News
Articles
Case Histories
White Papers
Tank Calculators
Buyer's Guide
Career Center
August Card Deck
Industry Links
July 2008
June 2008
June Card Deck
Arsenic
Decentralized Wastewater
Filtration
Flow Measurement
Headworks
Membrane Technology
Pumps
Ultraviolet Disinfection
Click here for a subscription to
Water & Wastes Digest
Give us your feedback on our site.
Change your subscription info
Subscribe to our
WQP/WWD Executive NewsSummary e-Newsletter.

News this week sponsored by: Aeration Industries International Inc.

INDUSTRY NEWS
 Subscribe
Get the latest industry headlines conveniently in our email newsletter! Click here to subscribe.
 
 Share It
"../popup_app/index.cfm?fuseaction=showEmailPageToAFriendForm&appDirectory=wwd&linkQueryString=fuseaction=showNewsItem*amp*newsItemId=15696&linkLabel=U%2ES%2E%20EPA%20Orders%20Marin%20County%20Sewage%20Collection%20Systems%20to%20Address%20Chronic%20Sewage%20Spills%20" target="_new">   "../popup_app/index.cfm?fuseaction=showEmailPageToAFriendForm&appDirectory=wwd&linkQueryString=fuseaction=showNewsItem*amp*newsItemId=15696&linkLabel=U%2ES%2E%20EPA%20Orders%20Marin%20County%20Sewage%20Collection%20Systems%20to%20Address%20Chronic%20Sewage%20Spills%20" target="_new">Email this page to a friend
 
 More News
  • NSF's Scrub Club Announced as Finalist for Platinum PR News Award
  • IDE to Supply $148 Million Desalination Plant to Australia
  • U.S. Wins Stockholm Junior Water Prize
  • ITT Unveils ITT Watermark, Announces Strategic Partnership with Water For People
  • WEFTEC.09 Call for Abstracts Issued
  • Organizations Sign Agreement to Promote Water Operator Partnerships
  • Global Ecology Corp. Announces Sale of Mobile Water Treatment System Units
  • NSF Announces New Certification Services for PVC Water Main Pipe
  • Massachusetts Resort Selects Koch Membrane Modules
  • Fairfield, Calif., Waterman Water Treatment Plant Project to Double Capacity
  • Q2 Technologies Acquires Assets of Adapco Environmental Solutions
  • EPA Approves Kansas Water Quality Standards
  • SUEZ Acquires Utility Service Co.
  • WEFTEC.08 to Offer Hot Topic Workshops & Sessions
  • India's POU/POE Industry Looks to Create Standards & Training
  • Siemens to Provide IPS Composting System Agitators for New Jersey Composting Plan
  • Thomas Wolfe Joins Toray Membrane USA
  • Georgetown, Del., Honored for Protecting Drinking Water
  • Dow Water Solutions to Expand in Spain and Minnesota
  • AwwaRF Releases Report on Method for Evaluating Water Contaminant Warning Systems
  • Trojan Technologies Acquires R-Can Environmental, Inc.
  • Illinois EPA Releases Final Report on Pharmaceuticals in Drinking Water Supplies
  • The Hydraulic Institute Opens Registration for Fall Management and Technical Meeting
  • Chester Engineers Announces Promotions
  • Dow Technology Used in Beijing Water Reuse Projects
  • Earth Tech to Lead Upgrade of Virginia Water Treatment Plant
  • Queen Opens Milngavie Water Treatment Works in Scotland
  • Virginia Governor Announces Water Improvement Grants
  • Koch Membrane Systems Announce Two Staff Additions
  • Connecticut City Installs Second Siemens SCADA System
  • CH2M HILL to Manage Major Sewage Tunnel Project in Abu Dhabi
  • Industrial Scientific Announces Organizational Changes
  • Dow Chemical Co. Acquires Rohm & Haas for $18.8 Billion
  • Aquatech Awarded Pretreatment System Contract at Texas Energy Station
  • Thermo Fisher Scientific Acquires AquaSensors, LLC
  • Plastics Pipe Institute Retracts Fusible PVC Advisory
  • Art's Way Vessel Systems Appoints New General Manager
  • EPA Continues Work to Understand Potential Impacts of Pharmaceuticals in Water
  • Sherwin-Williams Offering Low-VOC Protective Coating Products
  • Michigan to Pay $250,000 Toward Drinking Water Monitoring System
  • EPA awards $100,000 to LDEQ for Water Quality Management Planning
  • Bentley, United Utilities PLC Joint Project Wins Innovation Award
  • WWEMA Claims EPA Ballast Water Discharge Regulations Fall Short
  • Beijing Promises Stable Water, Power Supply for Olympics
  • EPA Releases Annual Clean Water State Revolving Fund Report
  • New Staff Changes at Chester Engineers
  • URS Awarded Flood-Mapping Contract with Georgia Dept. of Natural Resources
  • Cryptosporidium Sickens Swimmers in Texas
  • Falcolm E. Hull Joins ARCADIS as Technical Expert
  • EPA Works with Builders On WaterSense New Homes Program
  • Captain Craig A. Shepherd Receives the 2008 Walter F. Snyder Award
  • August NGWA Conference to Discuss Opportunities in Geothermal Heating & Cooling
  • Dow Biocides Introduces AQUCAR OPP 63 Microbiocide
  • Black & Veatch Awarded Nebraska Ozone System Project
  • Waters Corp. Publishes Rapid Screening Method for 402 Pesticide Residues in Food
  • Siemens to Provide Clarification Technology for Denver Metro Wastewater Reclamation District
  • ESRI Water Seminars to Explore the Geographic Advantage for Water Utilities
  • ITT Contributes to Cedar Rapids Flood Relief Fund
  • American Water Appoints Walter Lynch and John Young to New Leadership Roles
  • Stormwater Equipment Manufacturers Association Holds Initial Meeting
  • RAPTOR Directional Mixing & Aeration System Now Available
  • Toray Supplies PVDF Submerged Membrane Module for United Arab Emirates Sewage Recycling Plant
  • AWWA Testifies at Congressional Hearing on Carbon Sequestration
  • GE Water and STW Collaborate in Oil Field Water Recovery
  • Component Hardware Group Launches New Website
  • Office of Water Releases Water Quality Exchange Version 2.0
  • WERF Announces $500,000 for Water Quality Research
  • Chemilizer and Applied & Experimental Microbiology Join to Promote Eco-Irrigation
  • Clean Water Scientific, Inc., General Manager to Speak at Aquaculture Conference
  • Global Market for Membrane Bioreactors Worth $488 Million by 2013
  • Colorado Water District Begins MOSAIC AMR Deployment
  • Doosan Hydro Technology Appoints New President & CEO
  • EPA Determines Regulation Not Needed for 11 Potential Drinking Water Contaminants
  • Grundfos Supplies Systems, Materials for 17 Sites at Summer Olympics in Beijing
  • Dow Water Solutions to Expand Edina, Minn., Facility
  • AwwaRF Announces Report on Conservation-Aware Rate Structures
  • MIOX Corp. Promotes Kyle Lee to VP of Operations
  • Siemens to Supply Wastewater System for Pennsylvania Generating Station
  • EPA to Host Water Quality Modeling Workshop in Baltimore
  • MIOX Selected to Treat Reclaimed Water for Emerald Coast Utility Authority’s Pensacola Plant
  • Petie Davis Appointed Business Unit Manager of NSF’s Sustainability Programs
  • Why Does the Fee Becomes a Front-End and Back-End Problem?
  • Find Pump Information Faster
  • Water Quality Products and Water & Wastes Digest unveil redesigned websites
  • Severn Trent Services Awarded Contract for Desalination Plant in Mexico
  • Fairbanks Morse Announces Contract for New York City
  • NNGWA Conference Examines Pharmaceuticals and Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals in Water
  • AwwaRF Announces Report on Endocrine Disrupting Compounds in Drinking Water
  • Elster AMCO Water Appoints New President
  • NSF Announces New Certification Program for Geothermal Piping Applications
  • NSF Announces New Certification Program for Geothermal Piping Applications
  • Cruise Ships Reach Agreement With Washington DOE
  • World Bank Supports Improving Water Supply in Tajikistan
  • Water Service Company Blamed in Ireland Death
  • U.S. Navy Ordered to Reduce Drinking Water Chemical Levels
  • CH2M HILL Names Team Leader and Technology Director

  • All Current News
  • Archived News
  • U.S. EPA Orders Marin County Sewage Collection Systems to Address Chronic Sewage Spills

    More than 5 million gal of sewage flowed into Richardson Bay and San Francisco Bay earlier this year
    April 14, 2008

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recently issued enforcement actions requiring nine sewage collection systems in the Sausalito and Mill Valley areas of southern Marin County, Calif., to address chronic sewage spills, improve sewer maintenance and implement long-term programs to renew aging sewer pipes.

    Deteriorated conditions of the sewer systems became evident when heavy rains overwhelmed the systems, causing over 5 million gal of sewage to flow into Richardson Bay and San Francisco Bay earlier this year.

    "These small, underfunded and undermanaged systems will continue to pose threats to San Francisco Bay if communities fail to upgrade and maintain their systems sustainably," said Alexis Strauss, the EPA’s Water Division director for the Pacific Southwest region. "We urge the systems to begin to work together and invest in long-overdue assessment, repair and replacement of their wastewater infrastructure."

    The orders were issued to Sewerage Agency of Southern Marin (SASM), Almonte Sanitary District, Alto Sanitary District, city of Mill Valley, Homestead Valley Sanitary District, Richardson Bay Sanitary District, Sausalito-Marin City Sanitary District, the city of Sausalito and Tamalpais Community Services District.

    The EPA orders require the sewer systems to employ a number of strategies to reduce sewage spills. In the short-term, the systems are required to implement aggressive sewer cleaning programs aimed at the most problematic pipes. The systems are also required to inspect their sewer pipes and measure wet weather flows that are passed on to the sewage treatment plants. Finally, the systems must develop plans to manage excess flows and implement long-term programs to repair and replace deteriorated sewer pipes.

    The EPA encourages the cities and sewer districts to work together to finance, operate and renew their wastewater infrastructure.

    "It's clear from this January's sewage spills and overflows that aggressive action is needed to protect both public health and the Bay," said Bruce Wolfe, executive officer of the San Francisco Bay Regional Water Board. "We fully support EPA's issuance of these enforcement orders."

    Deteriorating pipes, combined with extreme peak flows from rain, overwhelmed the SASM wastewater treatment plant causing Jan. 25 flows to exceed capacity at the emergency holding basins at the plant, where 2.45 million gal overflowed to Richardson Bay. Another spill occurred on Jan. 31 when operators at the SASM treatment plant failed to operate all of its discharge pumps leading to a 2.7 million gal spill to Richardson Bay. In Sausalito, the Jan. 25 storm led to a 63,000 gal spill from a sewer manhole on Marinship Way.

    The SASM treats wastewater from about 28,000 people in the Mill Valley area. The sewage is collected from homes and businesses in networks of sewer pipes that are owned and maintained by five separate sanitary districts and the city of Mill Valley.

    Sausalito-Marin City Sanitary District, located at Fort Baker, treats wastewater from about 16,500 people in Sausalito, Marin City and Tam Valley.



    Source: U.S. EPA   April 14, 2008



    Advertise with us
    Learn about our online marketing opportunities.
    Home   |   Advertising   |   News Search   |   Articles   |   Buyer's Guide   |   Career Center   |   Case Histories   |   Top of Page