It’s important to know where your facility’s indoor and outdoor drains lead to, which determines what can go down them. Discharging the wrong materials down certain drains violates federal, state and/or local regulations in addition to harming the environment and potentially causing public health problems.
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Identify Where Your Drains Go
The three most common end points that your drains could lead to include:
1. Sanitary Sewers
Wastewater and other liquids that pass from drains to sanitary sewers separate into a scum layer, water layer and sludge layer. The water layer moves to a drain field where the water is either channeled back into the ground or sent to a publicly owned treatment works (POTW) to be sanitized and reused.
POTW’s are not designed to treat industrial waste, so check with your local authority to discuss the waste your facility produces that could end up in a sanitary sewer.
2. Onsite Treatment Facilities
Wastewater treated at or near its point of generation is either channeled to a nearby waterway after treatment or pumped back to the facility to be reused.
Flushing pollutants, such as pathogens, nitrogen and phosphorus to an onsite treatment facility can affect treatment and potentially pass through some treatment systems, polluting water. Test your wastewater for those and other pollutants before discharging processed waters.
3. Waterways
If your facility is close to a waterway, there’s a good chance your drains lead directly there. You’ll need a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit if your facility discharges pollutants, such as oil, sediment or other hazardous waste.
Even with a NPDES permit, you can’t dump whatever you want down drains. All NPDES permits have conditions that limit the amounts of a pollutant that may be discharged based on EPA Water Quality Standards.
Protect Your Drains
It’s important to protect your drains no matter where they go to stay in compliance with the Clean Water Act as well as applicable local and state regulations.
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Secondary Containment
Contained spills can’t get to drains. Hazardous liquids must have secondary containment should their primary container fail to prevent a discharge to navigable waters or adjoining shorelines. Common methods include berms, decks, pallets and portable pools. Secondary containment isn’t the solution to spills, but it will buy responders time to figure out a solution.
Drain Covers
Drain covers can be used proactively before fluid transfers and in areas that will be unmanned. They can also be used reactively after a spill has happened but before liquid gets to the drain. Some drain covers are a one-time use while others can be cleaned and stored for future incidents.
Whether it’s one big spill or trace amounts of sediment and hazardous material that enter a drain on a daily basis, water pollution destroys one of our most valuable natural resources. Protecting drains should be a key component in every facility’s environmental compliance efforts. Being aware of what can enter a storm drain and prepared to prevent incidents preserves this vital resource.
Are your drains ready to defend against spills to prevent releases? Stock up on these tried and trusted drain protection solutions.
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