November-December 2000

Emergencies, Incidents, and Other Erosion Control Surprises

Responding to unexpected erosion and sediment control problems doesnt involve rocket science. But sometimes a little ingenuity and even a helping hand from Mother Nature can sure make a difference.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By Greg Northcutt

Comments

In a perfect world there would be no such thing as an erosion and sediment control emergency at a construction site or other location, because the erosion control plan would provide the correct sequence of steps to be taken to protect against all threats - natural and otherwise - and would be followed properly. But in the real world there’s rarely such a thing as perfection, much less perfect weather, a perfect plan, or perfect implementation of a plan. Assumptions made in developing the plan might be faulty, the techniques and materials chosen to control the loss of soil might be inappropriate, time and budgets might limit the type and extent of any measures taken to prevent erosion, the plan might fall victim to shoddy workmanship, nature might simply overwhelm the best of human efforts, or any number of other likely and not-so-likely events might befall the project.

The bottom line: Just about any erosion control professional could face the need to revise or devise erosion and sediment control practices in a hurry.

Here’s a sampling of how other professionals responded to a variety of unexpected erosion and sediment control problems, all of which offer insights into the wide variety of events that can disrupt and even destroy erosion and sediment control plans and practices at a construction site or a natural area.

Preparing for Several Possible Failures

Sometimes exercising extra caution to prevent an emergency in the first place makes a lot of common and economic sense. In Redmond, WA, not only is sediment difficult to control, but to protect environmentally sensitive areas, water-quality standards are unusually high. What’s more, sites often drain to environmentally sensitive areas. Facing such a challenge, it doesn’t hurt to have a backup plan or two on hand.

Redmond officials heeded that advice and set the pace for other municipalities in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States in meeting new, stringent water-quality standards recently imposed to protect salmon, now an endangered species in that area. Such standards are very close to those required for drinking water.

Challenges

Jars with untreated water (left jar), water treated with polyacrylamide before filtration (center jar), and water treated with polyacrylamide and filters (right jar).
PF 400 unit treating stormwater runoff at the rate of about 250 gpm at a construction site. The treated water discharges into a wetland with endangered species.

Meeting these requirements is no easy task for developers and contractors. For one thing, soils at construction sites typically include colloidal-size clay particles - the really fine sediment that clouds stormwater runoff and can take weeks, even months, to settle out naturally. Turbidity readings of stormwater on Redmond construction sites of 5,000 to 10,000 nephelometric turbidity units (NTU) are common and may range as high as 28,000 NTU. To meet state and federal regulations, turbidity of stormwater discharged from a construction site into Class A water - such as a salmon-spawning stream - must be within 5 NTU of the turbidity level of that water, which is typically 50 NTU.

Many of the construction projects involve steep slopes and large, open excavations near salmon and trout streams. In addition, rain, which can be heavy during the winter, is likely throughout much of the spring and fall. As a result, developers and contractors working in Redmond are required to be prepared.

"Silt fence and other standard best management practices just won’t control the colloid-size particles from our glacial-till soils to meet those standards," points out Guy Oliver, Redmond’s lead construction inspector. "So we require a basic erosion control plan, such as silt fence and sediment ponds with gravel cones, for each project. Then, depending on slope, type of soil, and proximity to receiving waters, we use a matrix to figure out how much additional protection we feel comfortable with in case the first one doesn’t work. Depending on the site, that could mean as many as four or more backup plans."

Alternative Solutions

The first backup might be biofiltration. Stormwater collected by an onsite sediment basin might be piped 1,500 ft. into a level spreader that distributes it over a grassy field. If turbidity levels of water sampled at a certain point - say, 700 ft. downslope of the spreader - are still too high, then the contractor may be required to use ground infiltration or run the stormwater through a canister to reduce turbidity. Should the filters plug up with sediment or the ground infiltration prove unsatisfactory, then treatment of the water with a flocculant might be necessary. Another alternative might be a permit to discharge the stormwater into a sanitary sewer.

"Of course, another option would be to stop work during the wet season," says Oliver. "The developer would have to weigh the costs of delaying construction against the costs of erosion and sediment control."

For the past five years, Oliver has been working with several construction companies in testing different methods of removing fine colloidal soil particles from stormwater.

Electroflocculation. One removal method involves electroflocculation. Stormwater in a treatment cell is run through a series of electrified plates. This process changes the electrical charges of the soil particles, causing them to clump together until they become heavy enough to settle to the bottom of the cell.

"If done with the wrong type of plates, this electroflocculation is extremely toxic to aquatic life," Oliver warns.

Filters. Another method being studied involves the use of polyacrylamides, which are commonly used as soil binders, with filters made by Clear Creek Systems Inc. in Bakersfield, CA.

Advertisement

"Polyacrylamides aren’t as effective in causing flocculation as cation polymers," notes Joe Gannon, Clear Creek Systems’ vice president. "In one short-duration test at Redmond, however, polyacrylamides did cause soil particles to flocculate to a size big enough that they wouldn’t pass through filters. The treated water averaged about 20 NTU. We’ll do a longer study this winter to determine the long-term economics of this approach, including filter life."

Batch Treatment. Oliver is also working with Klean Earth Environmental Company of Lynnwood, WA, in the evaluation of a mobile stormwater treatment unit for removing fine soil particles. This batch treatment process features a 6,000-gal. tank mounted on a 30-ft.-long trailer. Stormwater is piped into the tank, where it is mixed with a dry-powder flocculating agent. After the sediment precipitates out, the treated stormwater is released. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get Erosion Control E-mail Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our Erosion Control e-mail newsletter!