Keeping Odor Under Control
Water & Wastes Digest
August 2005
By Ed Sullivan
“We are very concerned about maintaining an odor cap,” said David Williams, project engineer at Shell Oil (Shell Manufacturing) Martinez Refinery, California “Our treatment pond is about 1/4 mile from a residential community. We’ve got a delicate situation where even just a slight amount of odor could arouse complaints from the community. So, we keep a close eye on it.”
Practical Engineering Combined with Sound Operations Optimizes Phosphorus Removal
Water Engineering & Management
April 2002
Daniel Bolduc and James Fitch, P.E.
Built in the early 1970s, The Oakland, Maine, Wastewater Treatment Facility (WWTF) treats and discharges approximately 300,000 gallons per day (gpd) of wastewater to the Messalonskee Stream. The facility was designed as a conventional activated sludge secondary treatment system to be used principally for BOD and TSS removals. The secondary effluent enters the Messalonskee Stream upstream of several impoundments. This practice has resulted in a steady decline in the water quality of the stream as evidenced by increased algae blooms and other signs of euthophication in impoundments located downstream of the discharge.
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Vortex System Proves Effective Mixing Biosolids In Storage Tanks
Water & Wastes Digest
January 2002
J. Mark Crump
The Springfield Metro Sanitary District (SMSD), a wastewater treatment facility that serves Springfield, Illinois and surrounding communities, needed to meet the pathogen and vector-attraction reduction requirements and prevent nitrate levels from contaminating groundwater. After careful study, the SMSD selected a process that would allow it to store digested biosolids that accumulated when the sludge could not be applied.
Plunging into Protection
Water Engineering & Management
October 1998
Todd Hart
An innovative maintenance program maintained the aesthetic and functional appeal of one of the community's tallest structures.
Shutting Down Reservoirs for Renovation
Water Engineering & Management
July 1997
Charles T. Duncan
Sixty-one reservoirs required renovation, and the district needed a plan to shut down the facilities without disrupting service.
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