Politics & Government
Horsham Air Guard Station: New Filtration System Will Help Environment
Horsham Air Guard Station's new filtration system will "benefit (the) base, community and environment," according to spokespersons.

HORSHAM AIR GUARD STATION, Pa. – As of June 30, a high-tech water filtration unit, tailored to remove contaminants from ground water that services the base here is up and running; however, the directive for base personnel to not drink the water continues.
The contaminants identified were perfluorooctane sulfonate and perfluorooctanoic acid. Also known as PFCs, the pollutants were discovered in area ground water in August 2014. This underground water source not only supplies the base, but also supports the community’s private and public water resources.
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Until recently, these unregulated contaminants were formerly used in a wide variety of common items -- from airfields to home products. The PFCs were used in such products as firefighting foam used to combat aircraft fires, carpet and furniture treatments, cosmetics, food wraps, water repellant sprays for leather, shoes and clothing, paints and cleaning products.
Tucked away in an unassuming 20-foot trailer, a labyrinth of pipes, valves, pumps and gauges feed four enormous fiberglass wrapped granular activated carbon filter cylinders. Each of the filter housings measure approximately four feet wide by seven feet tall.
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The temporary filtration unit will remain in place and maintained until the new permanent pumping station and filtration structure have been completed. Currently, the estimated project completion date is spring of 2017. Once completed and thoroughly tested, a permit to allow drinking of water here again will be applied for by the base’s environmental engineering unit.
“Per day, the base will use an estimated 18,500 gallons of water,” said Capt. Jim Kash, deputy base civil engineer here. “With the filter in place and operating, the system is adjusted to filter approximately 100 gallons per minute.”
Besides performing the vital scrubbing of the base water supply from PFCs, the unit will provide additional benefits to the base and surrounding community.
“Water pulled from the ground water supply and purified should over time, aid in the reduction or removal of the PFCs from the area’s ground water basin,” said Lt. Col. Jaqueline Siciliano, base environmental manager. “The base’s waste water flow, processed by the Horsham Water Authority, will be substantially lower PFCs, reducing the contaminant’s reintroduction into the environment.
“Additionally, the activated carbon granules trap particulate matter, organic contaminants, reduce turbidity [clarity] and undesirable tastes and odors,” Siciliano added.
The installation of the GAC filter teams with a $6.3 million project on-base overhauling a troublesome water distribution and sanitary sewer infrastructure project said Maj. Lydia Stefanik, base civil engineer. When completed, this project will replace an estimated 10,000 feet of sewage lines and 20,000 feet of water feed lines.
The National Guard Bureau and Navy entities, Environmental Protection Agency and Pa. Department Environmental Protection have been working in synergy with area water authorities to reach a successful remediation goal.
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