CWEA Wastewater Professional :: April 2014 March 2014 Volume 2 | Page 15

Feature Article | CWEA’s First “Plant of the Year” Award, 1929 Members of California Sewage Works Association on Sprinkling Filter at University of California Farm, Davis, April 21, 1930 The Award Winning U.C. Davis Sewage Treatment Plant What type of treatment plant was the 1929 “Plant of the Year?”The 1930 CSWA film clip is just over a minute long and shows three of the main features of the U.C. Davis sewage treatment plant – a pump house, an Imhoff tank and sprinkling filters (a form of trickling filter). The film is very short but it did provide just enough information to help the CWEA History Committee track down more detailed information about the plant. Knowing that the U.C. Davis plant was the subject of a conference tour, the 1930 conference minutes and papers were the first documents to be reviewed by the History Committee. The 1930 spring conference minutes provide the details of the tour of the U.C. Davis Sewage Treatment Plant and a photograph (below) of the CSWA tour attendees posing on the plant’s sprinkling filter structure with the Imhoff tank in the background. The photograph matches the scene in the film and confirms that the film was taken on April 21, 1930. Regarding the U.C. Davis Sewage Treatment Plant’s design and process, the minutes and conference papers also gave us the following information: The U.C. Davis Sewage Treatment Plant was constructed in 1926, along with a sewage collection system, at a cost of $50,000 (approximately $660,000 in current dollars). The plant was designed by H.B. Foster, U.C. Engineer, and consisted of two pumping and screening plants, an Imhoff tank, sprinkling filter, two secondary clarifiers, a sludge bed and irrigation checks to utilize the effluent for summer irrigation. The treatment system was designed for handling the sewage of a population of 700 persons plus a large volume of manure and milk/creamery wastes from the U.C. Davis farm. The average flow to the plant was 0.175 MGD, but it was noted that the plant was occasionally subject to peak flows with a population equivalent of 20,000 people during club gatherings and special campus events. At the time of construction in 1926 the U.C. Davis plant was located 2.5 miles from the campus center and the travel time for the sewage from campus to the plant was approximately 2 hours and 20 minutes. The combination of domestic sewage, dairy/creamery wastes and barn wastes (with the dairy/creamery wastes representing approximately one-quarter of the total flow to the plant) created a very strong sewage thanks to the high BOD of the milk wastes, so odor control was a priority for pumping stations and treatment plant O&M program. 1930 CSWA Award Publicity & Students Program The League of California Municipalities (the predecessor of today’s League of California Cities) and the CSWA held joint annual conferences during the 1930’s. The League also published Pacific Municipalities, a monthly magazine that provided a “review of municipal problems and civic improvements” as well as covering activities for both the California and Oregon Leagues of Municipalities. The U.C. Davis sewage treatment plant was given a “starring role” by being featured on the April 1930 cover of Pacific Municipalities along with an article on the April CSWA conference. Future CSWA president John Jacobson is also highlighted in the Wastewater Professional April 2014 13