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The Havertown PCP Superfund site severely polluted Naylors Run. National Wood Preservers (NWP) operated a wood preservation treatment plant at the intersection of Eagle Road and West Hillcrest Avenue in Havertown from 1947 to 1991. [6] During its operations, chemicals used to treat wood and waste products were dumped into a well on the property ...
The membrane system would help the city anticipate new federal water treatment standards, lower pre-treatment costs, and achieve turbidity levels of 0.004 NTU, 125 times better than the state standard of 0.5 NTU. [7] Plans have been laid for an extension of water service to the Borough of McKean, Pennsylvania
At this site, the abandoned Maiden #1 mine dumped over a million gallons of untreated AMD into Dunkard Creek each day. Working with Stream Restoration, Inc. and public/private partners from across the region, the Alliance created a passive treatment system consisting of: 1. An aerobic wetland (shallow water flowing over vegetation). Once ...
Aqua's Ingram's Mill Plant is among 116 surface water treatment plants in Pennsylvania to be presented the award for successfully completing the Self-Assessment and Peer Review phase of the ...
Dixmont was completely self-sustained from the beginning. It had its own farmlands, livestock, rail station, and post office. Also part of the facility was a water treatment plant, a sewage treatment plant, and electricity generating facilities.
UNITY TOWNSHIP, Pa. (KDKA) — The body of Elizabeth Pollard, the missing 64-year-old woman who fell through a sinkhole while looking for her cat in Unity Township, Pennsylvania, has been found ...
At Westmoreland, Volkswagen developed three major buildings, two minor buildings, and a waste water treatment system. Richard S. Cummins, the plant manager, described the inside of the largest unfinished building with 2.1 million square feet, as a "three-dimensional chess-board covering an area of over 37 football fields."
(Ultimately, the company invested in their own water treatment facilities for process water. By 1977, the plant was treating 2.5 million gallons on-site in a 3.5 acre bacterial system. [20]) Thus began decades of tense negotiations between the company, local, state, and federal authorities. The Clairton plant repeatedly violated new air ...