HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978 09 20 Special Meeting Notice
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S P E C I A L
MEETING
NOT ICE
COUNCIL OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
(WE)JliESDAY L~;;~~i~20,7 197~
7:30 P.M.
Altamonte Springs City Hall
Commission Chambers
Approval of Minutes of August 23, 1978
Treasurer's Report 3 i i, tS'
Solid Waste Resource Recovery System Report
Status on "Double.Taxation" Information
Chairman's Report
Reports:
A. Sanford
B. Seminole County
C. Winter Springs
D. Altamonte Springs
E. Casselberry
F. Lake Mary
G. Longwood
H. Oviedo
Adjourn
MEETING OF COUNCIL OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS IN SEMINOLE COUNTY
September 20, 1978, Altamonte Springs City Hall, 7:30 p.m.
A special meeting of the Council of Local Governments in Seminole County
was held on Wednesday, September 20, 1978, at 7:30 p.m. at the Altamonte
Springs City Hall.
The meeting was called to order by the Chairman, Commissioner French.
Present were:
N. C. Floyd, Sr., Mayor, Altamonte Springs
Bill B. Grier, Mayor, Casselberry
Gerald T. Connell, Mayor, Longwood
Eddie O. Keith, Commissioner, Sanford
Bob French, Commissioner, Seminole County
Moved by Mayor Floyd, seconded by Mayor Grier, carried, that the minutes
of the meeting of August 23, 1978, be approved as written.
Treasurer's report: Commissioner French reported a balance of $344.85
in the account at ComBank, Longwood, as per statement received three days
ago. Commissioner French reported that he is in the process of transferring
the account to the City of Lake Mary, the present treasurer.
Status on "Double Taxation" Information
Commissioner French stated that the reason for calling the meeting was to
get specific direction from the Council on areas of double taxation to be
taken to the Board of County Commissioners for discussion.
Mayor Grier requested that the Council discuss the possibility of appointing
a committee of three to work in the areas of double taxation with the budget
that the County adopts this year and the proposed budget for next year.
Commissioner French suggested that the County Commission identify the
possible areas of either double taxation or duplication of services that
have come up in the past and work with the committee that the Council
appoints.
Mayor Floyd suggested that the term "equalization" should be used instead
of "double taxation" and that the County Commission be requested to commit
themselves to work in coordination and cooperation with the cities.
It was the consensus that the Council of Local Governments appoint five
members and the County Commission appoint three members of an equalization
committee. Commissioner French stated that he would take this request to
the County Commission at its meeting on September 26. Mayor Floyd suggested
that the County Commission insure that there be a liaision to coordinate
the work between the committee and the departments involved in the equaliza-
tion study.
Page 2 - Minutes of Meeting of Council of Local Governments in Seminole
County - September 20, 1978
It was suggested that the members not be elected officials, that they be
technically qualified.
It was the consensus that each member of the Council obtain the approval
of his entity and make a recommendation of an appointee at the next regular
meeting and the Council would then pick their five members from these recom-
mendations. After these members are chosen, they will be notified of the
appointment, the meeting date and other details. It was suggested by Mayor
Floyd that this committee be given guidelines regarding their requirements,
the first being the organization of the committee and the second being that
they investigate and fully understand the work required of them, and that
they establish an anticipated timetable for the approval of the Council,
Solid Waste Resource Recovery System Report
Dale MacMahan, City Planner for City of Casselberry, reported that the
contract with Post, Buckley, Schuh and Jernigan for services on the plan
was approved by the County Commission on September 12, 1978, in the amount
of $19,500.00. He also reported that a solid waste seminar is to be held
in Gainesville on October 24 and 25 and the total cost for a representative
would be approximately $150.00 or $200.00. Chairman French stated that he
would contact Mr. Schuder to bring the matter before the County Commission
to have representation in Gainesville and report to the Council at the next
meeting.
Reports of Members
Seminole County - none
Sanford - none
Altamonte Springs - none
Mayor Grier, City of Casselberry, reported that he had received a letter
from the Seminole County School Board outlining areas of concern and requested
the City to look at possibility of sidewalks, bike paths, fencing and other
matters.
Lake Mary - no representative present
Mayor Connell, City of Longwood, requested that the Council consider
establishing a committee to investigate areas for interlocal agreements
such as the interlocal fire agreement. Suggested areas were animal control,
solid waste, central purchasing, with the committee to be composed of
representatives of each City.
Commissioner French reported that Leon Olliff would be the representative
for the City of Oviedo and that he would contact him regarding future meetings.
The next regular meeting will be held on October 4.
There being no further business, the meeting was upon proper motion adjourned
at 8:50 p.m.
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NAVAL AIR STATION - JACKSONVILLE
A forty ton per day resource recovery facility is under construction at the
Naval Air Station in Jacksonville. The plant will burn refuse-derived fuel and
produce stearn which will be distributed to points within the air station. Com-
pletion of construction is anticipated for Spring, 1979.
The process consists of a shredder for oversize waste which discharges onto
a conveyor; a flail mill which discharges onto a vibrating conveyor where an air
scoop removes the light fraction and then discharges onto the same conveyor as the
shredder; magnetic separation for ferrous metals and discharge to a trammel where
glass is separated. The light fractions are transferred to a storage bin and then
fed to three starved air incinerators equipped with heat recovery tor steam pro-
duction.
Two interesting features of the design are:
(1) The flail mill is the primary shredder for the majority of refuse and the
oversize waste shredder is for large objects such as wooden pallets;
(2) In the event of any problem with any of the front-end equipment a by-pass
provides for mass burning in the three incinerators.
Burning refuse will reduce the volume by 95% and the energy obtained will
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replace the use of fossil fuels. In the past solid waste at NAS Jax was disposed
of in a sanitary landfill.
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~~YPORT NAVAL STATION
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A resource recovery project is under construction at this time with
estimated completion in January or February, 1979.
A built-in-place 48 ton/day solid waste incinerator with a stoker grate
and heat recovery will generate steam which will be delivered to existing steam
system at the station. The steam will be used for ships when in port. The
solid waste will be mass burned and the recovery of ferrous metals or other
resources is not planned at this time. The 48 tons/day of solid waste will be
from the station and ships. Also the water and oil from the bilges is pumped
to an oil water separator. The recovered oil is mixed with fuel oil and burned
in existing equipment at the station.
As stated this resource recovery is a built-in-place incinerator and boiler
and is not the modular or package type of unit. Since the project at Jackson-
ville NAS is the modular or package type this will give the Navy the opportunity
to study two types.
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KEY WEST CO~WOSTING
The City of Key West and the u.S. Navy signed a contract on March 7th, making
possible the construction of a 50 ton per day composting facility just north of
Key West on Stock Island, the present site of a Monroe County landfill. Construction
of the facility is expected to begin within a month.
Under the terms of the contract, the Navy will foot the front-end capital cost
of the facility (approximately $1.5 million) and Key \.Jest ,vill own and operate the
facility, paying back the Navy over a twenty year period based on a rebated tipping
fee that the city will charge the Navy.
The City is also looking into the possibility of adding sewage sludge with
solid waste at the composting plant. The resulting product will be a soil conditioner
for use initially at the City's golf course and in city "green areas" (parks, etc.).
It is hoped that eventually some of the composted product can be sold to the public.
The project will help solve difficult landfill problems facing both the city and the
Navy base.
Ground breaking for this project was September 5, 1978 and it is anticipated that
the new facility will be in operation by July 4, 1979.
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CITY OF ORL.~~DO RESOURCE RECOVERY
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The Orlando City Council accepted June 19th an engineering report and feasibility
study for a resource recovery project.
The consultant study looked at integrated solutions to current and long-range
waste disposal problems at the McLeod Road tvastewater Treatment Plant and the McLeod
Incinerator Plant.
A three stage program which could save the city as much as $110,000 a year was
proposed:
Stage I - Incineration capacity expansion - adds 100 tons per day of
incineration capacity to existing. lOa ton per day facility.
Reduces transportation and landfill cost, providing net
annual saving of $41,000.
Stage 11- Steam production and use - considers the potential for pro- ~
ducing steam by recovering waste heat from incinerators and
generating electricity for operating wastewater plant and
incinerators. Reduces electrical cost on 6-day week opera-
tion, providing additional saving of $47,000.
Stcl$~..,.!I; - Sludge pelletizing - considers providing sludge pelletizing
facilities at the incinerator to process sludge from the
wastewater treatment plant using waste heat energy from
incinerator plant. The pellets could be sold for fertilizer.
The anticipated savings for this project are enhanced by the close proximity of
the sewage treatment plant and incinerators.
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CITY OF T.~~A - HILLSBOROCGH COUNTY - CITY OF TE~WLE TERP~~CE - CITY OF PL~~T CITY
A request for qualifications was issued. Interested firms have submitted
their credentials and have been interviewed and the final selection of a con-
sultant has been made.
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ALACHDA COUNTY - DEERHAVEN #2
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The Gainesville Alachua County Regional Electric, Water and Sewer Utilities
Board had a feasibility study made regarding the use of refuse-derived fuel in a
new 235 MW pulverized coal suspension fired unit. The solid waste processing would
be at the Deerhaven Generating Station site.
Trucks arriving at the processing plant would be weighed and them dump the
solid waste on a concrete tipping floor in the receiving area. Rubber tired front
end loaders would stack the refuse and feed it onto steel apron conveyors. The
front-end loaders would also remove large bulky items from the waste stream. These
would be disposed of at the sanitary landfill. A single 50-ton per hour processing
line was selected.
The raw refuse would be conveyed to a picking station where additional rejected
material could be removed. Cardboard and/or mixed paper could be removed at this
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station. A baler would be provided to compress the paper products.
The refuse would enter the main processing area including two stages of shredding
air classification, two electromagnets removing ferrous materials, an aluminum re-
covery system and a screen to insure that the 3/4 inch limitation on RDF is attained.
Air used for classification would be filtered through a baghouse before release to the
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atmosphere. The air classifier heavy portion which cannot be salvaged would be land-
filled.
RDF would be stored in two live bottom storage bins each with a capacity of
approximately one day's RDF output. The two storage bins allow for continuous opera-
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tion when one may need repair. Also each bin can be emptied relatively frequently
minimizing fuel degradation problems.
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UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA IUS - GAINESVILLE
Currently, the University meets all of its steam needs and only five percent
of its electricity requirements with gas and oil burned in its power plant. The
remaining electricity is purchased from the Florida Power Corporation. The steam
is ultimately used for space heating; space cooling is accomplished with electric
and steam driven centrifugal chillers. The condition of the existing ste&~ plant
at the University indicates a need to install another new boiler within the next
few years. Federal regulations will prohibit the construction of Major Fuel Burning
Installations designed to burn oil or natural gas as fuels. Although an exemption
can be applied for, it is unlikely that the University will be allowed to construct
a new oil fired boiler; any new facility will have to burn coal or some other fuel
which is less scarce than gas or oil.
The heart of the Integrated Utility System (IUS) is the use of new coal-fired
spreader stoker-equipped boilers to generate moderate pressure & temperature steam for
power production with backpressure turbines. Low pressure steam leaving the turbine
would be used to satisfy all the University's space heating needs and much of the
cooling requirements. Cooling is accomplished with new absorption chillers that
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use low pressure extraction steam to generate cold water. Variable capacity regenerative
heaters facilitate load matching by using exhaust steam which may not be needed by
either the absorption chillers or for the University's space heating requirements.
Such ~apability will help minimize electrical demand. It is estimated that this co-
generation approach to simultaneous steam and electricity production will result in
the University being able to continue to self satisfy all of its steam requirements
and at the same time provide for over 90 percent of its electricity requirements.
Thus the IUS comes close to being a total energy system.
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In addition to the cogeneration system, the IUS conceptual design incorporates
solid waste derived fuel. The University's solid waste would be burned in a starved
air combustion unit which produces hot combustible gases. These gases are then intro-
duced into the boilers to generate steam. Solid waste from the Gainesville/Alachua
County area would be processed to produce densified refuse derived fuel (dRDF) __
a solid fuel made up primarily of paper and plastics in the incoming waste. The.
conceptual design of the IUS, and particularly of the boilers, accommodate the use
of dRDF as a coal substitute. Thus both solid waste subsystems result in coal being
replaced by a relatively replenishable fuel.
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AL~CHUA COL~TY - FLORIDA HYRDOCARBON COMPN~Y - BROOKER
The Florida Hydrocarbon Company met ~vith the Waste ~'1anagement Administering
Board of Alachua County on August 31, 1978 to present a proposal to dispose of 300
tons of solid waste for the county at the company's Brooker plant. At this meeting
it was mutually agreed that the company would retain an independent consultant to
do a feasibility study for the company and the Board.
The company proposes to use starved air modular incinerators with heat recovery
to produce steam for application in a hydrocarbons extraction plant at Brooker.
The solid waste (with bulky items removed) would be mass burned without any
front-end preparation and the residue returned for landfill.
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LONG KEY - MONROE COUNTY
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A feasibility study was made regarding the use of heat recovery from incineration
of solid waste to desalinate water and to deliver the product water to the Keys
aqueduct. At this time it appears that the solid waste for this part of Monroe County
will be incinerated without heat recovery.
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SCIE~TIFIC E~ERGY ENGINEERING CO~PANY - JACKSO~VILLE
An innovative and very promising approach to energy recovery from solid waste
has been developed by Scientific Energy Engineering Company. A prototype plant has
been built and an application has been made to DOE for a grant to install and operate
a demonstration unit at the Jacksonville Electric Authority Kennedy Generating
Station. The unit will produce steam for in-house use at the station.
Solid waste is received at the unit on a tipping floor. Rubber tired front-
end loaders move the waste to a conveyor where hand picker removes bulky and/or
potentially explosive items. The waste is conveyed to a shredder and then to an
air classifier. The light fraction is conveyed to a starved air incinerator which
is the innovative part of the system.
The starved air and combustion chambers are one refractory lined cylindrical
chamber. Combustion air is supplied through pipes installed in the refractory which
provides for pre-heating of combustion air and cooling of the refractory. Provision
is made for controlling the volume of underfire air for the starve air process and
for over fire air in the combustion process. The chamber has an auger extending the
full length of the cylindrical chamber. By controlling the speed of the auger burn-
ing or retention time is controlled while the solid waste is continually burned and
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the ash is dumped for water quenching. The auger has a water cooled shaft and design
provides for ease of removal of the auger for maintenance and repair. The hot gases
are channeled through a heat recovery unit for steam production and an electrostatic
precipitator will be used to insure compliance with air pollution codes.
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CITY OF FORT PIERCE
The City of Ft. Pierce is having a study made to determine the feasibility of
producing steam from MSW and selling the steam to a local industry.
The proposal is to mass burn approximately 200 tons per day of solid waste.
in starved air modular incinerators with heat recovery to produce steam which will
be sold to a local citrus concentrate plant.
The residue will be landfilled without the recovery of materials.
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PO~G'.-\:W BEACH - WASTE ~1fu\!AGEHENT, INC.
Waste Management-Pompano has been operating a shredding plant with a 1,300
ton per day capacity and disposing of the shredded waste in a sanitary landfill
located on the same property.
On Hay 12, 1978 the Company dedicated the garbage-to-gas plant. The D.S.
Department of Energy is sponsoring the experimental plant for converting municipal
solid waste and sewage sludge to methane. Approximately 100 tons per day of the
air classified fraction solid waste will be mixed with sewage sludge in two
anaerobic digesters. Studies will be conducted to determine optimum operating
conditions and maximum methane production. The gas produced will not be pipeline
quality and will not be sold. The plant is designed so that commercial
purification equipment can be installed in the future. For the testing period
the gas will be burned by a waste gas burner.
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SEHI~OLE COUNTY
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A consulting engineering firm has been selected to prepare a resource recovery
report. The report is due in about 60 days.
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PINELLAS COUNTY
Efforts toward solving the solid waste problems of Pinellas County have been
underway since 1975 when the state legislature passed a local act placing the
authority and the responsibility for solid waste disposal with the Board of County
Commissioners.
~luch work was done by the solid waste technical management committee and their
consultant engineer to determine the feasibility of resource recovery. After going
through the process of request for qualifications and request for proposals, UOP,
Inc. was selected.
The proposed is as follows: The arriving trucks are weighed and unload into a
receiving pit in the processing building. Except for bulky waste, the refuse is
fed into the furnace by overhead cranes without any pre-processing for mass burning
on a martin stoker grate. Steam is produced and piped to a turbine generator that
will produce enough electricity to supply the needs of approximately 20,000 homes.
An electrostatic precipitator will be used to remove the particulate matter
from the stack gases.
The residue from the burning process is quenched in water and delievered to the
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material recovery operation where ferrous and non-ferrous metals are extracted for
sale.
The first residue separation process splits the stream between items larger
and sm~ler than two inches. A further separation of larger items leaves one stream
that is mainly cans. Using a drum magnet one stream is divided into ferrous and non-
ferrous items.
The under two-inch stream material is screened to remove stone dirt ashes, etc.
Ferrous objects in this stream are also magnetically separated and recovered. The
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non-ferrous portion is milled and screened again to remove glass and grit.
The remaining material is conveyed to a heavy media density separator which
works on the principle of specific gravity. The aluminum floats while heavy non-
ferrous metals sink.
The final residue which represents less than 5% of the original volume and is
made inert by the combustion process is landfilled for disposal.
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DADE COUNTY
The Dade County project is the largest high technology project proposed or under
construction in Florida at this time. In addition to recovering materials, the burn-
ing of the waste will produce steam and electricity to supply approximately 41,000
homes.
Utilizing a combination of two styles of technology, municipal waste will go
directly to the hydrapulpers and the bulky yard waste will be processed through
shredders first. A separate pathological incinerator will be constructed.
The "Hydrasposal Process" is a wet processing technique for size reduction and
classification of solid waste which is based on systems commonly used in the pulp
and paper industry.
The loaded trucks are weighed as they arrive and then dump their load into a
shallow pit where heavy tractors compress and macerate the waste. These tractors
also move the waste directly to conveyor hoppers or to storage.
Four heavy duty conveyors controlled by load sensors move the waste to four
hydrapulpers. Beneath the rotor there is an extractor plate which has one inch
diameter holes in it. Oversize waste such as cans, metal, large pieces of rubber,
stones, etc. are not readily broken down into small sizes. These are ejected out of
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the pulper through a slot located near the bottom of the hydrapulpet tub. When the
waste has been pulped or ground to a size to pass through the one-inch openings, it
is pumped to liquid cyclones as a water slurry to separate the heavy particles which
are washed and the organics flow to the surge chest.
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The material that is removed through the slot is 50% ferrous metal, mostly tin
cans while the other half consists of non-ferrous metals, glass, wood, and rubber.
These materials are magnetically separated. The non-ferrous material is screened and
the smaller items are conveyed back to the hydrapulper.
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The reject stream from the liquid cyclones contains glass, aluminum and other
inorganic materials. Since this glass and aluminum fraction is contaminated with
other materials a series of separating operations are required to yield a product
of commercially acceptable purity. The material is washed and screened. The over-
sized particles are returned to the hydrapulper and the fines are dewatered and
conveyed to refuse.
A heavy media separator is used to separate the plastics and lighter materials
from the heavier metals and glass. The light materials float to the top and are
skimmed off and conveyed to fuel storage.
The residue from this process is dried and again processed for ferrous metals
that were not removed by the first magnetic separation.
Aluminum foil and light sheet aluminum such as can and tray stock is separated
on an air aspirated shaking table.
The next step separates the electrical non-conductors from conductors on a high
tension electrostatic separator. Materials which are poor conductors such as glass
acquire an electrical charge while the conductors lose their electrical charge
immediately. The non-charged particles falloff a rotating drum immediately into one
hopper, th~.S~~~g~d particles cling to the drum and falloff the bottom of it into the
glass hopper.
The conductors consist of non-ferrous metals which are copper, brass, chunky
aluminum and lead and zinc alloys mixed with non-metallic poor conductors. The
metallic fraction is recovered by running the mixture through a crusher which reduces
the non-metallic to a powder but only flattens out the metallic particles. Tne two
are separated by screening.
The remaining stream from the high tension electrostatic separator, the non-
conductors, consist of mostly mixed glass and ceramic particles. This first passes
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through an optical transparency sorter which removes any non-transparent material.
The final color sorting of the mixed glass into clear, amber and green is accomplished
by the opitcal color sorter.
Trash, yard waste, etc. is delivered separately from the packer truck waste and
will be handled at one end of the receiving and storing building.
A tractor will feed conveyors to two heavy duty shredders in parallel. The
shredders will reduce the large bulky items to particles six inches and smaller.
The shredded waste is then subjected to two stage magnetic separation for ferrous
metals and then is conveyed back to the waste storage pit and then fed to the hydra-
pulpers along with the packer truck waste.
The slurry from the liquid cyclones is piped to a large surge tank where it is
thoroughly blended. The slurry is pumped to the two stage dewatering press. At the
first stage the slurry is raised from 3% to approximately 15% solids content.
At the second stage, cone presses, the solids content is raised to approximately
50%. All of the extracted water is returned for use in the process.
The fuel is conveyed pneumatically to live bottom metering binds. Since fuel
production is on a six-day week, while energy production is on a seven-day week sub-
stantial fuel s~orage capacity is provided.
The inventory of fuel will be worked on a first in - first out basis.
The boilers will be water wall type equipped with integral super heaters, econ-
omizers and air heaters.
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RESOURCE RECOVERY fu~D CO-DISPOSAL AT LAKE~~D
The City or Lakeland and the Orlando Utilities Commission plan to cooperate on
a 364 megawatt power plant using municipal garbage and maybe sewage sludge as
supplemental fuels. Lakeland has a state permit for a 250 megawatt plant but on
April 17, 1978, asked for a permit for the larger plant in order to build the joint
proj ect.
According to the site re-certification application approximately 210 tons per
day of refuse-derived fuel will be burned with coal or oil in the new unit No. 3
C.D. McIntosh, Jr. Power Plant.
The municipal solid waste is limited to what is collected in the City and con-
tiguous outlying area. However since Polk County is one of the designated 19
counties to plan for resource recovery, possible additional municipal solid waste
could be used.
The processing system will consist of shredding, magnetic separation
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of ferrous metals, and air classification prior to combustion in the boiler. It is
estimated that 15 tons per day of ferrous metals will be recovered.
In addition, the possibility of burning sewage sludge from Lakeland's sewage
treatment plant is being studied. Sewage sludge from drying beds has a heating value
of 4,000 toJ,OQD BTU per pound depending on moisture content and its use would solve
another disposal problem. Treated effluent from Lakeland's sewage treatment plant
will be used as make-up water to the cooling tower and sulfur dioxide scrubber system
at the power plant. Approximately 5 to 7 million gallons of treated effluent will
be vaporized. Although this is not the total volume of effluent, it will aid in the
final disposal of the treated effluent.
Altogether this looks like an excellent approach to resource recovery and co-
disposal of se~.,age and' sewage sludge.
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BREVARD COUNTY
The Brevard County Solid Waste System went into operation in October,
1977. Brevard County is unusual because of its 72-mile length. The solid
waste is collected by municipal and franchised collectors and delieverd to
either transfer stations or to the main processing facility in Cocoa. All
trucks are weighed.
The facility has two parallel fifty ton per hour shredders and 48-inch
drum magnetic separators.
As soon as the trucks unload white goods and other heavy or bulky items
are removed, the remaining refuse is pushed onto one of the conveyors and moved
to a shredder. Following the shredding process the refuse is discharged onto
a short downward sloping apron conveyor, which was provided to insure clearance
of the underside of the shredder and is designed to absorb the impact of ballistic
prone objects that may shoot out of the machine.
The refuse then moves onto a belt for magnetic separation. The ferrous
metals amounting to about 4 percent of the refuse drops into a container. The
remainder moves by belts to compactors and then is transported to the adjacent
landfill.
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The two process lines are designed to operate one at a time to facilitate
routine maintenance but can be operated at the same time if needed to keep up
with the volume.
The landfill has a plastic liner and all leachate is collected and treated
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in a 40,000 gallorr per day waste water treatment plant.
The recovery part of this facility could be expanded to include aluminum,
glass and incineration with heat recovery.
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KA.P L\.\l DlDUSTRI!.::S, I~C. - BA!{TotJ
The Department of Energy has contracted with United Technologies of Windsor
Locks, Connecticut, for design, construction and operation of a $938,000 experimental
facility to produce methane from cattle manure.
The cattle waste is collected from a slotted floor feed lot and transferred
to anaerobic digesters for thermophilic digestion (1100 F).
The energy yield from the sy.stem is sufficient to replace approximately
75% of the Bunker "e" fuel that would normally be purchased to support the kill
floor, rendering~and feed mill operations.
Construction was started on the project about two months ago.
The operation of the cattle waste conversion system is totally automatic
except for some minimal routine maintenance, data logging and periodic checking
of systems functions.
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MCKAYS CREEK STP - ST. PETERSBURG
The McKays Creek Sewage Treatment Plant in St. Petersburg is being expanded
from 1.5 MGD to 6.0 MGD. Gas holding covers will collect methane from two
anaerobic digestors. The methane will be used in diesel engines to drive
generators which will supply electricity for most of the plant. When gas from
the digestors is not sufficient, natural gas will be used as fuel for the diesel
engines.
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BROWARD COUNTY
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The County had a comprehensive solid waste management study made which considered
energy and materials recover]. At the time of the report (1976) it was concluded that
energy recovery was not feasible at that time.
~
'- ,,'to.; .".
r.
--
-25-
9/27/78
ESCA~mIA COUNTY
A solid waste management study was made and several alternatives or resource
recovery were evaluated.
1_ "..~ .,
..-
-
-
9/27/78
-26-
crTY OF BOCA RATON
~"
The City had a feasibility study made which indicated that the solid waste
from the City could be used to generate electricity to supply the city sewage
treatment plant, the city water plant and the Florida Atlantic University.
~
t....<, t':....... ",.
~
9/27/78
-27-
CITY OF TALLAHASSEE
T~e City had a feasibility study made for a pyrolysis system to produce boiler
gas for the Hopkins Electric Generating Plant. The City is reviewing the cost
periodically to determine when it will be economically feasible.
'.., ',~ .
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9/27/78
-28-
FLORIDA SOLID WASTE ~~~AGE~lliNT STUDIES
-,.
STATE OF FLORIDA
ALACHUA COUNTY
BAY COUNTY (2)
BREVARD COUNTY
BROWARD COUNTY
CALHOUN COUNTY (2)
CHARLOTTE COUNTY
DADE COUNTY
ESCA.'1BIA COUNTY
FRAi.~KLIN COUNTY
GADSDEN COu~TY (2)
HILLS BOROUGH COUNTY (1)
HOLMES COUNTY (2)
INDI.~~ RIVER COUNTY
JACKSON COUNTY (2)
LIBERTY COUNTY (2)
M&~ATEE COUNTY (1)
MONROE COUNTY (4)
OKALOOSA COUNTY
PALM BEACH COUNTY GLADES REGION
PASCO COu'NTY (1)
PINELLAS COUNTY (1)
POLK COUNTY
SANTA ROSA COUNTY (4)
VOLUSIA COUNTY
WAKULLA COUNTY (2)
WASHINGTON COUNTY (2)
--.,.
'.
CITY OF BOCA RATON
CITY OF CORAL SPRINGS (3)
TOWN OF HYPOLUXO (3)
CITYo~ JACKSONVILLE
CITY OF LAUDERHILL (3)
CITY OF MARGATE (3)
TOWN OF MELBOURNE VILLAGE (3)
CITY OF PLA:."{TATION (3)
"'"
Key:
(1) Tampa Bay Regional Planning Council
(2) Northwest Florida Planning and Advisory Council
(3) Local Government Comprehensive Planning Act - DOA, DSP
(4) West Florida Regional Planning Council
......
9/27/13
-29-
WOOD AND WASTE WOOD BURNING FACILITIES IN FLORIDA
FRANKLIN C&\TES - MICili~OPY
Bark and Wood Chips
GEORGIA PACIFIC - CROSS CITY
Wood Waste (132 tons/day,)
SUWfu~NEE LU}ffiER - SHA}ffiOCK
Wood Waste
SOUTHERN WOOD PIEDMONT - BALDWIN
Wood Haste
ALTON BOX BOARD CO}W.~~Y - JACKSONVILLE
Two Bark Boilers
fu~ FOREST PRODUCTS - JACKSONVILLE
t.Jood Shavings & Sawdust
ili~RICfu~ CREOSOTE - PENSACOLA
ESCili~IA TREATING COMPili~Y - PENSACOLA
V{ood
REICHHOLD CHEMICAL - PENSACOLA
Wood
ITT RAYONIER WADSWORTH LU}ffiER DIV. - BUNNELL
Wood Waste
HIGDON FU&~ITURE CO~W.~~ - QUINCY
Wood Waste
COASTAL LUMBER Cm.W.~~Y - HAVANA
Bark and Sawdust
ST. JOE PAPER COMPANY - PORT ST. JOE
24,000 lb./hr. bark
26,000 lb./hr. bark
40,000 lb./hr. bark
100,000
ST. REGIS PAPER COMPfu~ - JACKSONVILLE
Bark
RUBBINS MFG,.~}Wili"1Y - Tili'1PA
REX LU}ffiER COMPili~ - GRACEVILLE
Wood
Wood
Bark Boiler
tvood
Bark Boiler
Hand Fed Wood Boiler
Bark
ELBERTA CRATE COMPANY - TALLAHASSEE
FLORIDA VENEER COMPAN~ - HOSFORD
REICHHOLD CHEMICAL CO. - PENSACOLA
FLORIDA PLYHOODS, INC. - MADISON
J.T. GOETHE LUMBER CO. - DurlliELLON
CONTAINER CORP. OF fu~RICA - FERNANDINA BCH.
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-30-
ITT RAYONIER - FERN&~DI~A BEACH
FLORIDA FmL~ITu~E INDUSTRIES - PALATKA
HUDSOi'l" PULP & P.A..PER - PALATKA
BRmm WOOD PRESERVE - LIVE OAK
ASSOC. FOREST PRODUCTS - LIVE OAK
BUCKEYE CELLULOSE - PERRY
Bark
Waste Wood
Bark
Wood
Waste Wood Boiler
Bark
. ....... ~,"""
.:
9/27/78
--.
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9/27 /78
-31-
STATE OF FLORIDA -- 19 DESIG~ATED COUNTIES
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(X)
COUNCIL OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS IN SEMINOLE COUNTY
June 5, 1996 Meeting Minutes
Page 5
Commissioner Sargent - City ofLongwood:
o No report.
Councilman Hagood - City of Oviedo:
o Reported the City of Oviedo is presently working with Seminole County on the possibility of
some additional wastewater treatment capacity from either the County or construction of a
City system for the additional capacity. He further reported that Alafaya Utilities has filed a
lawsuit against the City in regard to that matter.
o Reported that Oviedo Councilman Phil Hampton recently resigned from his position on the
Council and the Council appointed Bob Dellari to fill his unexpired term.
o Reported the Oviedo City Council had selected him as the new Council Chairman.
MOTION: Commissioner Warren moved, Commissioner McMullen
seconded, and motion carried unanimously to adjourn the
meeting.
Chairperson Gennell adjourned the meeting at 9:26 p.m.
Minutes submitted by:
Donna G. Gardner, City Commission Secretary
City of Casselberry, Florida