The city of Oak Harbor is about to bring Puget Sound’s
newest wastewater treatment plant online. It’s designed to fit alongside a revitalized
downtown park, service the community’s needs for many years, and contribute to continuing
efforts to restore and protect water quality in the Sound.
The administration building at Oak Harbor's new wastewater treatment
plant will include an interpretive center and multi purpose space.
|
We’ve provided over $105 million dollars in financial assistance,
through low interest loans and grants, for design and construction of the $128
million dollar project.
New capacity
The plant will be able to treat up to 5 million gallons of wastewater per day. The city’s current daily volume is about 1.5 million gallons, serving about 22,300 people.
“I want to commend the city for its early and ongoing proactive
community outreach and communication. The city went to great lengths to ensure
that information was shared with its citizens from planning through
construction,” said Jeff Nejedly, who oversees Ecology’s Water Quality grants
and loans, at the ribbon-cutting event.
Jeff Nejedly, financial assistance supervisor, and Shawn McKone, municipal wastewater treatment plant permit manager, were among Ecology's staff who helped the city develop the new facility. |
Advanced technology
Oak Harbor’s new system treats wastewater with membrane
bioreactors, or “MBRs.” The advanced technology uses ultra-filtration
membranes to remove solids left over after beneficial microbes digest the
city’s sewage. The result is water that has had most of its impurities removed
and residual solids that can be further processed for beneficial use as a
fertilizer.
“This advanced wastewater treatment system is capable of
producing high-quality “Class A” reclaimed water that can be used for
irrigation in parks and in other public areas. This can reduce dependence on drinking water sources for activities that
don’t require drinkable water,” said Nejedly.
Oak Harbor's new treatment plant, upper right, nears completion next to Windjammer Park, center, undergoing its own upgrade. |
Re-usable water
The first planned use for the plant’s reclaimed water will
be irrigation for the adjacent Windjammer Park, which the city is redeveloping
in tandem with the treatment plant project. The city is in the process of finalizing a
proposal to divert a portion of the water produced at the facility for these
purposes.
The MBR technology is capable of producing water that contains
lower levels of nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorus, than conventional
wastewater treatment systems. Excess nitrogen can cause conditions that upset
the Puget Sound food web. Maintaining healthy conditions promotes the recovery
of salmon, which are the natural prey of Puget Sound’s southern resident orcas.
Oak Harbor’s work on the new plant dates back to 2010 and
earlier, when city staff and elected officials determined that the city’s
growth would exceed the existing treatment plants’ capacity. Staff from
our Water Quality Program provided technical review and assistance on
sizing and designing the new system, in addition to the financial assistance.
By Larry Altose, communications manager, Northwest Regional
Office
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