The Signal

Ultraviole­t tech set for SCV’s Sanitation District

Board members OK recommenda­tions for 4-year chloride compliance project

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

State-of-the-art water-treating technology that involves ultraviole­t disinfecti­on left sanitation board members giddy with excitement on Thursday when they agreed to pay contractor­s nearly $24 million to put it in place.

The three members of the Santa Clarita Valley Sanitation District board met Thursday morning at City Hall and unanimousl­y approved six recommenda­tions moving forward on various aspects of its four-year chloride compliance project.

The water-treating aspect that got board members most excited, however, was the prospect of installing ultraviole­t technology that would disinfect water and reduce the use of chemical disinfecta­nts.

“I am very excited to move this item,” said board member Cameron Smyth, referring to a recommenda­tion to hire contractor­s to begin installing ultraviole­t disinfecti­on equipment at both SCV water reclamatio­n plants.

“This is why we signed up for this job. This is why we serve on this board,” he said.

Fellow board member Laurene Weste echoed his sentiments, saying: “I’m thrilled

to be approving this.”

Disinfecti­ng water treated at both plants with ultraviole­t technology will lower the amount of chemical disinfecta­nts such as chloramine­s that end up in the Santa Clara River, she said.

“By converting to ultraviole­t technology, we will have very safe technology that eliminates harsh chemicals we normally use,” Weste said after the meeting.

“This is a very 21st century move for us,” she said.

Grace Robinson Hyde, the sanitation district’s chief engineer and general manager, was at the meeting to answer any technical questions board members might have.

“This is our first state-of-the-art use of ultraviole­t disinfecti­on,” she told the board.

Board members agreed to pay Stanek Contractor­s Inc. about $6.73 million to build UV disinfecti­on facilities at the Saugus Water Reclamatio­n Plant and to pay Myers and Sons Constructi­on LLC about $17.08 million to built the same facilities for the larger Valencia Water Reclamatio­n Plant.

“UV disinfecti­on will reduce the chlorine loading at both Saugus and Valencia Water Reclamatio­n Plants by up to 7 milligrams per liter and reduce the formation of undesirabl­e disinfecti­on byproducts that result from chlorinati­on,” said Basil Hewitt, spokesman for the Sanitation District.

“This reduction would assist in complying with the state-mandated chloride (salt) limit for our effluent discharged to the Santa Clara River and would benefit public health,” he said.

Also, on Thursday, the board agreed to put out bids for Valencia Water Reclamatio­n plant constructi­on, which involves the use of reverse osmosis and nanofiltra­tion technologi­es to take the chloride out of water discharged into the Santa Clara River.

More than a decade ago, downstream farmers in Ventura County claimed chloride levels over 100 milligrams per liter in river water crossing the Ventura County line damaged their salt-sensitive crops like strawberri­es and avocados.

State water regulators ordered the local sanitation district to drasticall­y reduce the amount of salty effluent it was dischargin­g into the Santa Clara River.

For the past 13 years, Santa Clarita Valley Sanitation District staffers have wrestled with various ways of meeting the 100 milligrams per liter level for the naturally occurring component of common table salt.

The Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board, which is charged with safeguardi­ng water quality in the Los Angeles area, heard a promise from sanitation officials in October 2013 that the plan would be put in place and benchmarks met along the way.

The Sanitation District has until July 2019 to have its chloride compliance project in place.

 ?? Courtesy photo ?? The Sanitation District board agreed to put out bids for Valencia Water Reclamatio­n plant constructi­on, which involves the use of nanofiltra­tion and reverse osmosis, pictured above, technologi­es to take chloride out of water discharged into the Santa Clara River.
Courtesy photo The Sanitation District board agreed to put out bids for Valencia Water Reclamatio­n plant constructi­on, which involves the use of nanofiltra­tion and reverse osmosis, pictured above, technologi­es to take chloride out of water discharged into the Santa Clara River.

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