ELKINS — Elkins Wastewater Treatment Plant employees recently received training from a state government training team.
“If you’ve ever seen a stream choked with green algae, you know what happens when there is too much nitrogen, phosphorous, and other nutrients in water,” an Elkins press release states. “Agricultural runoff is one of the main causes of these ‘algae blooms,’ but potentially problematic nutrients are also present in the wastewater effluent that is released after treatment as surface water.”
To learn how to deal with this situation, the Elkins Wastewater Treatment Plant recently hosted a training team from the West Virginia Environmental Training Center. The team provided WWTP operators with classroom instruction and hands-on practice in removing nutrients from treated wastewater.
During the training, operators learned how to test wastewater for alkalinity, ammonia, phosphorus, nitrite/nitrate and pH. Operators also learned about oxygen reduction potential and jar testing, “a process that simulates WWTP processes at a small scale to test whether changes are needed to achieve water quality goals,” the release states.
“This training was really important to my operators, because there is increasing concern in our watershed about the need for nutrient removal,” Whitney Hymes, the chief wastewater operator for the Elkins Sanitary Board, said.
“There are likely going to be state regulations coming soon requiring nitrogen and phosphorous removal, and so we wanted to start learning about it as soon as possible. We really appreciated the visit from ETC. They put on a great class for us.”
The West Virginia Environmental Training Center was established in 1983 under the administration of the West Virginia Department of Education, The West Virginia Environmental Training Center provides training and technical assistance to wastewater and water professionals statewide. About 75 programs per year are delivered to approximately 1,200 participants. Wastewater and drinking water operator certification courses are offered at many levels, usually twice a year.
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