Clean Water Services
{{Undisclosed paid|date=January 2024}}
{{Infobox company
| name = Clean Water Services
| logo = File:Clean Water Services logo.png
| type = Public utility
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| area_served = Washington County
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| genre = Wastewater treatment
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| foundation = 1970
| location_city = Hillsboro, Oregon
| location_country = United States
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| homepage = [http://www.cleanwaterservices.org cleanwaterservices.org]
}}
Clean Water Services is the water resources management utility for more than 600,000 residents in urban Washington County, Oregon and small portions of Multnomah County, Oregon and Clackamas County, Oregon, in the United States. Clean Water Services operates four wastewater treatment facilities, constructs and maintains flood management and water quality projects, and manages flow into the Tualatin River to improve water quality and protect fish habitat.Haight, Abby. Stream to get healthy helping of native plants. The Oregonian, November 29, 2007. They are headquartered in Hillsboro.Much, Justin. Farmers and neighbors debate use of biosolids. Statesman Journal, November 7, 2007.
History
In 1969, Oregon's Department of Environmental Quality placed a temporary halt to new construction in Washington County.Tsao, Emily. Skate park search uncovers plans for sewage ponds. The Oregonian, October 24, 2007. On February 3, 1970, ten cities and sixteen sanitary districts combined to form the Unified Sewerage Agency (USA). Later that year, voters in the new district approved a $36 million bond measure to consolidate, construct and upgrade USA's regional public wastewater treatment facilities. The Durham Wastewater Treatment Facility opened in 1976, which replaced 14 smaller treatment plants.CWS' Durham facility celebrates 30 years of treatment operation. The Tualatin Times, December 28, 2006 Two years later six more treatment plants were replaced with the opening of the Rock Creek Wastewater Treatment Facility.
As population continued to grow in the service area of USA, the water quality of the Tualatin River worsened. In 1986, the Northwest Environmental Defense Center filed a lawsuit against the United States Environmental Protection Agency, prompting Total maximum daily loads for the Tualatin River.{{Cite web |url=http://or.water.usgs.gov/projs_dir/pn356/pn356.html |title=Oregon Water Science Center Active Projects |access-date=2010-06-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100609111226/http://or.water.usgs.gov/projs_dir/pn356/pn356.html |archive-date=2010-06-09 |url-status=dead }} A Clean Water Act amendment added regulation of storm-water runoff, and the Rock Creek Facility achieved 99% removal of ammonia nitrogen. In 1988, the Tualatin Valley Water Quality Endowment Fund was established by the Northwest Environmental Defense Center lawsuit.
USA worked to maintain the quality of the Tualatin River by establishing Surface Water Management (SWM) utility for water quality and drainage in 1990, and began a $200 million facility expansion and upgrade program to meet compliance deadlines. That same year, the agency established the River Rangers program. USA began consumption-based rates and combined billing with water providers in 1994.
In July 2001, the Unified Sewerage Agency renamed itself as Clean Water Services at a cost of $60,000.Highlights, lowlights and other dubious achievements of the year 2001. The Oregonian, December 27, 2001. Clean Water Services' Operations Building opened in 2003, which is used as a showcase of low impact development. The same year, the Administrative Building Complex opened. It was the first LEED Gold certified public building in Washington County. In 2004, the agency began a program to add shade along the watershed's streams and river by planting trees and shrubs to lower temperatures of the waterways.Arrandale, Tom. Trading for clean water. Governing Magazine, April 2004. Pg. 32.Delegation secures $640,000 for water supply project and title transfer process. Beaverton Valley Times January 3, 2008. This program received approval from environmental regulators and was in lieu of spending $150 million to build chilling systems at the four treatment facilities.
The agency's Rock Creek facility won an EPA National Clean Water Act Recognition Award in 2006,County treatment site wins honors. Forest Grove News Times March 14, 2007 and in 2008 the Durham facility's Influent Pump Station was the first to earn LEED Silver certification.LEEDing the Way. Treatment Plant Operator Magazine June 2010 The following year the Durham plant became the United States' first wastewater treatment plant to produce commercial fertilizer.Ostara Nutrient Rocovery Technologies Inc.: Oregon Wastewater Treatment Plant Is the First in U.S. to Recycle Nutrients Into "Green" Commercial Fertilizer. Wall Street Journal Market Watch September 23, 2008 In 2010, the Clean Water Institute was established by the agency.County spins off patented science biz. Christian Gaston, Forest Grove News-Times March 4, 2010
Services
Clean Water Services provides stormwater and wastewater services in partnership with 12 member cities that include; Beaverton, Tigard, Tualatin, Hillsboro, King City, Forest Grove, Sherwood, Cornelius, Banks, Gaston, Durham, and North Plains.
Clean Water Services is a special service district that serves as a separately managed and financed public utility. The [http://www.co.washington.or.us/BOC/ Washington County Commissioners] serve as the board of directors for Clean Water Services.
As a wastewater utility, Clean Water Services cleans more than {{convert|60|e6USgal|m3}} of wastewater a day. The wastewater treatment process uses physical, biological, and chemical treatment to clean wastewater to some of the highest standards in the nation. The cleaned wastewater is then released into the Tualatin River.Griffin, Jeff. Overcoming pipebursting challenges--on time, under budget; Rehabilitation TECHNOLOGY. Underground Construction, February 1, 2007. Pg. 49(2) Vol. 62 No. 2 {{ISSN|1092-8634}}. The wastewater is collected by a vast network of more than {{convert|800|mi|km}} of sewer lines and 39 pump stations and routed to one of four treatment plants—Durham, Rock Creek, Hillsboro and Forest Grove.
Ten percent of the wastewater treated by Clean Water Services is used for irrigation and in area wetlands during the summer months.Mayes, Steve. Two-pipe system with fresh, recycled water taps into future. The Oregonian, August 29, 2005. Biosolids recovered through the treatment process are sold to farmers in the region as fertilizer. Additionally, the [https://web.archive.org/web/20100328183557/http://www.cleanwaterservices.org/AboutUs/WastewaterAndStormwater/Ostara.aspx Durham Advanced Wastewater Treatment Facility] is the first in the nation to recover fertilizer from a natural byproduct of wastewater treatment.Smith, Kennedy. Tigard treatment plant turns waste into fertilizer. Daily Journal of Commerce, June 1, 2007. In 2007 the Durham facility began working with [http://www.ostara.com Ostara Nutrient Recovery Technologies] to construct a $2.5 million multi-reactor plant Smith, Jill Rehkopf. Kennedy lauds sewage plant's green setup. "The Oregonian", June 11, 2009. that allows the Durham facility to run part of its waste stream through special reactors that transform potentially damaging nutrients into environmentally friendly fertilizer, which Ostara sells commercially.Renfroe, Don. Clean Water Services to extract nutrients from waste for fertilizer. "The Oregonian", November 13, 2008.
As a surface water management utility, The District's Stormwater Management (SWM) program improves water quality, protects fish habitat and manages drainage by operating and maintaining the stormwater conveyance system, establishing design and construction standards, regulating activities that can impact the watershed and enhancing streams and floodplains. Clean Water Services is the regional SWM utility for urban Washington County. In cooperation with Washington County and the 12 member cities Clean Water Services maintains and enhances the public drainage system to meet public needs and to comply with strict water quality regulations set for the Tualatin River drainage area by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ).
Clean Water Services offers a classroom educational program called [https://web.archive.org/web/20100924184740/http://cleanwaterservices.org/Residents/ToolsAndTips/RiverRangers.aspx River Rangers] geared toward 4th-grade students.Sherman, Barbara. Durham students learn how to protect Tualatin Watershed. Tualatin Times, December 5, 2005. Environmental educators interactively teach students about the water cycle, watersheds, surface water pollution, water conservation and wastewater treatment. The 45-minute presentation is used to educate students about how people impact water quality through use of sewer and storm systems.
Tualatin River
The {{convert|80|mi|km|adj=on}}-long Tualatin River meanders slowly through relatively flat terrain, draining more than {{convert|700|sqmi|km2}} of forested, agricultural and urban areas before joining the Willamette River.Gorman, Kathleen. Tualatin River treated with tradeoff. The Oregonian, October 12, 2007. The Tualatin is Washington County's only river, and it is used for the regional drinking water supply, agricultural irrigation, and recreational activities. Clean Water Services has worked to protect the health of the watershed through programs such as the planting of trees and shrubs along the water corridors.
Water supply
As communities in the [http://www.tualatinbasinwatersupply.org/ Tualatin Basin] continue to grow, more water will be needed for municipal and industrial uses.Gorman, Kathy. Washington County: Water partners wonder how to increase supply. The Oregonian, June 7, 2007. In addition, more water is needed to augment flow in the Tualatin River and its tributaries for water quality.Colby, Richard. Hagg Lake water helps river run. The Oregonian, July 1, 2004. The two water supply options being considered assume aggressive conservation targets for homes and businesses, wastewater reuse, and aquifer storage and recovery.
These options are:Carr, Housley. Population Growth Drives Rising Tide Of Water and Wastewater Projects; Utility owners look to alternative supply methods in some regions. Engineering News-Record, November 27, 2006. SourceBook: Water/Wastewater; Pg. 44 Vol. 257 No. 21.
- A {{convert|40|ft|m|adj=on}} dam raise at Henry Hagg Lake with a raw water pipeline pumpback.
- A multiple source option that includes a {{convert|25|ft|m|adj=on}} dam raise at Hagg Lake with a raw water pipeline pumpback and expansion of the Willamette River Water Treatment Plant for municipal uses.
Expense Controversy
In 2016, Clean Water Services created a captive insurance subsidiary incorporated in Hawaii with no employees overseen by the agency's executives who receive an additional $60,000 each for their board service. The water agency pays annual premiums to its insurance subsidiary. Because Hawaiian law requires at least one board meeting to be held in that state per year, the agency's executives are flown annually to 5-star resorts in Hawaii for their annual meeting, with the Executive Director flying first class, with the total cost of the 2023 trip being $42,000. The Executive Director also received premium accommodations costing $6,928. Because the insurance subsidiary is based in Hawaii, The subsidiaries' lawyer claims it is not subject to Oregon's Public records law, meaning any record held by the captive can be withheld from public disclosure.{{cite news |last1=Goldberg |first1=Jamie |title=How Oregon government officials scored annual Hawaii trips and 5-star lodging |url=https://www.oregonlive.com/watchdog/2025/03/how-oregon-government-officials-scored-annual-hawaii-trips-and-5-star-lodging.html |work=The Oregonian |date=Mar 20, 2025}}
References
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External links
{{Commons category-inline}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20070617050041/http://www.co.washington.or.us/deptmts/cao/bd_comm/bocmain.htm Washington County Commissioners]
- [http://www.tualatinbasinwatersupply.org/ Tualatin Basin Water Supply]
- [http://www.trwc.org/ Tualatin River Watershed Council]
- [http://www.tualatintimes.com/ Tualatin Times]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20100609111226/http://or.water.usgs.gov/projs_dir/pn356/pn356.html Oregon Water Science Center Active Projects Tualatin River Basin Water Quality Assessment]
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Category:Water management authorities in the United States
Category:Multnomah County, Oregon
Category:Washington County, Oregon
Category:Clackamas County, Oregon
Category:Local government in Oregon