Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Still No Solution To Stinking Situation In Aspen


What with so many people being reported or thought to be 'missing' - and Aspen being close to - and perhaps under - an area of the 'new' Denver International airport - wonder if they are burning bodies - a crematorium - of which the sludge is partially made up - the smells in Europe in WW2 were said to be lingering and even ash in the air but a new system could convert the ash to sludge - just a thought for those who may be able to further research the cause - wouldn't normally cross my mind except for the DIA location and underground facility

Still No Solution To Stinking Situation In Aspen

February 11, 2013 6:15 PM
A building at the Aspen waste water plant (credit: CBS)
ASPEN, Colo. (CBS4) – It used to be an inconsistent nuisance, but now it’s turned in to one big stinking problem. And workers at one Colorado sanitation plant don’t know why it smells so bad.
There are actually several theories to the problem in Aspen, but no solution yet. The complaints from one neighborhood full of families are sporadic, but since the holidays more than a month ago they say it’s the first time the smell has lingered.
“There’s an inherent smell that goes along with waste water, there’s no doubt, no one can deny that,” said Nathan Nelson, Aspen Consolidated Sanitation District Operations Manager. The smell that’s been coming from the Aspen waste water plant even has the sanitation district concerned.
“Honestly, I didn’t think much about it when I first moved in but they did say it didn’t smell,” Aspen resident Marie West said. “They still say it shouldn’t smell, but it smells more often than it did before.”
Neighbors usually call around Christmas and New Year’s when the town is full of people and the plant is working at capacity.
“We all just talk as neighbors like, ‘Oh, it’s really bad,’ ” West said.
“We also have the highest loading, which means we have the most sludge and the most vapors and compounds to break down through this unit. That’s adding to the problem,” Nelson said.
The sanitation district sent off samples to the company in Canada that makes the machine that should eliminate the smell. But the samples came back as normal, and now the sanitation district is hoping for a home visit from the manufacturer.
“That’s great that they’re admitting it and trying to find a solution,” West said.
“We want to be good neighbors and we definitely want it to smell as good as we can make it,” Nelson said.
There was a theory that the frigid sub-zero temperatures in late December and early January created an inversion layer and didn’t let the exhaust mix in the atmosphere. There’s another theory that the bacteria used to defuse the smell isn’t working properly. That’s one of the things the sanitation district is hoping will get worked out soon. 

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