Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Springdale adding to wastewater plant

$51M contract approved for upgrades

- LAURINDA JOENKS

SPRINGDALE — The Springdale Water and Sewer Commission soon will start constructi­on of upgrades to the wastewater treatment plant on North Silent Grove Road.

The commission voted unanimousl­y Wednesday to approve a $51 million contract with Crossland Heavy Contractor­s of Lowell.

The Springdale City Council in March approved the sale of $45 million in revenue bonds by the commission to make the upgrades to the city’s wastewater treatment plant. The utility will repay the bonds using $15 million a year in sewer service revenue it makes from ratepayers, said Chris Weiser, chairman of the Water and Sewer Commission.

Rick Pulvirenti said the constructi­on contract puts expected completion of the project in two years. Pulvirenti is the chief engineer and operating officer of Springdale Water Utilities, which operates the plant.

The project will include two new clarifiers, an influent pump station and more. The clarifiers work near the end of the treatment process to help the solids settle, said Jennifer Enos, plant manager. The influent pump station will hold more water before treatment, she said.

The upgrades won’t change the capacity of the plant.

“We will still be a 24-million-gallons-a-day plant,” Enos said.

The work will allow the plant to operate better at peak flow, like those associated with heavy rainfall.

Nor will the upgrades improve the levels of phosphorus the plant releases in its water, she said.

The federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency in January rejected the permit the state Division of Environmen­tal Quality in December issued Springdale Water Utilities for work at the plant. The federal agency also rejected the permit the state issued the Northwest Arkansas Conservati­on Authority for its wastewater treatment plant in south Bentonvill­e.

The state permit allowed the Springdale wastewater treatment plant to release phosphorus at a monthly average of 1 milligram per liter, but the federal office called for 0.1 milligram of phosphorus per liter of water.

The state has sued the federal agency over its action.

The new clarifiers at the Springdale plant will relieve a bottleneck in the treatment process and allow plant operators to take the old clarifiers off line, one at a time, for rehabilita­tion, Enos said.

The upgrade is needed to meet the needs of the quickly growing population in Northwest Arkansas, Weiser said.

Weiser said the bond will pay for most of the project, with any overages coming from the utility’s revenue.

The utility last raised rates in 2020.

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