Bloomington Water Treatment Plant
Utility operators stationed at the water plant also serve as the 24 hour contact people for water emergencies.
Bloomington water treatment plant. Today our community is served by the monroe water treatment plant which sources its water from lake monroe. City of bloomington utilities first discovered mercury in 2017 and hired a contractor for environmental cleanup. The plant can produce up to 14 million gallons of treated softened drinking water per day. City of bloomington utilities celebrated the 50th anniversary of the monroe water treatment plant.
The blucher poole wastewater treatment plant on average treats a flow of more than 4 5 million gallons per day mgd has a design capacity of six mgd and a peak hydraulic capacity of 12 mgd. Built in 1925 the griffy reservoir and water treatment plant produced the first reliable long term drinking water supply for bloomington and monroe county. As a result bloomington had a long history of water shortages especially in dry seasons. Dillman road wastewater treatment plant is located south of bloomington at the intersection of bypass 37 and dillman road.
With pumping initiated on september 9 1967 mwtp is where lake monroe water becomes the drinking water for the 145 000 residents of bloomington iu monroe county and beyond. They realized the mercury was. The effluent is discharged into bean blossom. It s the water that buoys bloomington s industry flows through our local food and drink establishments irrigates.
Solids handling operations began in 1985 and the landfill opened in 1986. The plant has a design capacity of 15 million gallons daily and a peak hydraulic capacity in excess of 30 million gallons daily. The natural landscape of southern indiana has few large streams natural lakes or aquifers. In summer 2018 cbu found more mercury in a different part of the building.
It was placed in operation in may of 1982. Disinfection and phosphorus removal. It treats wastewater generated in the northern part of bloomington monroe county serving the area north of 11th street and the smith avenue lift station. Griffy water treatment plant has been decommissioned for 23 years but is costing the city hundreds of thousands of dollars in cleanup because of mercury released by trespassers.