Buyers Guide '09

Keeping House

City officials discuss how street sweepers, vacuum trucks, and related equipment fit into their “good housekeeping” programs

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By Tara Beecham

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Construction, traffic, and tourists have one thing in common: they leave a trail, whether of dust or debris. In a battle that may seem neverending, municipalities must keep their streets clean, not only in an effort to keep up appearances, but to protect surrounding surface waters from pollution.One of the six minimum control measures outlined in the EPA’s National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) Phase II regulation is pollution prevention/good housekeeping. This is necessary to reduce pollution that collects on “streets, parking lots, open spaces, and storage for vehicle maintenance areas and is discharged into local waterways,” according to the EPA, which also stresses that practicing pollution prevention and good housekeeping can protect land from becoming environmentally damaged by poor development and land management practices or from poor storm system maintenance.

A stormwater program’s “good housekeeping” can have many interpretations, but components can include maintenance of best management practices (BMPs), street sweeping, and measures that will reduce water pollution, such as the use of a filtration device.

The means to achieve the goals of the stormwater program often overlap with neighborhood concerns—even when citizens aren’t necessarily aware of the water-quality aspect of the program. “‘Good housekeeping’ tends to be a feel-good activity dealing with aesthetic appearance of the neighborhoods,” says Mark Kinter, technical consultant to Elgin Sweeper, which is based in Elgin, IL, and is a subsidiary of Federal Signal Corporation’s Environmental Solutions Group. “It tends to be driven by citizen demands for appearance. Stormwater programs tend to be more goal-driven and less appearance-dependent. The contaminants that are a concern to stormwater pollution don’t have much aesthetic concern.”

When shopping for a street sweeper, don’t just consider power; consider all your area’s needs. “Lower-income neighborhoods tend to have larger dirt and trash accumulations. More affluent neighborhoods have less trash and more vegetation, such as leaves and grass clippings,” says Kinter. “Broom sweepers work best with bulky trash, while air sweepers work better on contaminants that would be of greater concern to stormwater programs.”

Photo: City of Lincoln

The frequency with which sweepers clean a city’s streets varies. High-traffic areas, for example, demand more care, while in many areas, budget can be the primary determining factor.

“In the northern rust belt, it tends to be twice a year,” says Kinter. “This frequency does nothing for stormwater. In many areas, particularly the beach areas of Los Angeles, they sweep weekly, and sometimes even twice a week.”

In this article, city workers from a variety of municipalities discuss ways they protect their streets from dirt and debris and reduce water pollution in their respective storm drain systems.

Tackling Construction Runoff in Indiana
The city of Noblesville, IN, is a growing community just north of Indianapolis. With expanding residential areas and highway improvements come debris and more roads that need to be swept clean.

“Street sweeping is a major component and probably the most active of the day-to-day programs,” says Tim Stottlemyer, chief operator of the stormwater program for the city. “We have a lot of different things that we do in that area.”

The city’s good housekeeping practices include the manner “we handle our facilities, practices at the facilities, where the outside drains go—managing the risk,” he says. The city uses Tymco regenerative air sweepers as part of its street cleaning program.

Photo: City of Lincoln

Stottlemyer says the sweepers are effective at cleaning up larger trash items as well as fine particles. The city owns the Tymco four-wheel trucks it uses.

“We’ve used these sweepers for 30 years,” says Len Finchum, street commissioner of Noblesville. “We used to have the three-wheel type, but their speeds didn’t allow a timely schedule to get things done.

“The way the city is set up, we’re stretched from north to south. We have sweepers out almost every day,” Finchum explains. “We have five highways that intersect. Hamilton County is the fastest growing county in the state. We were, at one time, 13th [fastest growing county]in the nation. We have a tremendous amount of construction. We have a lot of road debris.”

Because the city administrators like the ability to multitask whenever possible, the Tymco sweepers held an additional appeal for them.  

“We utilize them for the leaf program as well,” says Finchum, commenting on their ability to remove the dead leaves that can wash into the city streets.

Although the street sweeping program was introduced earlier, it’s now incorporated into the city’s Phase II stormwater program.

“It’s a joint venture of the city itself,” says Finchum. “We work together. I get them reports of quantities and schedules for stormwater reports.”         

Photo: @ iStockphoto.com/David H. Lewis

Stottlemyer explains how the program fits into place. “Our program is set up as part of our overall utilities, including wastewater utilities, GIS, and stormwater. We’ve got a rotation schedule, weather dependent, sharing one truck on two systems in summertime—cleaning either sanitary or storm sewers,” he says. “It’s more coordinated with the overall plan on cleaning the storm sewers so the lines of the basins are cleaned together.”

When heavy rains pummel the region, street sweeping is completed in conjunction with the wastewater facility.

“They have the vacuum machines for when water goes underground,” says Finchum. “We clean the surface area—the grates and things like that. We notify them when one’s plugged. They have their own schedule, and it’s a separate operation until we find a plugged line.”

In an area where the average home costs about $300,000, residents want the streets kept clean.

“In Hamilton County, there’s quite a bit of money. It’s never a complaint,” he says, referring to days when residents must remove vehicles from the streets for sweeping. “If anything, we don’t get around quickly enough.”

Building Cleaner Beach Communities in the South
Water protection is a concern for residents and workers on Tybee Island, GA, located about 12 miles east of Savannah.

“On a barrier island,” says Joe Wilson, public works director for Tybee Island, “everything has to go back to the marsh.”

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Picking up fine particles is important, he explains, because heavy metals can potentially adsorb to these particles.

Taking an inventory of what the city has available, controlling the point-source pollution, and maintaining the area are the most important good housekeeping components of Wilson’s stormwater program. A Schwarze street sweeper is used as part of the program because it can pick up the fine particles using vacuum and brushing actions at the same time, says Wilson. Schwarze Industries is based in Huntsville, AL. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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Benmary

June 10th, 2008 8:43 AM PT

Does anyone test the debris before landfilling if so, how often? We operate a landfill and are concerned with the debris passing certain analytical criteria. Any thoughts?

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