Cyanotoxin Solution Becomes Resiliency Backbone | WWD Weekly Digest

Nicole Williams, lead engineer for Carollo Engineers, shares how an algae bloom resulted in resilience against weather events.
July 25, 2022

A treatment plant in Oregon had a cyanotoxin issue resulting in a do not drink notice. Within a few days of lifting it, they had to issue another notice. But the solution they installed not only solved this drinking water issue but also boosted the facility’s resilience to extreme weather.

Nicole Williams, lead engineer for Carollo Engineers, talks about the extent of the problems facing the utility, technology considered for treatment, and how the chosen solution saved the utility from an extreme freeze event and complications from wildfire runoff.

Additional Resources

Timestamps

  • Overview of Salem, Oregon cyanotoxin problem | 0:23
  • Technologies considered and reviewed | 2:40
  • Going beyond addressing the problem at hand | 4:09
  • Satisfaction and pride in a resilient outcome | 6:10
  • Outro | 7:04

Sign up for More Water & Wastes Digest Content

Connect with WWD on Social Media

Sign up for Wastewater Digest Newsletters
Get the latest news and updates.