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Wastewater And Toxics Don’t Mix Preventing Toxic Discharges To Municipal Treatment Plants

Wastewater And Toxics Don’t Mix Preventing Toxic Discharges To Municipal Treatment Plants. Judy Kennedy , WA State Dept. of Ecology Jessica Shaw , City of Wenatchee. Toxic Effects. Interference and reduced treatment capability. Toxic Effects. Treatment plant pass- through

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Wastewater And Toxics Don’t Mix Preventing Toxic Discharges To Municipal Treatment Plants

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  1. Wastewater And Toxics Don’t MixPreventing Toxic Discharges To Municipal Treatment Plants Judy Kennedy, WA State Dept. of Ecology Jessica Shaw, City of Wenatchee

  2. Toxic Effects • Interference and reduced treatment capability

  3. Toxic Effects • Treatment plant pass- through • Violate permit limits • Possible fines or citizen lawsuits

  4. Toxic Effects • Equipment damage

  5. Toxic Effects Threaten health and safety • fumes • explosions • confined space hazards

  6. Toxic Effects • Operational problems • Sludge bulking • Poor sludge thickening • Foaming • Odors

  7. ToxicEffects • Biosolids may fail to meet standards for land application • Call for new standards for persistent toxic organics

  8. Toxic Effects • Liability • Superfund responsibility

  9. Documented Problems WDOE report on W.E.T. testing, 1994-1998: • 68% of permittees have had toxic events of regulatory concern • Episodes of toxicity in nearly half of POTW discharges

  10. Pass-Through • 1992-1996 • 140 million pounds of partially-treated toxics passed through POTWs to receiving waters in U.S. • Estimate based on TRI data, according to WASHPIRG (Troubled Waters, 1998)

  11. Toxics and Salmon Recovery • Common surfactant in dishwashing detergents, cosmetics, plastics, pulp mills, industry • Passes through treatment plants, kills young salmon

  12. Passing Through POTWs • other medications: • cholesterol drug • chemotherapy drugs • anti-inflammatory compounds • aspirin • anti-convulsive drug • hormones • psychiatric drugs • nicotine • caffeine • plasticizers • endocrine disrupters • halogenated compounds • brominated flame retardants

  13. Need ForControls • 77% of industrial toxics not under permit (GAO, 1994) • Only the largest industries permitted

  14. Small Toxic Dischargers • High potential collective impact of smaller, unpermitted facilities • EPA: 15% of priority pollutants and 2/3 of toxic metals come from small sources.

  15. Small Toxic Dischargers • photoprocessing chemicals (from printing, photo, medical) • solvents (painting, auto, labs, fiberglass, dry cleaner water) • cleaners and disinfectants (food processing, car wash, steam cleaning, oil/water separators) • metals (vehicle maintenance, metal finishers, dental)

  16. Benefits of Keeping Toxics Out Of Sewer Systems • Better treatment plant performance • More cost effective than end-of-pipe controls • Reduces environmental impacts • Protects public’s investment in treatment and collection facilities • Protects health and safety • Helps avoid law suits

  17. Strategies To Keep Toxics Out Of Sewer Systems • Use local sewer ordinances to set requirements • Use the state industrial waste permit system • Establish a local pretreatment program with authority to visit, monitor, enforce, charge fees • Maintain Industrial User Surveys • Target outreach to key industry sectors • Respond promptly to clandestine dumping • Determine toxicity of discharges

  18. City of Wenatchee A Case Study Jessica Shaw Environmental Supervisor

  19. It Does Happen! • Wastewater Treatment Plant Upsets • Discharge Permit Violations • Environmental Lawsuits • Consent Orders & Consent Decrees • Over $7 Million spent so far……………

  20. Problems at the POTW • High Strength • Toxic Discharges • Nitrification Inhibition

  21. Getting Started • Sewer Use/Pretreatment Ordinance – 2003 • Reviewed treatment plant data • Researched methods for detecting toxics • Surveyed and compiled data on dischargers

  22. Program Areas • Grease • Restaurants, cafes, bakeries, cafeterias • X-ray & Photo Processing • Medical and dental offices, print shops, photo processor • Cooling Water & Boiler Water Discharges • Food storage facilities, office buildings, schools

  23. Program Areas Continued… • Industrial Dischargers with State Permits • Fresh Fruit Packing Facilities, Categorical Industrial Users • Medical Wastes • Medical laboratories, mortuaries, pharmacies • Other Pretreatment Facilities • Automotive repair shops, car washes, research laboratories

  24. The Printer • WWTP Data & Photo X-ray Survey • Hydroquinone – developer • Most X-ray developing solutions %1-5 • Some developing solutions are as high as 30% • Used Nitrification Inhibition Test

  25. Nitrification Test Results • November 2003 100% Inhibition • Discharger began collection developing solution • August 2004 100% Inhibition • Was not collecting another developing solution containing phenylcellusolve (2-phenoxyethanol) • September 2004 24% Inhibition • New Chemicals, no phenols just a few biocides

  26. Solvents in the Sewer • Solvent smell detected by Collections Crew • Monitoring confirmed the presence of several volatile organic chemicals • Chemicals traced to dry cleaners, industrial facilities and automotive shops

  27. Actions & Results • City and WDOE met with business owners • WDOE hazardous waste conducted inspections with City staff • Informational letter and solvent brochure • Follow-up monitoring, specifically for “perc”, showed significant reduction in solvent levels

  28. Preventing Toxic Discharges • Informational Brochures • Surveys • Seminars • Inspections

  29. Signs of Progress • Fewer slug loads of prohibited discharges • Better relationship with dischargers • Improved sludge quality • Less grease

  30. Questions? Judy Kennedy WA State Dept. of Ecology Jessica Shaw City of Wenatchee

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