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City
Lets Sludge Hit the Land;
Farmers Benefit
As Appeared in American
City & Country
Salisbury, Md.,
has joined a widespread effort to transform an ecological hazard-
sludge- into a useful product through land application.
The
story that has led Salisbury to this stage begins in the early ‘80’s,
when the city was dumping about 6 million gallons of municipal,
anaerobically digested sludge each year in a pit-like spoil site
created by dredging the Wicomico River. Realizing this disposal
posed a potential threat to the area’s groundwater, the Maryland
Department of Environment discontinued the city’s permit in
1986 and ordered a phase-out.
Fortunately,
in anticipation of this change, the city had recently begun an authorized,
experimental program for farmland application of anaerobically digested
liquid sewage sludge. Upgrades in the city’s treatment plant
to improve wastewater quality had also been completed in conjunction
with this program.
The plant’s
digestion process and pretreatment monitoring program significantly
removed pathogens and limited heavy metals, leaving an end product
that was Class 1 sludge as designated by the state- safe for application
on farmland.
(During this
transitional period, an early plan to dispose of sludge through
composting proved to be cost-prohibitive and was thus abandoned.)
So, faced with
a fast-approaching shutdown date, the city decided to stick with
the land application program newly underway, an option that would
also provide a service to surrounding farming communities.
The city also
had to deal with a sludge overload problem that occasionally forced
it to truck excess waste at a high cost to other treatment plants
in the vicinity.
Salisbury selected
a containment system manufactured by Long Island City, NY. -based
ModuTank after evaluating and rejecting in-ground lagoons, concrete
tanks and other permanent type structures. Two galvanized steel
tanks of 500,000 and 2 million gallon capacities were installed
on prepared surfaces adjacent to the wastewater plant and equipped
with required plumbing to receive and discharge liquid sludge.
A third, 1.9
million-gallon tank since been installed as part of a new system
for treating Wicomico County’s septage. The facility’s
lime stabilization process raises septage pH and removes pathogens
to the level of Class 1 sludge.
The two treatment
processes at work, anaerobic digestion for the city’s septage
and lime stabilization for the county’s, require separate
sites and farmland applications techniques.
Fresh sludge
undergoes its normal settling process after introduction into the
storage tanks. Through dynamic cycling, water rises to the top and
serves as a buffer for odor control.
Farmers were
invited to cooperate in a research program to develop scientifically
based application rates specific to local agricultural conditions.
Tank trucks now haul treated sludge to the fields according to agricultural
cycles. At least five months’ worth of available sludge is
held in the tanks for precisely timed delivery to the grain and
pasture grass fields, which are harvested solely for animal feed.
A second-phase
research program is investigating the effects of phosphorous on
ground and natural surface waters located downstream of the 2,000-acre
sludge application area. The study, led by Ronald Mulford, a University
of Maryland faculty advisor directing the county’s research
farm, aims to determine optimal application rates for nitrogen-rich
septage sludge consistent with environmentally acceptable phosphorous
levels.
The plant’s
dredging system transfers sludge from the tank bottoms to trucks.
Initially, operators drained the sludge in the smaller tank by gravity
feed through lines set in three sump connections. But after an initial
outflow of water, the residual sludge tended to thicken and settle
and could be removed only by vacuum suction equipment.
Automatic dredges,
supplied by Crisafulli Pump, Glendive, Mont., provided a more cost-effective
way to draw off the sludge. Activated by cable winches, the dredges
move back and forth across tank bottoms, allowing the settled sludge
to be pumped directly into the trucks.
Separated water
can by easily decanted off the top of the tank and recirculated
through the wastewater treatment process. The remaining sludge thickens
to a more desirable consistency for field use. Less water is trucked,
and land application rates are more consistent.
The land application
option has been a good one so far, costing both the city and county
substantially less than would drying and transporting it to distant
disposal sites.
The program
is also designed to investigate how ground and surface waters respond
to the application of treated sludge, and to monitor crop yields.
Since the program’s inception, farmers have been steadily
signing up on a free and voluntary basis.
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