July 11, 2007
Wastewater treatment utility earns prestigious national awards for environmental protection
King County's Wastewater Treatment Division has earned two national
awards from the National Association of Clean Water Agencies for
outstanding compliance with its state and federal permit requirements.
Both the South Treatment Plant in Renton and the
West Point Treatment Plant in Seattle received Platinum Peak Performance
awards for attaining five consecutive years of 100 percent compliance
with effluent limits their respective National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System permits under the federal Clean Water Act and
the state’s
Water Pollution Control Law.
Only 76 treatment plants in the United States earned the Platinum Peak Performance award this year.
To comply with state and federal discharge permit effluent limits,
the county’s treatment plants must remove
various pollutants from the wastewater in order to meet set limits
for biochemical oxygen demand, total suspended solids, fecal coliform
counts and total residual chlorine. The permit conditions also
require each plant to conduct regular sampling and testing of both
its untreated and treated wastewater.
This is the ninth consecutive platinum-level award for South Treatment
Plant, and the first ever for West Point Treatment Plant.
“These
awards reflect the dedication of the wastewater professionals who staff
our regional treatment plants," said King County Executive Ron Sims.
“Five years of perfect compliance supports regional efforts to clean up
Puget Sound and protect the quality of life that makes this such a
great place to live and work, so this is a significant accomplishment.”
Each day, King County’s two regional treatment plants treat and
disinfect about 170 million gallons of wastewater, which is discharged
deep into Puget Sound.
The South Plant treats
wastewater from east and south King County, southeast Snohomish County
and northeast Pierce County.
West Point treats wastewater from Seattle, north King County and southwest Snohomish County.
More information about the Peak Performance Awards and list of King
County’s prior rankings is available on the Web at http://dnr.metrokc.gov/wtd/homepage/awards.htm
People enjoy clean water and a healthy environment because of King
County's wastewater treatment program. The county’s Wastewater
Treatment Division protects public health and water quality by serving
17 cities, 17 local sewer districts and more than 1.4 million residents
in King, Snohomish and Pierce counties. Formerly called Metro, the
regional clean-water agency now operated by King County has been
preventing water pollution for more than 40 years.