Stormwater Chemistry: Principles and Applications to Storm Water Management, Anchorage, AK, October 9 - 10, 2013

  • October 09, 2013
  • 8:00 AM
  • October 10, 2013
  • 5:00 PM
  • Historic Anchorage Hotel, 330 E Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501

Registration

  • $395 per additional person

Registration is closed
October 9 - 10, 2013, 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. (2 Days)
Historic Anchorage Hotel
330 E Street Anchorage, Alaska [directions]

Instructor: Erick McWayne, NEMA, LLC

Overview: This course provides participants with an improved understanding of stormwater pollution chemistry and its applications to stormwater monitoring, treatment, and program management. Topics include a thorough overview of stormwater pollutant types, sources, characteristics, behavior, source control, treatment best management practices (BMPs), BMP performance monitoring, recent research, and emerging technologies. Other topics include the potential for stormwater to cause groundwater and surface water contamination.

Course Topics
 Runoff Characteristics
  • Stormwater and MS4s
  • Dry Weather Base Flows
  • Combined Sewer Overflows
  • Snowmelt
  • Hydrographs
  • Pollutant Sources
  • Atmospheric Deposition
  • Variability Factors
  • Cross-Media Contamination
  • Habitat Degradation

General Stormwater Chemistry
  • Fates of Contaminants
  • Chemistry Basics
  • Pollutant Transport
  • Solubility Rules
  • Organic Pollutant Properties
  • Partitioning Coefficients
  • Metal Pollutant Properties
  • Complexation & Speciation
  • Cation Exchange
  • Use of Redox Potential
  • Acidity (pH)
  • Alkalinity and Hardness
  • Conductivity
  • Chemical Reaction Types
  • Vadose Zone Processes
  • Primary Soil Properties

Pollutant Chemistry
  • Solids (TS, TSS, TDS, SSC)
  • Nanoparticles
  • Metals
  • Salts and Other Minerals
  • Nutrients
  • Oxygen Demanding
  • Oil and Grease
  • Soaps and Other Surfactants
  • Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals (EDCs)
  • Persistent Organic Pollutants
  • PAHs
  • PCBs
  • Phthalates
  • Pesticides and Degradates
  • Pathogens
Stormwater Management
  • Management Approaches
  • Retrofitting Facilities
  • High Risk Chemicals
  • Toxicity Variations
  • Constituent Relationships
  • Composite Sampling
  • Event Mean Concentrations
  • Pollutant Loadings
  • First Flush Management
  • Source Control BMPs
  • Sediment Chemistry
  • Dissolved Oxygen
  • Water Quantity Issues
  • Habitat Preservation
  • Stormwater Monitoring

Stormwater Treatment Processes
  • Sedimentation
  • Flotation
  • Precipitation
  • Coagulation/Flocculation
  • Filtration
  • Sorption
  • Volatilization
  • Biodegradation
  • Phytoremediation
  • Soil Processes Treatment

BMP Effectiveness
  • Performance Monitoring
  • International BMP Database
  • Concentration Reduction
  • Load Reduction
  • Efficiency Ratio
  • Summation of Loads
  • Effluent Probability Method
  • Online vs. Offline Facilities
  • Treatment Trains
  • Emerging Technologies

Surface Water Transport and Fate Processes

Stormwater Infiltration and Groundwater Protection

Intended Audience:
Professionals seeking an improved understanding of stormwater chemistry and its applications. Managers, scientists, field staff, regulators, and engineers working on stormwater projects will likely benefit from attending this training.

Education Level: Introductory to intermediate/refresher.

Prerequis
ites: Basic understanding of fundamental chemistry is recommended, but all levels will benefit from attending.

Course Materials: Course proceedings and reference material.

Credit: 15 PDUs and 1.5 CEUs for completing 15 hours of instruction.

Registration: $495 ($395 per additional person registered as a group). You may register online or by calling us toll-free at (800) 385-0783.

Accommodations: Historic Anchorage Hotel (workshop location). Click here for a map of nearby hotels.

About the Instructor: Erick McWayne has eighteen years of environmental chemistry experience and has conducted numerous soil and water quality investigations as well as teaching related courses. As an environmental consultant, Mr. McWayne served as a project manager for water quality investigations at numerous Department of Defense and other contaminated sites. He currently manages NEMA and teaches courses in stormwater chemistry, groundwater chemistry, contaminant transport and fate, and hydrogeology around the country.

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