Worlds Best
Storm Water Filter Systems
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Reduces
Pollution Runoff at the Source

"Catching
Water Pollutants at the Source"
By JON SAVELLE
Journal
Environment Editor
September 15, 1998
With increasing anxiety over water quality, salmon habitat and
toxins in sediments -- all of which are affected by surface water runoff -- one
may reasonably ask: Why not filter the runoff before it enters the
pipe? That's just what Jim Hutter wondered. So, almost eight years
ago, he decided to try it.
Hutter invented a filtration system that fits
in storm drains. Then he started a company, Enviro-Drain, to manufacture and market them. Now,
at long last, he has received a patent on the design. The device is extremely
simple. It consists of a stainless steel assembly that nests under the storm
drain grate, and holds one to three filters. The filters
can be configured for any application, trapping sand, silt, grease, oil and
metals.
"We can clean all the way up
to 97 percent of pollutants" Hutter said in a recent interview.
Each Enviro-Drain unit contains
screens on top to trap sediments. Below that, smaller-mesh screens catch silt.
At the bottom a variety of filters can be used, including activated carbon,
geo-membranes and Absorbent W, an oil- absorbing cellulose product made by
International Absorbents in Bellingham. Although conditions vary widely, the
units are designed to work for about a month before the screens need to be
cleaned and filters changed. The filters cost about $1 apiece. Prices for the
filter units range from $450 for a single-tray model to $1,600 for a three-tray,
depending on the application and the number of units ordered. "If they order
more, they get a better price," Hutter said.
Enviro-Drain, based in Snohomish, has
been selling filters all over North America and even in Australia.
Their customers are mainly industrial companies, although Hutter initially
tried to interest local governments. That didn't work out. Hutter found that
trying to get multiple agencies and jurisdictions to work together to try his
products was more hassle than it was worth. He said some agencies incorrectly
assembled and maintained the units, and therefore got unsatisfactory results.
"I've tried to encourage construction site filters," he said. "But it's
a long process to get someone to do something the government isn't requiring
them to do."
Not filtering runoff, however, has
dramatic consequences. In the Lake City neighborhood where Enviro-Drain has a small manufacturing facility, it
wasn't hard to find examples of the problem. Hutter lifted up a storm drain
grate on 33rd Avenue Northeast and found a catchment basin loaded with sediment
and debris one foot deep.
Across the street, where sickly-looking
Thornton Creek briefly emerges into daylight, the creek-bed sediments sparkled
with what Hutter said were metal particles. Rocks showed signs of oil staining.
On the stream bank, and draining into it, was a green plastic wastewater pipe
that carried runoff from the AA Rentals equipment yard above. The yard's asphalt
paving bore numerous oil and grease deposits from parked trucks and machinery,
similar to thousands of other paved lots in the region.
"We let [the city of] Kirkland try a filter for free for quite a
few months," Hutter said. "Every 30 days we would pull at least 40 pounds of oil
and grease from the catch basin. It was from 25 cars that drained to the catch
basin -- which was just 100 yards from Lake Washington."
The
filter also trapped plastic bags, cigarette butts and human hair. "I noticed a
lot of hair," Hutter said. "It was just phenomenal." Looking over the AA Rentals
yard, Hutter said the best solution would be to make filtration of the runoff
mandatory, and require the user to fill out a maintenance schedule. He believes
that would be much more effective than relying on voluntary efforts.
"It's going to take government," Hutter said. "They don't want to be the
bad guy, but they have to." What's more, local governments control a lot of
storm drains. Hutter said the city of Seattle spends $47 million annually to
clean and maintain its catch basins, which is enough to install and maintain as
many filter units.
Hutter believes the system would pay for itself in
one year by reducing maintenance costs, and would nearly eliminate pollution
from runoff at the same time.
Neil Thibert, supervising civil engineer
with Seattle Public Utilities, said he is familiar with Hutter's Enviro-Drain system and thinks it is an excellent
product for certain applications. But after Seattle and other cities tested it
and other filter devices, they found that it wasn't suitable for large municipal
storm water systems.
"Jim has been approaching us with this idea and
trying to convince us to use them for about 10 years," Thibert said. "His product does remove a lot of contaminants that go into a
catch basin extremely well. We were interested in seeing how well
these would work. Seattle, Bellevue and other cities sponsored two different
research studies on these and other [filters], and found that they work really
well for a week or two or up to a month. Then they have to be maintained -- to
remove the filter media and the dirt they contained. "With 32,000 in the city,
that would be an awesome task."
Thibert said the city now uses a large
Vactor pumper truck to suck deposits out of each basin once a year. That
material is dewatered and sent to a landfill. A storm-drain filter, by contrast,
would have to be serviced 12 times a year and the filters themselves disposed
of.
The catch basins actually do a good job of trapping sediments and
other solids, according to Thibert. Most of them are large -- four to five feet
in diameter -- and he said they do not have a small rectangular grate on top.
But Thibert said filters will do a better job of trapping oil than a catch basin
alone.
"These
[filters] would be good for a small business, like a 7-11 or something, that
can't afford a Vactor truck," Thibert said. "They could put one of these things in, and throw
the filter in the dumpster. I think it's a big problem -- and for the right
application, it's a great product."
At
the Kenworth truck assembly plant
on the Duwamish River,
Stephan Alm-Plouff was the environmental manager
who two years ago installed a dozen of Hutter's drains on the
site. He said each one
was configured for its specific function and the kinds of runoff it would
collect. "They work very well," Alm-Plouff
said. "I would recommend them to anyone on the river who has critical exposure
issues."
Particularly for older properties with no storm water detention
facilities, Alm-Plouff said the Enviro-Drain provides a measure of protection against pollutant releases that
is cheap and effective. And that may become more important, he said,
as regulations tighten under the
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permitting program.
"Everyone should have a system like his, especially on a
waterway," Alm-Plouff said.
Dick Peltzer, facilities manager
for the Food Services of America distribution center
in Kent, believes the dozen Enviro-Drain filters he uses in his loading area are
worth the roughly $20,000 he invested in them. "We're
putting them in high-traffic areas," he said. "It's the only product on
the market that allows three levels of filtration mediums. You don't have to
constantly change that first level." The filters catch runoff from a
truck staging area. Peltzer said the frequency of maintenance depends on
rainfall; the more it rains, the more often the filters need to be changed.
That's once a month on average, but during rainy periods maintenance could be as
frequent as once a week. For his application, Peltzer uses absorbent filters to
catch oil and grease before it drains into a spillwell. And why did he volunteer to filter his runoff? "I'm a
fisherman," Peltzer said.
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TESTIMONIALS
"They work very well. I
would recommend them to anyone on the river who has critical exposure issues,
particularly for properties without storm water detention facilities. The Enviro-Drain provides a
measure of protection against pollutant release that is cheap and
effective."
"Everyone should have a system like this, especially on a
waterway."
Steve Alm-Plouff
Environmental Manager - Kenworth Truck
Assembly Plant, Seattle, WA
"We're putting
them in high-traffic areas. It's the only product on the market that allows
three levels of filtration mediums. You don't have to constantly change that
first level."
Dick
Peltzer
Facilities Manager - Food Services of America Distribution
Center, Kent, WA