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Collection Systems
Under the direction of the Supervisor of Water & Wastewater Operations, the
Department operates and maintains sixteen sewage collection systems comprised of
eight waste water treatment plants. Of the eight waste water treatment plants, six
are aerated lagoons, one is an activated sludge process, and one a sequential batch
reactor process. There is also a laboratory at the Regional sewage treatment plant
and a septage treatment facility at the Waterville sewage treatment plant. There
are 68 pumping stations located throughout the County from Greenwood to Hants Border.
Sewer Permit Connection Charges
Avonport
See By-Law 27A Sewer Charge By-Law
Single Home connection - $4000
Wolfville Ridge Hamlet
See By-Law 27A Sewer Charge By-Law
Single Home connection - $5000
Greenwich Road South
See By-Law 27A Sewer Charge By-Law
Single Home connection - $4000
Treatment Plants
There are eight sewer treatment plants located at the following locations: Hants
Border, Avonport, Canning, Aldershot, New Minas, Waterville, Aylesford and Greenwood.
Of the eight sewage treatment plants, the largest is the Regional sewage treatment
plant located in New Minas. This particular plant services the town of Kentville,
the Village of New Minas, Coldbrook, Greenwich and a number of private industries.
The users pay for the operational and capital costs of this plant under an agreed
cost sharing formula.
Other Municipal waste water treatment plants treat sewage from one or more communities
such as the Aldershot and Waterville Sewage Treatment Plants. There is an agreement
with the Greenwood Sewage Treatment Plant and Department of National Defense where
the Department contributes 55% of ongoing operating costs in return for treatment
of 14 Wing Greenwood sewage. In September of 1997, the Municipality opened the septage
waste disposal facility adjacent to the Waterville sewage treatment plant to treat
all residential/commercial septage generated in Kings County from residential/commercial
septic systems and holding tanks. The network of piping and sewage lift stations
leading to these waste water treatment plants consist of some 90 km of collector
and force main piping.
Monitoring & Inspections
The Nova Scotia Department of Environment and Labour, the regulatory authority,
requires compliance monitoring at each waste water treatment plant. Municipal Staff
collect, test and analyze samples at the Regional treatment plant lab facility on
a weekly basis and submit the results on a monthly basis to the Nova Scotia Department
of Environment and Labour. In the case of the Regional sewage system, the industrial
users are sampled on a daily/weekly basis and are used to apportion costs to each
user.
Daily inspections and repairs to all systems are carried out by our Staff and a
24- hour on-call system is in effect at all times to ensure the public's access.
A computerized central monitoring system (S.C.A.D.A.) constantly scans each station
and reports any alarms during working hours or after hours.
Scott
Quinn
Manager- Engineering & Public Works
(902) 690-6194
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