Logan offers public tours of $150 million regional wastewater treatment plant – Cache Valley Daily

2022-06-04 02:41:01 By : Ms. Kassia J

LOGAN – With Logan’s new regional wastewater treatment facility opening soon, the city’s Environmental Department is offering free guided tours of the plant to the public.

“We will offer a general tour,” according to city spokeswoman Emily Morgan Malik. “That’s available to individuals aged 13 and older.”

Malik added that the Environmental Department will also host a family friendly tour that can accommodate all ages, including children in strollers.

Both types of tours will have a morning and afternoon time slot, between June 7 and 18, excluding Sunday, June 12 and Monday, June 13.

The Regional Wastewater Treatment Facility was a $150 million undertaking by Logan City. The plant will replace a 460-acre lagoon system currently serving seven cities in Cache County – Logan, Smithfield, Hyde Park, North Logan, Providence, River Heights and Nibley – plus Utah State University.

Back in 2010, a study by Environmental Protection Agency found that the lagoon system was releasing too much nitrogen and phosphorous into the water behind Cutler Dam.

MWH Constructors of Bloomfield, CO was selected as the general contractor for the project and construction of the new plant began late in 2018.

The new facility will product higher quality effluent flows to nearly Cutler Reservoir and will allow the city to treat a greater amount of water, to a higher quality, with a smaller footprint, according to a MWU Constructors news release.

The lagoons are anaerobic, city environmental director Issa Hamud explains. The new treatment plant is aerobic. It depends upon significant aeration to reduce ammonia and phosphorus in the treated wastewater.

The aeration process takes place in circular treatment tanks. The plant will also employ a patented process known as BioMag that uses metal particles to draw sludge down to the bottom of a water clarifier.

The new wastewater treatment plant is located south of the Logan sewer lagoons along Valley View Highway (State Road 30).

Malik said that the tours will be limited to 15 participants per tour.

“Each participant must be registered individually,” she emphasized, “so that we can have an accurate headcount for his tour.”

To see the available dates and times that tours are being offered, visit http://wastewater.loganutah.org.

If you have any questions about the tours, please contact Emily Morgan Malik at 435-719-9792.

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It may be better environmentally, however that’s not the reasons behind the mayor’s decision to do it. She is know where even close to anything truly environmental. This decision is based on the old system not capable of supporting the massive onslaught of predatorial development approved by our reps.

This is also about the money she wants to generate from those cities. She cancels contracts with the country with the trash collection and does this to make the other cities in the county absolutely dependant on Logan’s sewage waste facility.

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