Flush.
All of us who live in town do it at
least once a day. Realistically, a lot more than that. In fact, it's
such a routine activity of our daily lives that we don't even think
about it when we do it. Until something breaks and then it's about
all we can think about until the matter is dealt with.
The same goes for our wastewater
treatment plant. Out of sight, out of mind. Until something goes
south there and then – if that happened – it would literally be
the talk of the town.
Mike quipped that the barbed wire is to keep him in |
The other day I got the grand tour of
our municipal wastewater treatment plant and received an education
from Plant Operator Mike McGinnis. Of all the guys who work for the
city, Mike is the grand old man now in his 35th year of
service. He's not only smart and affable but able to explain in lay
man's terms the mystery of what happens at the facility below the
dam.
Sexton Street Lift Station |
The gate where it all flows in |
The Primary Clarifier |
One of our RBC turbines. That sheen is the "slime" that does the eatin' |
Inside the Final Clarifier |
That big round building is the Digester |
The Sludge Holding Tank - NOT potable water |
The ultraviolet disinfecting happens in the right-hand tank and then it is released into the Chetek River |
Follow the arrows and dotted lines |
In very simple terms, it's like this:
When someone on, say, Pleasure Street, uses their toilet, the
waste runs to the lift station on Sexton Street. One of six spread
throughout the city, a lift station does exactly that – it lifts
the refuse and makes sure it keeps flowing to the treatment plant on
Water Street. When it gets there it enters
the plant through a Fine Screen and then moves through the Primary
Clarifier that essentially separates the liquids from the solids.
From there it goes to the RBC Units and that is where the “magic”
happens. If you were to google “waste-water treatment technologies”
a page would come up at Wikipedia that lists about sixty different
terms. A rotating biological contractor essentially grows bugs to eat
bacteria that in turn removes pollutants. According to Mike, it's a
bit like the trickling filters they used to use before the present
system was built – it's the slime that grows on the rocks.
That big panel is antiquated. The newer systems can be run off a unit the size of a thumb-drive. |
After it's spent some time there it
moves on to a Final Clarifier where the sludge goes one way and the
liquid another. The “sludge” moves to the Digester that operates
pretty much like our own stomachs: it breaks it down and then moves
it on to the giant blue holding tank in the back where it is
ultimately used as spread on area cropland. And the liquid? It moves
to the Ultraviolet Disinfection tank where it is “zapped” and
then released into the Chetek River, which according to Public Works
Director Dan Knapp, is “drinking-water clear”.
The Chetek River has been really moving these days |
Clearly there are a lot more
intricacies involved in this process (like phosphorous removal, for
example) but essentially this is my version of Chetek's Wastewater
Treatment Plant for Dummies. Built in 1982, for the last year or so
the facility has been functioning over the design capacity of the
plant. On a “normal” day, 380,000 gallons of water will be
treated. Just the other day, 500,000 gallons passed through forcing
Mike, in his wonderful turn of a phrase, to temporarily store “six
gallons of water in a 5 gallon bucket.” Apparently this happens
more than we'd like to know but Mike artfully makes it happen which
is why we never hear about it. The culprit? These days, Mother Nature
what with all the rain we've had and every day lots of otherwise
clean groundwater gets processed. That's why Public Works Director Dan Knapp urged us recently to pursue grant money that would help pay for
relining the pipes and alleviate a lot of that problem.
Wastewater Treatment Plant Operator, Mike McGinnis. We should all be grateful that he's on the job. |
“She may not be the prettiest girl on
the dance floor,” says Mike, “but she still gets the job done.”
That being said he is quick to add that we are one year into our
current 5-year permit from the DNR and by 2021 we will have to have a
plan in place for replacement or serious upgrade of our current
facility. Whether we want to hear that or not, we'll be crossing that
bridge before we know it and hopefully it won't be over a river of
sludge.
Mike McGinnis will be honored for
35 years of service at the June City Council meeting this Tuesday
night, June 14, at 7 p.m.
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