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WPCNR WATER WATCH. From the New York City Department of Environmental Protection.(UPDATED) July 24, 2011: DEP reports significant progress in making the sewage treatment plant at 135th Street and 12th Avenue(shown below) operational and all untreated discharges into the Hudson River was stopped as of approximately 9:30 pm Friday evening.
No odors or fouled air was experienced by WPCNR during time spent adjacent to the Hudson River on the West Side of Manhattan on the High Line from midtown to the battery. Air around the plant (shown here) was distinctly unpleasant with a West wind prevailing. The Hudson River from the midtown to the tip of Manhattan did not to this reporter’s observation have any pleasure craft plying the waters except for Circle Line Tours, and one lone sailboat. No cause has been announced of the fire that broke out at 11:45 Wednesday, causing shutdown of the plant about 5:15 P.M., resulting in a reported 200,000 gallons of raw, untreated effluent being released into the Hudson River. The plant processes 125,000 gallons of raw sewage a day. The DEP has not reported a precise estimate of the effluent released. The DEP reported Sunday morning contractors continue to repair equipment, assess damage, and perform cleanup activities. Of the plant’s five engines used to pump wastewater into the facility, only two engines need to be operating during dry weather to handle the wastewater flow into the plant. Both engines were brought back online earlier Friday, which restored pumping capacity to the plant; DEP is now pumping wastewater flow into the plant at a rate that is processing current flows, as well as any remaining sewage that has been stored in the system while the plant was down. Wastewater is receiving primary treatment and chlorine disinfection, which are the key components of the sewage treatment process needed to restore water quality to the extent necessary to eliminate advisories at area beaches. DEP is still working around the clock to stabilize the operations that have been restored, and re-establish secondary treatment to the plant as soon as possible. As a backup in the event of further operational disruptions, DEP is installing an additional pumping system in case any further issues with the existing system arise. In order to minimize the discharge of wastewater from the plant, DEP Friday began performing some small “pump arounds” — pumping wastewater flow out of an 84-inch sewer at West 117th St. in Manhattan that normally flows to the plant and pumping into a 42-inch sewer at Frederick Douglass Boulevard and 117th, which flows to the Wards Island Wastewater Treatment Plant. Environmental, Health and Community Impacts
Beaches and status changes will be available to the public through website postings at the City’s beach website www.nyc.gov/health/beach, at www.nyc.gov under NYC Right to Know, and at www.nyc.gov/health, the City Information Hotline 311, Health Department press releases, and those who have signed up to Notify NYC will receive up to date status information relating to public beaches via Twitter, RSS, email and SMS. Water quality modeling indicates that these beaches have been potentially impacted by the untreated sewer discharges from the North River Wastewater Treatment Plant. Though the beaches are not closed, the New York City Department of Health does not recommend swimming and bathing until this advisory is lifted, especially for people with underlying medical conditions, or young or elderly people who may be more likely to get sick if beach water is swallowed. Signs will be placed at the beach entrances to alert the public to the risk. Alternative beaches, such as Coney Island Beach, Rockaway Beach, Orchard Beach, Manhattan Beach and Wolfe’s Pond Beach, remain open and unaffected based on current water quality modeling. Fifty-four outdoor pools are open for swimming as well. Call 311 to find the pool nearest to you. Additionally, based on recommendations from NYC Health, the Hudson River to Ossining, the East River from the Robert F. Kennedy Bridge to Verrazano Bridge, the Harlem River and the Kill Van Kull to the Goethals Bridge will not be fit for recreational activities such as swimming, canoeing, kayaking, windsurfing or any other water activity that would entail possible direct contact until the recommended use restriction is lifted. Also, consuming fish caught from these areas is not recommended for anyone until the pollution advisory is resolved. It is recommended that individuals catch and release fish back into the water. The New York City Police Department Harbor Unit will be patrolling near the plant to ensure boaters keep a proper distance. The city Parks Department is restricting access to the river at the 79th Street Boat Basin and placing signs prohibiting kayaking, canoeing and other recreational activities from all city boat launch sites along the Hudson River and other appropriate sites. The Hudson River Park Trust as well as the Battery Park City Authority are also installing similar signs at sites under their jurisdiction. DEP and the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene continue to take samples in the harbor and at permitted beaches that could potentially be impacted. For the most up-to-date information, go to the NYC Health website at www.nyc.gov/health, the DEP website at www.nyc.gov/dep, or call 311. Individuals can also receive proactive alerts by signing up through 311 for Notify NYC, the city’s official source for information about emergency events and important city services. Riverbank State Park, located atop the treatment plant, re-opened at 2:00 pm today. Westchester County and New Jersey DEP are also performing water sampling and water flow modeling to determine any impacts on their rivers and beaches. DEP will continue to provide routine updates on the status of the plant’s operations and public health impacts in collaboration with the Health Department. Related Documents and Links
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