A new frontier.: A wastewater treatment plant in New York City produces 1 L of algal biofuel.
LaShell Stratton-Childers
págs. 18-19
Chesapeake Bay TMDL calls for steep cuts in nutrient, sediment loads.: Despite past reductions, point sources face more stringent discharge requirements.
Jay Landers
págs. 20-24
Maximum benefits.: Upgrade provides biological nutrient removal despite unusually high phosphorus loading.
John O'Neil, John Metzler, John Keller, Ed Kobylinski, Matt Bond
págs. 30-34
Same plant, better results.: Achieving enhanced nutrient removal without new construction .
M. Casey Whittier, John Olson, Mark Pamperin, Betty-Ann Curtis
págs. 36-40
Remote gate control maximizes interceptor storage and minimizes CSOs.: Lowell, Mass., uses real-time remote control to reduce combined sewer overflows.
James S. Drake, Mark Young, Michael Stuer
págs. 42-47
Introducing FOG to solids.: A sticky proposition.
Tom Johnson, Tim Shea, Dale Gabel, Bob Forbes
págs. 48-53
Plant profile.: The Stratford Water Pollution Control Facility has made great strides in nutrient removal.
Gary R. Johnson, Peter Stallings
págs. 54-56