system. Odors from excessive ammonia accumulation and foaming were prevalent. The system also had operation and
maintenance issues dealing with methane, and gas vents froze during
winter.
Solution
RESULT:
Biosolids enter the digesters at 2.5 to 4 percent solids; material
exits at 1.5 to 2 percent solids. Solids reduction is achieved by maintaining temperature control, aeration and mixing. Solids reduction
ranges from 40 to 60 percent. Ammonia concentrations are consistently
below 2 mg/L in each digester. 512/834-6000; www.ovivowater.com.
Problem
Asphalt emulsion had been used for years as hard armor berm protection for a secondary containment system at a tank terminal site in the state
of Washington. However, frequent cracking of the berm led to high maintenance and repair costs and operation disturbances from recoating every five
to seven years.
Solution
In late 2014, the asset owner selected Milliken Infrastructure Solutions Concrete Cloth GCCM, a flexible, concrete-impregnated fabric
that hardens on hydration to form a durable, waterproof and fire-resistant
concrete layer. It helps reduce installation time and the maintenance associated with slope erosion, vegetation growth and animal burrowing. Sandbags were first used to elevate the berm height to meet requirements. Bulk
rolls of the cloth were then spooled down to cover the berm and fixed to the
concrete infrastructure. The
cloth was placed into an anchor
trench and backfilled with a
compacted asphalt road base on
the inside and outside of the
berm. Finally, the solution was
hydrated using a high-volume
hose attached to a water hydrant.
RESULT:
The new surface minimized daily operation disturbances and upgraded the secondary containment berm to allow for possible expansions. It was installed in
seven days using minimal personnel. It has drastically reduced maintenance costs and safety concerns while improving impermeability and
aesthetics. 864/503-2020; www.milliken.com.
(continued)
69
case studies
Problem
Problem
Solution
Solution
RESULT:
Insulating the water
surface reduced heat loss and improved anaerobic and aerobic processes, enabling reliable year-round treatment. The system performs
successfully all year. 952/829-0731; www.ieccovers.com.
RESULT:
Using RMs modular design, the buildings were erected around the
equipment. RM provided a supervisor to oversee the job, which was
completed in less than 10 days. 800/363-0867; www.rmfiberglass.com.
Problem
Problem
Solution
RESULT:
The entire application was completed in three days by a three-person
crew. The application created a seamless, chemical-resistant, permanent seal in the 40,000-gallon overflow
basin. The city plans for the same application at other pool locations.
800/422-2603; www.rhinoliningsindustrial.com.
70
Solution
RESULT:
The plant can now easily handle its biosolids production and can
load trailers in less than 15 minutes without repositioning. 715/2473433; www.schwingbioset.com.
Booth 3445
Problem
A large-scale expansion project of the Changi water facility in Singapore required a number of bolted and reverse osmosis flush tanks.
Solution
RESULT:
All 13 tanks were supplied in a timely manner in early 2016 with no
issues. The contractor and end users were satisfied with the project
execution. 620/423-3010; www.tankconnection.com.
Problem
In Cortland, Illinois, a limited budget prevented the owner of a 125-million-gallon elevated municipal water storage tank from abrasive blasting a
failing 20-year-old alkyd paint system on exterior steel before recoating.
The project called for minimal preparation consisting of power washing
steel at 6,000 psi and some mechanical hand- or power-tool cleaning to
remove loose rust, scale and deteriorated coatings.
Solution
RESULT:
After a severe winter of freeze-thaw conditions, the overcoating system
maintained its color and gloss stability. 800/863-6321; www.tnemec.com.
Airashell
for Odor Control
Recycled
Seashells Media
71
BioGas
boldly go
where no aerator or mixer
has gone before.
www.foldafloat.com
72
815-654-2501
Robu
VISIT US AT
www.RobuschiUSA.com
2016 Gardner Denver. All rights reserved.
FREE INFO SEE ADVERTISER INDEX
Robuschi_TPO_8-2_9x10.875_PRESS.indd 2
8/26/2016 9:12:36 AM
spotlight
By Craig Mandli
74
The unit includes a fully guarded coupling. Pump casings are hydrostatically tested to 50 psig above the peak casing design pressure. Systems arrive
mounted on a highway trailer with integral fuel cell, chassis, lights, fenders,
tie-downs, lifting bail and front and rear jacks. Trailer brakes are optional.
The pump is a robust design that provides a dependable and highly efficient solution for municipalities, says Vogel. Customers cant believe how
efficient the pump is and how low the cost of operating is. Options include:
Auto Prime automatic compressor-fed venturi priming or diaphragm
priming
Mechanical seal with biodegradable glycol quench that allows the
pump to start and run dry
Environmental Box that separates and silences air exhaust and returns
liquid to the pump suction for added efficiency
Fuel cubes for extended runtimes in remote locations
Skid-mounted formats with tie-downs, lifting bail and fork pockets
Hose racks and accessory containers
Range of suction and discharge fittings, including QD Quick Disconnect fittings and accessories
The WWETT Show was solid for Global, Vogel says. We met several
potential customers along with some established customers. Global engineers
are developing innovations to roll out for the 2017 show, including a new
compact model.
We will have our SAE-mounted centrifugal pump at next years show,
Vogel says. This will reduce the units footprint and will not require a traditional alignment. Were excited about it. 866/360-7867; www.globalpump.com.
Get A New
XRipper
For Less Than
The Cost Of
A Repair.
Show us a competitors repair quote
and well sell you a brand new XRipper
twin shaft grinder for $1 less. You get
our leading two year 100% parts and
labor warranty which includes wear
parts along with the most powerful
wastewater grinder in the industry.
call us at 1-800-984-9400
www.vogelsangusa.com/twinshaft
FREE INFO SEE ADVERTISER INDEX
76
SALES@KELLERAMERICA.COM
877-253-5537
industry news
Duperon names Turpin president
Duperon Corporation named Mark Turpin president.
He replaces current president and CEO Tammy Bernier,
who remains as CEO. Duperon is a leader in preliminary
liquids/solids separation technologies and provides solutions for coarse screening, fine screening, low-flow screening, perforated screening, washing, compacting and
conveying.
Mark Turpin
Aurora, IL USA
www.mcnishcorp.com
FREE INFO SEE ADVERTISER INDEX
Dorian Alexandrescu
Grundfos Pumps Corporation appointed Dieter Sauer as regional managing director of the Americas region. He will oversee all aspects of the global
pump manufacturers North and South America business, including driving
regional growth and maintaining a motivated workforce.
Booth 8417
Hach broke ground in June on a multimillion-dollar research and development facility in Loveland, Colorado. The 86,000-square-foot building will
house multiple testing and development laboratories.
Jesus Rodriguez
78
VISIT US AT WEFTEC
Evoqua Booth# 4839
Learn more at
www.neptunebenson.com
FREE INFO SEE ADVERTISER INDEX
79
product news
3
5
4
6
2
1. BAYCO PRODUCTS AC-POWERED LED WORK LIGHTS
AC-powered magnetic LED work lights from Bayco Products deliver
1,200 lumens on high mode and 600 lumens on low mode. Models SL-2135
(25-foot 18/2 SJTW cord) and SL-866 (50-foot cord inside retractable
reel) have two integrated magnets one at the balance point in the
middle of the handles and the other at the tip of the light. Both models
include a detachable magnetic hook that can be attached to either magnet for added versatility. 800/233-2155; www.baycoproducts.com.
80
10
Model 80SL Slim Line well check valves from Flomatic Corporation
are designed to support the weight of up to 1,000 feet of pipe and well
pump. Sizes range from 2 through 8 inches. Fusion epoxy coating is
standard. The small outside diameter allows for tight fits in the well.
The valves have a stainless steel body with corrosion-resistant internal
parts. 800/833-2040; www.flomatic.com.
9
8. KAESER SIGMA AIR MANAGER BLOWER CONTROL
The Sigma Air Manager (SAM) 4.0 blower control from Kaeser
Compressors provides seamless integration into plant control/SCADA
systems, tying blowers together in a secure Sigma Network. The control
The RIM20 rotor insertion flowmeter from Spirax Sarco USA utilizes a common electronics platform available in all new 20 Series meters
and provides the same features and benefits as the RIM10, including
SMART multivariable electronics for the measurement of mass or volumetric flow, density, temperature and pressure. Applications include
measurement of steam and natural gas flows for fiscal or load control and
heat flow calculations for chilled, hot water and other liquids and gases
in 3- to 80-inch lines. 800/356-9362; www.spirax.com.
(continued)
water:
SL1000 portable
parallel analyzer
(PPA) from Hach
product spotlight
Hach portable parallel analyzer tests
multiple parameters at once
By Ed Wodalski
The SL1000 portable parallel analyzer (PPA) from Hach is designed
to quickly and consistently test multiple parameters in drinking water
systems. The analyzer can simultaneously test four colorimetric and two
probe-based parameters by inserting the appropriate Chemkeys into the
sample for one to two seconds. Status bars on the analyzer display time
remaining until test results are complete.
Instead of having to run separate tests for chlorine, monochloramine,
free ammonia and nitrite, you can run all of those at the same time,
taking the testing time in many instances down from about 20 minutes
to eight minutes, says Ursula Jessee, Hach global product manager
instruments.
EPA-approved for reporting free and total chlorine in drinking water
applications, the analyzer uses no powder pillows or glass vials. All chemicals and processes are contained in the Chemkeys.
As an operator, especially when there are multiple operators running
a test, there is some variability, Jessee says. The SL1000 greatly reduces
that variability because everyone performs the test the exact same way.
Chemkeys can test for free and total ammonia, free and total chlorine,
monochloramine, nitrite, copper, conductivity, dissolved oxygen, fluoride,
nitrate and pH, as well as newly released hardness, alkalinity, orthophosphate and dissolved iron.
As an operator going from site to site gathering samples and doing
the testing, you would have to run each of the tests one by one and wait
for them to finish before you could move on, Jessee says.
Probes can test for conductivity, dissolved oxygen, fluoride, nitrate
and pH.
If there were any problems, youd have to start over. With the SL1000,
youre able to get your sample, insert the Chemkeys into the instrument,
attach the probes for pH and conductivity, for example, dip the instrument in the sample cup and start the reading. Two minutes into the test
you can start driving to your next location. Instead of spending 20 or 30
minutes at each location, youre now spending five.
The analyzer also captures sample time, temperature, site and operator ID. Data is downloadable to an Excel or similar format and transferred
via USB cord to a laptop computer.
It takes away the need to write down data in the field or in the lab,
Jessee says.
The portable analyzer includes the SL1000 meter, carrying case, instrument sample cup, two probe sample cups, rechargeable lithium-ion battery pack (200 Chemkey tests per full battery charge), instrument manual
and USB cable. 800/227-4224; www.hach.com/ppa.
81
product news
13
17
15
11
14
18
12
16
19
11. FLUID COMPONENTS INTERNATIONAL
ST100 FLOWMETER
The ST100 flowmeter from Fluid Components International (FCI)
is designed for measuring direct gas flow, including hydrogen, wet gas,
mixed gases and dirty gases. The basic insertion style air/gas meter
features a thermal flow sensing unit that measures flow from 0.25 to
1,000 SFPS. It can measure at high flow rates from 0 to 6,600 lb/hr at
29 to 87 psi. Communication options include 4-20mA analog, frequency/pulse or certified digital bus communications such as HART,
Foundation Fieldbus, Profibus PA or Modbus RS485. 800/854-1993;
www.fluidcomponents.com.
grinder, fine screening shaftless screw system, spray wash and S270-SR
automatic control system with optional S270-SRH hauler station control system that collects transaction data, authenticates haulers, racks
loads and supplies a receipt via a card swipe system. The units wash and
compact screenings by up to 40 percent. Processed solids are conveyed
for discharge into a bin, bag or conveyor. The SPIRALIFT has a stainless steel tank enclosure with quick-disconnect inlet flange. An automatic inlet valve automatically regulates internal fluid level. Options
include the Taskmaster TT automated rock removal system. 800/9320599; www.franklinmiller.com.
82
wastewater:
product spotlight
TITLE:
FACILITY NAME:
MAILING ADDRESS:
CITY:
STATE:
PHONE:
CELL PHONE:
FAX:
EMAIL:
ZIP:
O1016
Scan and email to: nicole.labeau@colepublishing.com
Fax to: 715-546-3786
Mail to: COLE Publishing Inc., P.O. Box 220, Three Lakes WI 54562
83
worth noting
people/awards
The Richmond Lake Sanitary District Wastewater Treatment System
earned an Operation and Maintenance Wastewater Treatment Award from
the South Dakota Department of Environment and Natural Resources.
The Conservation Foundation presented the city of Elmhurst (Illinois)
Wastewater Treatment Plant with a Clean Water Award.
The village of Potsdams Robert Henninger was named the 2016 Wastewater Operation Specialist of the Year by the New York Rural Water
Association.
The city of Amarillo, Texas, announced the hiring of Robert Patrick as
Public Works director and Russell Grubbs as utilities director.
Kishia L. Powell was named the commissioner of the Atlanta (Georgia)
Department of Watershed Management.
The Georgia Association of Water Professionals named the Henry County
Water Authoritys Bear Creek Water Reclamation Facility the states best
wastewater plant in the category non-discharging plants with 1.1 to 10 mgd
capacity.
The Scarborough (Rhode Island) Sewer Treatment Plant received a
Gold Award from the Narragansett Water Pollution Control Association for
having zero permit violations in 2015.
Killis Sinkhorn, who has been supervisor of the Winchester (Kentucky)
Municipal Utilities Wastewater Treatment Plant for 16 years and is planning
to retire soon, was honored by the WMU Commission for his service and
received a commemorative plaque.
Ray Wolf, an Enterprise (Alabama) Water Works Department certified
water operator, received the citys Extra Mile Award, nominated by residents
who wrote to Alan Mahan, field superintendent, about Wolfs service above
and beyond the call of duty.
The town of Madison Water Filtration Plant received the Area-Wide
Optimization Award for 2015. Of the 150 surface water systems in the state
of North Carolina, only 56 received the award.
The city of Wallowa, Oregon, and Travis Goebel, Public Works director, won awards for the citys new $4 million, 100 percent federally funded
water system. The city won the 2015 Water Project of the Year from the Eastern Oregon Region of the AWWA/Pacific Northwest Clean Water Association. Goebel was named 2015 Water Operator of the Year.
The Lake County (Ohio) Department of Utilities received the Directors Award of Recognition from the Partnership for Safe Water for both of
its water treatment plants. Lake County East Water Treatment Plant is in
Painesville and the West Water Treatment Plant is in Willoughby.
The Prince William County (Virginia) Service Authoritys H.L. Mooney
Advanced Water Reclamation Facility won a third consecutive Platinum Peak
Performance Award from the National Association of Clean Water Agencies.
Several honors were distributed at the 2016 Delaware Water and Wastewater Professionals Annual Award Ceremony:
Ronald Foreman, Water Department director in the town of
84
events
Oct. 4-6
Oct. 4-7
Oct. 5-7
Oct. 9-11
Oct. 11-13
Oct. 12-13
New England Water Environment Association Northeast Residuals and Biosolids Conference and Exhibit, Radisson Hotel, Cromwell,
Connecticut. Visit www.newea.org.
Oct. 23-25
Oct. 24-27
Oct. 30-Nov. 2
Re-NEW it!
Vi
s
W it U
E
s
ot FT At
h
E
#1 C
Bo
32
Cutter CartridgeTM
Technology
Since
1918
www.franklinmiller.com
Call Toll Free 1-800-932-0599
FREE INFO SEE ADVERTISER INDEX
4 Online Exclusives
4 Editors Blog
tpomag.com
AMERICAN PLEASURE
PRODUCTS INC.
ROSE CITY, MI
INFO@AQUACYCLEUSA.COM
989.685.2697
85
MARKETPLACE ADVERTISING
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
Generator-Parts.com
Online parts breakdowns to help you
troubleshoot and identify repair parts.
OCTOBER
COVERS
Filters
Fuel System
Components
Starter Motors
Replacement
Gaskets
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Uniform Distribution of
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Generator-Parts.com
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Gas Collection
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Algae/TSS Control
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86
FOR
GET EMAIL
NEWS ALERTS
TPO1609
EDUCATION
PRESSURE WASHERS
RoyCEU.com: We provide continuing education courses for water, wastewater and water distribution system operators. Log onto
www.royceu.com and see our approved
states and courses. Call 386-574-4307 for
details.
(oBM)
Industrial Pressure Washer - New w/warranty $9,500. 2,000psi, 18gpm. 999cc Kohler &
AR pump. Will deliver. 321-800-5763 (MBM)
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
POND & TANK COVERS: Industrial & Environmental Concepts makes gas-collection
covers, odor-control covers, heat-retention
covers and anaerobic digester covers. Call
952-829-0731 www.ieccovers.com (oBM)
process. A full benefit package is also provided. Please forward letters of interest, resumes and three professional references to:
Wastewater Superintendent Search, Town of
Montague, Town Administrator, 1 Avenue A,
Turners Falls, MA 01376, EOE. Applications
will be accepted until the job is filled. (o10)
Town of Montague, Massachusetts, Wastewater Superintendent: The Town on Montague is seeking applicants for the full-time
position of Wastewater Superintendent.
The Montague wastewater system has approximately 7,400 customers, and is a
secondary treatment facility designed to
treat 1.83 million gallons (4.65 mgd peak)
of waste per day.The WPCF is also an EPA
award-winning facility that prides itself on
the innovation and creativity of a staff that
has implemented an innovative treatment
process that has achieved impressive cost
savings and generated significant revenues.
The Town is committed to the continuation
of this new process and seeks an individual
who will commit to achieving this objective.
Other qualifications for the position include:
Grade 6 wastewater operator license; Associates Degree in engineering, environmental
science or related field (strong biological
focus a plus), and 10 years experience in
wastewater treatment systems with three
years (five preferred) in a responsible administrative and/or supervisory role or any
equivalent of education and experience. Familiarity with sewer billing systems and generation of sewer rates, the SCADA system,
and enterprise accounting systems required.
Excellent communications skills are a must
as is interaction with local, state and federal
officials and the general public. The Superintendent is responsible for the operation and
maintenance of the sewer treatment plant
and eight pumping stations, compliance with
wastewater regulations; preparation and
management of operating and capital budgets; grants administration; the implementation of an industrial pretreatment program;
setting of sewer rates; and supervision of up
to nine employees. Salary range $70,858
to $78,213 depending upon qualifications.
A higher salary may be negotiable if candidate can demonstrate unique educational
or experience related to the new treatment
Honda horizontal GX engines, new in-thebox w/warranty. GX200QX - $399; GX270QAG - $579; GX390QA - $599 delivered
price. 800-363-9855 or GXParts.com (MBM)
RENTAL EQUIPMENT
Liquid vacs, wet/dry industrial vacs, combination jetter/vacs, vacuum street sweeper &
catch basin cleaner, truck & trailer mounted jetters. All available for daily, weekly,
monthly, and yearly rentals. VSI Rentals, LLC, (888) VAC-UNIT (822-8648)
www.vsirentalsllc.com.
(CBM)
SERVICE/REPAIR
Dynamic Repairs - Inspection Camera
Repairs: 48 hour turn-around time. General
Wire, Ratech, RIDGID, Electric Eel Mfg, Gator
Cams, Insight Vision, Vision Intruders. Quality
service on all brands. Rental equipment
available. For more info call Jack at 973478-0893. Lodi, New Jersey.
(CBM)
WATERBLASTING
20,000 - 55,000 psi Sapphire Nozzles, OS4,
OS6, OS7 replacements, UHP hoses & replacement parts. Excellent quality & prices.
772-286-1218, info@alljetting.com, www.
alljetting.com.
(CBM)
Gardner Denver T-375M: Bare Shaft
pump. Gardner Denver T450M Bare Shaft
pump. Gardner Denver TF-375M 21 gpm
@ 10,000 psi. Gardner Denver TX-450HB
21gpm @ 20,000 PSI. Gardner Denver TF450MB 52gpm @ 10,000 psi. NLB 10-200.
34 gpm @ 10,000 psi. HT-150S 25 gpm
max 10,000 psi max, Shell Side Machine,
Wheatley 165: 30 gpm @ 10,000 psi.
Wheatley 125 with aluminum bronze fluid
end. Boatman Ind. 713-641-6006. View @
www.boatmanind.com.
(CBM)
WATER JETTING EQUIPMENT: We sell, repair and retrofit water blasters. Visit us at:
www.waterjettingequipment.com or phone
714-259-7700.
(CBM)
NEW
CONCERTOR
PUMPING SYSTEM WITH
INTEGRATED
INTELLIGENCE
This revolutionary system delivers optimal performance while reducing your total cost of ownership.
It also offers unparalleled flexibility and simplicity on a whole new level. You might even say it thinks
for itself. We invite you to enter a new era in wastewater pumping with Flygt Concertor.
One powerful solution. Unlimited possibilities.
To find out more, visit us at WEFTEC in New Orleans
September 26-28, 2016 BOOTH 2529
www.flygt.com