posted on 2003-03-22, 00:00authored byJeffrey A. Soller, Adam W. Olivieri, James Crook, Robert C. Cooper, George Tchobanoglous, Rebecca T. Parkin, Robert C. Spear, Joseph N. S. Eisenberg
The City of Stockton, CA operates a wastewater treatment
facility that discharges tertiary treated effluent during
the summer and secondary treated effluent during the winter
to the San Joaquin River. Investigations were carried
out between 1996 and 2002 to provide insight regarding
the potential public health benefit that may be provided by
year-round tertiary treatment. A hydraulic model of the
San Joaquin River and a dynamic disease transmission
model integrated a wide array of disparate data to estimate
the level of viral gastroenteritis in the population under
the two treatment scenarios. The results of the investigation
suggest that risk of viral gastroenteritis attributable to
the treatment facility under the existing treatment scheme
is several orders of magnitude below the 8−14 illnesses
per 1000 recreation events considered tolerable by U.S. EPA,
and winter tertiary treatment would further reduce the
existing risk by approximately 15−50%. The methodologies
employed herein are applicable to other watersheds
where additional water treatment is being considered to
address public health concerns from recreation in receiving
waters.