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Tracking the Source of interference at a POTW. Jeffrey Uhler. Introduction. Mr. Jeffrey Uhler Pretreatment Coordinator for the City of Portland, Tennessee Discuss the steps I took to identify and stop the source of interference with the proper operation of our WWTP.
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Tracking the Source of interference at a POTW Jeffrey Uhler
Introduction • Mr. Jeffrey Uhler • Pretreatment Coordinator for the City of Portland, Tennessee • Discuss the steps I took to identify and stop the source of interference with the proper operation of our WWTP
Job Description • Our job description in pretreatment is to protect the POTW from discharges that may adversely effect the system or be a threat to the health and safety of human beings or the environment and to ensure compliance with all federal, state and local pretreatment regulations
Topics of Discussion • Interference • The term Interference means a Discharge which, alone or in conjunction with a discharge or discharges from other sources, both: • (1) Inhibits or disrupts the POTW, its treatment processes or operations, or its sludge processes, use or disposal; and • (2) Therefore is a cause of a violation of any requirement of the POTW's NPDES permit (including an increase in the magnitude or duration of a violation) or of the prevention of sewage sludge use or disposal in compliance with the statutory provisions and regulations or permits issued thereunder (or more stringent State or local regulations).
Identify the Problem • Feedback from operators of the WWTP • Verify the problem area • Hydraulic • Mechanical • Operational • Eliminate in house possibilities
Identify the Problem • Increasingly higher dosage of CL2 needed to achieve disinfection at the WWTP • Caused e-coli violations of NPDES permit • Identify and solve the problem ASAP!
Sources of the Problem • Some tools to determine the possible source of interference • IU files, permit applications, past inspection findings, MSDS, etc. • The internet - search engines • Past experiences at the WWTP
The Investigation • Visual inspections of lift stations and gravity system feeding each station • Set up automatic samplers to determine the quality of the wastewater at the WWTP headworks, lift stations, manholes, etc.
The Investigation • Visit possible IU sources unannounced • Collect samples and conduct inspections • Conduct the investigation keeping in mind your findings could be questioned
The Investigation • DOCUMENT everything! • Dates, times, flow rates, observations, people present, conversations, sample locations, COC, etc.
Helpful Tools • A fellow employee • two sets of eyes are better than one • A camera • a picture is worth a thousand words • Log book • Electronic documentation • Microsoft Outlook
Findings • Discovered an upset condition at a ham processing plant • Observed two employees of the facility watching the event without correcting, diverting or reporting the condition • Results from samples collected confirmed discharge was a slug load
Action steps • Set up composite sampler • Took pictures of the events • Documented everything • Continued to sample
Facts • During the investigation two more upset conditions were observed • The IU suspended processing and discharging one day that week and the following weekend • The CL2 demand at the WWTP returned to normal during that day and the weekend • When the IU process discharge resumed the CL2 demand at the WWTP increased again
Conclusions • The ham processing facility was the cause of interference at the WWTP • An Administrative Order with fines was issued • Total fine amount was $91,000.00
Outcome • The IU appealed the amount of the fines • None of the results or findings were appealed by the IU, only the fine amount • Final fine amount was $60,000
Outcome • $30,000 fine • $15,000 used for employee training • $15,000 used for treatment facility improvements