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Workshop Information

May 12-13, 2008

Washington Metropolitan Council of Governments

Washington, DC



Agenda

Presentations

Hand-outs and Related Links

Contact Us








Workshop

Maximizing the Dual Benefits of Advanced Wastewater
Treatment Plant Processes: Reducing Nutrients
and Emerging Contaminants



Growing concerns over potential environmental and human risks from endocrine disrupting compounds (EDCs), such as pharmaceutical and personal care products (P/PCP), have prompted this workshop. Evidence of possible impact to the living resources of the Chesapeake watershed (e.g., fish) suggest that a greater understanding of the contribution of EDCs from wastewater effluent to surface waters is needed. As WWTPs in the Chesapeake Bay are dealing with implementation of ENR through limit of technology (LOT) strategies, the issue of EDC-P/PCP fate and nutrient control is inevitably linked. The objective of the workshop is to collect information about upstream sources of EDCs, the behavior of EDCs in enhanced nutrient removal (ENR), and the impact to biosolids and reclaimed wastewater, and to provide the information to wastewater plant authorities, designers, and operators. Although past workshops on EDCs and P/PCPs have discussed the role of nutrients, that discussion has tended to be superficial. This workshop will have a national impact as it will explicitly address the current and planned uses of ENR and how those decisions will impact or influence EDC-P/PCP fate. Workshop proceedings will be synthesized into a technical brief that will be distributed to the wastewater community and to state and federal environmental agencies.


Presentations

Nancy Love,
University of Michigan, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Maximizing the Dual Benefits of Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant Processes: Reducing Nutrients and Emerging Contaminants

Suzanne Rudzinski, US EPA Office of Water
Contaminants of Emerging Concern

Ellen Schmitt and Virginia Thompson, US EPA Region Three
Fred Pinkney,, US Fish and Wildlife Service
Pharmaceuticals in the Environment: Take-Back and Proper Disposal Programs

Dipankar Sen, Santa Clara Valley Water District
Leveraging Opportunities for Water Reuse to Economically Address Concerns with EDCs and P/PCPs

Willie Harper, University of Pittsburg
Transformation Mechanisms in Biological Wastewater Processes

Joan Oppenheimer, MWH
Fate of Pharmaceuticals and Personal Care Products in Wastewater Teatment Processes

Sudhir Murthy, District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority
John Novak, Virginia Tech
Overview of Process Improvements and R&D Efforts for Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Facilities

James Gray, US Geological Survey
Fate of Estrogenic Compounds During Municipal Sludge Stabilization and Dewatering

Chris Peot, District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority
Biosolids Land Application - Benefits and Issues with Major and Trace Nutrients - Advice from the Field and Lab

Hugh Monteith, Hydromantis, Inc
Energy Costs and Green House Gas Impacts Associated with Removing Emerging Contaminants

Chris Tabor and Daniel Murthy, Camp, Dresser, and McKee
Cost Comparisons for Various Nutrient Removal Technologies for the City of Norwalk, Connecticut

Sam Amad, Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission
Operator Skills and Training Needs

Amit Pramanik, Water Environment Research Foundation
Two Key Challenges for the Water Quality Secor: Nutrients and Trace Organics - Overview of WERF Plans and Activities




Hand-outs and Related Links

  • www.epa.gov/waterscience/methods/method/other.html
    EPA Office of Science and Technology's (OST) methods for analysis of ~100 pharmaceuticals, personal care products, steroids, and hormones in water, soil, sediment, and biosolids. (See Suzanne Rudzinski's presentation for more information.)


  • www.epa.gov/ppcp/
    EPA website on pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCP), with a focus on the Agency’s research. (See Suzanne Rudzinski's presentation for more information.)


  • www.teleosis.org/gpp-program.php
    Green Pharmacy Program established by the Teleosis Institute. (See Ellen Schmitt's and Virginia Thompson's presentation for more information.)


  • www.nodrugsdownthedrain.org/
    No Drugs Down the Drain Campaign established by Los Angeles and Orange County, California. (See Ellen Schmitt's and Virginia Thompson's presentation for more information.)

  • www.smarxtdisposal.net/
    The Smarxt Disposal Program, established by the USFWS, PHARMA, and the American Pharmacists Association, teaches methods for responsible medication disposal as demonstrated by Fred Pinkney, USFWS.


Contact Us

For logistical questions, please contact:
Elizabeth Van Dolah, Chesapeake Research Consortium
vandolahe@si.edu
(410) 798-1283

For technical questions, please contact:
Greg Allen, EPA-Chesapeake Bay Program Office
allen.greg@epa.gov
(410) 267-5746



Last Updated: May 27, 2008


Photo Credit: Jane Thomas, IAN Image Library (www.ian.umces.edu/imagelibrary/)



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