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posted by takyon on Monday August 26 2019, @03:30PM   Printer-friendly
from the water-everywhere-but-not-a-drop-to-drink dept.

From MLive, Months after dire warnings, Flint spills 2 million gallons of raw sewage into river:

The city dumped an estimated 2 million gallons of untreated sewage into the Flint River Sunday, Aug. 18, just months after officials warned wastewater infrastructure was fast approaching a "critical point."

A partial report filed by the city with the state Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy on Tuesday, Aug. 20, says a "flash flood event" overflowed primary settling tanks at the city's wastewater treatment plant on Beecher Road, sending raw waste onto the ground and into a storm sewer drain that discharges directly to the river....

Earlier this year, the city sought a waiver from the Genesee County Health Department, requesting that it be allowed to skip testing river water for bacteria after sewage spills in cases in which the discharge comes from its retention basin.

From the WSWS (ICFI/SEP), Michigan: Two million gallons of untreated sewage spill into Flint River:

Genesee County issued a public advisory that people should avoid all contact with the Flint River. As of this writing six days later, there are no reports in the press or on government websites that the advisory has been lifted....

The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that in the United States 7 million people on average per year, i.e., a population that would rank as the second largest city in the US, become ill from exposure to raw sewage, and 7 percent of these severely or fatally ill. While some of the illnesses are due to ingestion through drinking water, a majority are the result of external contact, often resulting from municipal spills.

Late Saturday night, over 2.2 inches of rain fell in the Flint area in just a three-hour period....

The Flint River has long been known to be highly polluted due to the unrestrained dumping of toxic waste into it by General Motors for the better part of a century.

On MLive (comments adwalled), user Chukobuk suggested:

Just raise industrial user sewer rates by a factor of ten. What else is GM going to use its vast federal income tax break for from the Tax and Jobs Cut Act? Laying off another 12,000 employees? Oh, sorry, that's the Tax Cut and Jobs Act.

A different failure mode from 2014: Power failure leads to raw sewage in Flint River

See also: 'Damage has been done': Newark water crisis echoes Flint

Previously:


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by RS3 on Tuesday August 27 2019, @02:29PM

    by RS3 (6367) on Tuesday August 27 2019, @02:29PM (#886086)

    Like many places I've worked, the exact wrong people are running things. You should run things (general manager) if for no other reason than that you have passion for things being done right (like I do).

    Well, it's the classic problem of short-term cost vs. long-term. That temp. sensing system may save big $ in pump replacement... unless insurance pays for it, even then, hopefully insurance co. won't cover future pump replacements without temp sensing, etc.

    So it's pretty easy to do temp. sensing, of course, including infrared. Another is timers- if the thing is idling too long, shut it off. I've done some PLC programming and I could see a few of them- small, cheap- running things for you, keeping track of pressures, temps, flow, motion, limit switches, position sensors, human interface, timers, indicators, motor currents, speeds, etc. then all networked to a SCADA / mimic system, if warranted. Of course major automation integrators will charge huge $, but it's not really difficult. They'll drag it out and make a huge project of it. You're reminding me how much I liked that field, but not the people so much- some great ones, but also some very politically-driven bully monster idiots.

    Hmmm- I have a cousin in the Houston area who's something technical, and I need to get back in touch with him. It'd be ironic if he does automation / SCADA stuff.

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