Showing posts with label trends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trends. Show all posts
Thursday, December 1, 2016
NEWS: "Animal rescued from drain pipe" are the feel-good stories you need right now
In a world of chaos, discord, and debate, saving animals from precarious situations make even the most hardened of hearts feel a tinge of sentimentality.
Recent weeks have seen an uptick of news stories focused on animals being rescued from danger, specifically sewer and drain-pipe rescues that draw a connection to the work we do. Our sewer crews are dedicated to protecting water quality, but when related duties call, our men and women are ready to respond.
Below are some of our favorite recent rescues, including two of our own from years past.
Monday, August 8, 2016
SPORTS: What would happen if Michael Phelps tried swimming in our tanks?
As swimmer Michael Phelps places more gold medals around his neck during these Olympic Games in Rio, we wondered how he'd fare in an environment more unusual than a 50-meter chlorinated pool.
![]() |
Southerly first-stage aeration tanks |
First, such a thing would not be a good idea, and the topic is not an invitation to try it. But second, the hypothetical does make for interesting discussion regarding the treatment process and the water's physical properties.
We asked our Easterly Wastewater Treatment Plant Assistant Superintendent Dan Smith that question, turning our attention to two tanks along our common tour route: our clarifiers, and our aeration tanks.
Tags:
operations,
sports,
treatment plants,
trends,
wastewater
Monday, April 18, 2016
#SewerDebate: The 2016 election is about to go down the drain April 26, and for a good reason.
We want to make sewers great again.
Our first-ever #SewerDebate will take place on Twitter all day Tuesday, April 26. You will be able to cast your votes in a series of Twitter polls throughout the day as we pose water and infrastructure questions about the four leading Presidential contenders.
The questions will help us know what the electorate thinks about the priorities and water-quality-related habits of Hillary Clinton, Ted Cruz, Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump.
The series will also allow followers to share their opinions on a variety of topics regarding the work it takes to protect natural water resources around the country, and important discussion as we prepare for Infrastructure Week May 16.
Join the #SewerDebate and cast your votes April 26 with @neorsd and our @WallyWaterdrop on Twitter.
#SewerDebate Tweets
Tags:
infrastructure,
policy,
politics,
trends
Tuesday, April 5, 2016
TRENDING: 5 other things that make Crying Jordan cry
The meme to end all memes wants you to know that some things are worth crying over. Here are five unexpected events that get Crying Jordan all misty.
Seeing you flush your unused meds down the toilet.
Crying Jordan reminds you to dispose of your pills safely. Flushing them can affect health and the environment, and here's why: http://neorsd.org/PitchThosePills
Watching you apply way too much fertilizer on your lawn.
Fertilizer is a key contributor to algae blooms like those in Lake Erie. Stop Jordan's tears by checking out suggestions from Popular Mechanics.
People who leave dog poop without picking it up.
Jordan shouldn't have to see this, too. Help him out. Pick it up, throw it away. http://dogscantflush.org
A sink drain clogged with fats, oils and grease.
Don't pour these things down your kitchen drain. Cool them and throw them in the trash to prevent clogs. We also recommend not putting any of these 15 items down your drain.
People who think it's OK to flush disposable wipes.
Oh the tears! Even wipes that are marketed as "flushable" really aren't. They don't break down like toilet paper. Or crying Jordan.
Tags:
#flushresponsibly,
trends
Monday, March 21, 2016
SCIENCE: Tardigrade takeover? How the indestructible water bear parallels "The Walking Dead"
For all you The Walking Dead fans out there, you may be surprised to see a similarity between this AMC franchise and the science of water quality.
We introduce you to the Are-you-kidding-me?-Is-that-thing-still-alive?!? water bear, also known as the tardigrade.
These microscopic buggers are known for their ability to endure the most extreme of conditions—from heat, to cold, to radiation, to the very vacuum of space. These guys know how to survive for the long haul, and those who study them have referred to water bears as "indestructible."
Now water bears aren't out to takeover the world, and we find them to be friends in our water-analysis efforts. But if a sci-fi style "tardigrade apocalypse" was imminent, how might we defend ourselves?
Tags:
media,
science,
trends,
water quality
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
#SewerBowl: Because we know the biggest games are won in the trenches.
Game on, football fans.
For the fourth straight year, water and sewer infrastructure will take the field during the Super Bowl as we cover some of the unexpected #SewerBowl stats and stories from our accounts.
From the beverages consumed to the systems that take it away from your homes safely, we and many other utilities know clean water doesn't take a day off to watch the game, halftime show, or commercials. Which is why we will find the unexpected connections between football and bring you the best on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.
Our pups have made a prediction.
RELATED STORIES:
- WHY WE PLAY: SewerBowl shines light on the hidden systems that make it possible
- FACT? Did a city sewer actually burst under the force of a Super Bowl halftime flush?
- BOWLS: The Daily Beast takes a look at the (toilet) bowls that matter
Tags:
#SewerBowl,
infrastructure,
social media,
trends
Thursday, December 31, 2015
HISTORY: This viral list of 1915 facts is full of lies. Except the ones about water.
Turns out this viral list of 1915 "facts" rounding out 2015 is actually a fake, filled with untruths and misleading statements. But FWIW, it turns out the few about water are indeed true.
Gizmodo's Factually posted a breakdown of the list, a graphic that has made its internet rounds back in 2002 and 2006 with very few changes beyond a Photoshopped date. Based on the 1915 fact-checking, the water statements as shown below turn out to be true.
Only 14 percent of homes had a bathtub.
If this is referring to tubs with running water, that's probably true. The Cleveland Division of Water has been around in some form since the 1850s but even in 1915 its service was only beginning to reach beyond the city of Cleveland. In terms of sewers, a primary pipe taking sewage away from the city was not constructed until 1905 (and until a treatment plant was constructed in 1933, that sewage simply dumped out into Lake Erie).
A mechanical engineer could make about $5,000 per year.
Engineering is a huge part of water infrastructure generally, and that's true in our case. For comparisons today, a civil engineer starting annual salary averages $62,000.
Women only washed their hair once a month.
But we assume all of us are washing our hair more frequently in 2016, since on average Americans use 80-100 gallons of water per day.
Diarrhea was one of the six leading causes of death.
Sanitation improvements in the first half of the 1900s made tremendous strides in public health. Around the world, sanitation remains a huge concern: Diarrhea is still accountable for 20% of the six leading causes of child deaths worldwide.
Canned beer hadn't been invested yet.
True, it was not invented until 1935. And when we talk beer, we always say drink responsibly and flush responsibly.
Tags:
history,
social media,
trends,
wastewater
Thursday, December 17, 2015
WATCH: When we sense a disturbance in the Force, things tend to get messy. #StarWars
We don't think this is the Force George Lucas or J.J. Abrams had in mind. Still, clean water wouldn't be the same without it.
Our own treatment-plant Jedi Christen Wood shows us how force and the rarely-seen sludge "explosion" helps keep a sewer line clear and gives the Death Star's demise a run for its money.
RELATED STORIES:
Tags:
operations,
treatment plants,
trends,
video,
wastewater
Monday, December 7, 2015
LIST: 9 ways the movie Elf pretty much sums up any water lesson we could ever teach
The life lessons offered in Will Ferrell's Elf are profound and unparalleled. In this holiday season, we invite you to reflect on nine specific clean-water insights only Buddy can convey.
A short shower is just as effective as a long one.
Everyone needs some alone time. Let your throne be a place of emotional comfort.
Singing a song while you're in the shower can help you conserve water by timing your routine. Singing while someone else is in the shower is creepy.
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
TRENDING: Never forget, it was a toilet that made time travel possible. #BackToTheFutureDay
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Back To The Future's Doc Brown and his illustration of the time-travel-enabling flux capacitor. |
The future has arrived. As the past. In the present. Thanks to a toilet.
October 21, 2015 has been declared Back To The Future Day, a day of '80s sci-fi nostalgia, the date to which Back To The Future's Marty McFly travels in the second movie of the trilogy in hopes of rescuing his future family.
What made the films' time travel possible was the flux capacitor. What made the flux capacitor possible? Remember, it was inventor Doc Brown slipping and falling off his toilet:
Sure, the flush toilet was considered the greatest medical advancement of the last 200 years. But in the BTTF universe, it became—more importantly—the greatest inspiration of the entire space-time continuum.
Heavy. We know.
RELATED STORIES
- TECH: Bath to the future? Toilet tech predictions for the year 2030
- MOVIES: Lake Erie Sharknado? Unlikely. Raining sea lampreys? Plausible.
- MEDIA: WMMS host Alan Cox wants to attend our Sewer University?
Tuesday, August 11, 2015
PERSPECTIVE: What if a toxic spill the likes of Colorado's #AnimasRiver struck the Cuyahoga?
While the Cuyahoga River has had its share of challenges, none compare to the catastrophe going on in Colorado.
An Environmental Protection Agency project to reduce pollution seeping into the Animas River resulted in a breach that caused an estimated 3 million gallons of gold-mine wastewater to rush into the river, turning the water mustard yellow and leaving officials scrambling to assess the damage while residents seek answers and await test results.
As an agency prepared to respond to HAZMAT situations, I asked our Water Quality & Industrial Surveillance team how we might respond to a disaster like this had anything like it struck the Cuyahoga River.
Scott Broski put it pretty bluntly.
"In terms of control, based on what has been released and the volume, I’m not sure what anyone can do to control a spill of this magnitude." Scott is the Superintendent of Environmental Services, and said a major challenge in this situation is an inability to strategically collect the material.
Friday, July 31, 2015
LOOK: What happens one hour after drinking one glass of tap water
The possible health effects of a can of soda have been blogged and tweeted about for a long time, most recently in an infographic that made its rounds this week.
How your body responds to a glass of tap water? Perhaps even more shocking.
View full size.
How your body responds to a glass of tap water? Perhaps even more shocking.
View full size.
Tags:
coca cola,
coke,
health,
infographic,
infrastructure,
social media,
trends,
water
Monday, July 20, 2015
TRENDS: No, #Sharknado3 would not affect Great Lakes, but raining sea lampreys would be a thing of nightmares
Despite a sketchy 1954 report of a bull-shark attack on Lake Michigan, fears of a Great Lakes Sharknado is nothing to keep you up at night.
But could any Great Lakes monster rain from the sky in a so-bad-it's-good made-for-SyFy-channel movie? Our investigators named one.
Tags:
electrofishing,
fun,
invasive species,
lake erie,
sharknado,
syfy,
trends
Thursday, June 6, 2013
BREAKING! Sewer District is more cutting edge than major music awards show
Just caught this story over on Mashable about the CMT Music Awards generating social media buzz by using decals above urinals.
That's sooo yesterday.
Livin on the edge rn #waittotweet twitpic.com/chsjig
— Calla Bonanno (@hellocalla) April 7, 2013
Our #WaitToTweet decals at the Cleveland International Film Festival and Cleveland Indians' Progressive Field in stalls and above urinals and hand dryers have been generating tweets for months now (despite our incessant warnings against it).
Shout out to Progressive Field for looking out for fans. #waittotweet #baseballroadtrip twitter.com/jessilespie/st…
— Jessica Gillespie (@jessilespie) June 2, 2013
Still, nice to see we set a bit of a trend.
Tags:
#waittotweet,
photograph,
trends
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