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Home > News > Story
 The odor
was coming from a sewer line that carries waste from the
ethanol plant to the city sewage treatment plant

| Posted: 01/12/2004 04:49 pm Last Updated: 01/12/2004 04:50
pm
Story filed by NewsCenter16
Reporter Robert
Borrelli
After neighbors complained for years about an
awful odor, something is finally being done to deal with the
smell coming from the sewer. The stink has been traced back to South
Bend's ethanol plant.
In November, changes were being made at the New
Energy Ethanol Plant to cut back on the odor into the air. New
equipment was installed back then to alleviate the smell of
fermenting grain that wafted from the plant.
Now, work being
done underground will hopefully do the same. A two or three-square
block area around Walnut and Euclid Streets has been a smelly spot
for many neighbors. The odor of sour corn could be smelled,
especially during summer months.
Assistant City Engineer Jason Durr says,
"Some of the solid material they discharge from their plant actually
accumulates within our sewer. Bacteria actually likes this type of
material and it creates a obnoxious gas."
Durr says crews have pulled "corn mash"
from sewer lines running from the ethanol plant. It turns out
that waste from the ethanol plant on its way to the city sewage
plant was getting clogged up because of a failed sewage
gate.
According to Durr, disconnecting that cross-connection
will help prevent the odor in the future. Construction
will close the intersection perhaps into March.
The city engineer's office has heard from other
neighborhoods along the same sewer line. They say New Energy will
install equipment next month to contain nearly all the solids now
entering the city sewer system.
When new sewage pre-treatment begins next month,
about 90% of the solids leaving the plant should be removed before
it enters the sewer. City officials hope to then clean the sewer
lines and get rid of any other neighborhood odor problems.
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