Water and Wastewater

Wastewater

Purpose:

To provide treatment for the wastewater emanating from the City. Plant is designed to produce an effluent whose quality meets standards set forth by the California Regional Water Quality Control Board.

Description:

Plant size is currently at 1.55 MGD with an average monthly flow of 1.1 MGD.  Wastewater Plant consist of two complete mix aerated lagoons operated in parallel, and two partial mix aerated lagoons operated in series. Each lagoon has an operating depth of 12 ft. and has a detention time of 3 days at design flow.  Flows enters plant through 18” and 24” diameter gravity sewers, which discharge into two separate headworks structures made from concrete and both have mechanically cleaned barscreens. Screenings are pressed and collected in a plastic bag and disposed of as a solid waste.  From heaworks, influent flows into a manhole where streams are combined and metered and recorded through a magnetic flow meter. Then flow enters a splitter box where flow is split and gravity flows into lagoon 1a and 1b. theese lagoons provide the primary aeration of incoming flows. Most of settleable solids will settle out and undergo anaerobic digestion on the lagoon bottoms.  From lagoons 1a and 1b, the primary treated wastewater flows by gravity through flow control structures and buried piping into lagoon # 2. Flow in lagoon also goes through same treatment process as lagoon 1a and 1b. From lagoon # 2, wastewater is pumped to lagoon # 3. The pump station has 3 constant speed pumps. The operator varies the number of pumps online, which sets the flow, based on the level of lagoons.  From lagoon # 3, treated wastewater flows by gravity through a flow control structure and buried piping into one of the 3 storage reservoirs, with the capacity of 472 acre feet of storage.  A recirculation line draws water from pump station and discharges into incoming untreated wastewater. Recirculated water is also used for washdown water at headworks. Recirculated flow is designed to initiate bacterial activity in incoming wastewater. All treated effluent flows into the storage reservoirs are disposed of onsite by agricultural irrigation on city owned farmland.

Water

The City of McFarland owns, operates, and maintains the domestic water system within the City of McFarland.  The City water system presently consists of four (3) water wells and one (1) storage tank equipped with booster pumps.  Monthly service fees are established to provide the city necessary funding to cover current operational expenditures, the replacement of existing equipment, and required additions to capacity. 

The Water Division provides the following:

  • Domestic and fire fighting water service to the McFarland community
  • Continuous monitoring of water for pollutants, contaminants, and bacteria in conformance with health and safety standards
  • Monitoring and implementation of water-related laws and codes
  • Water Quality
    The City performs water quality testing and monitoring in conformance with establishing health and safety standards.  Annual water quality reports called "Consumer Confidence Reports" are prepared and mailed to all of our customers
    by July 1. 

 

TCP 4th Quarterly Report (2019)

TCP 4th Quarterly Report (2021)

TCP 2nd Quarterly Report (2022)

TCP 1st   Quarterly Report (2023)

TCP 3rd Quarterly Report (2023)

 

2024-2028 Water-Sewer Consolidated Rates

Discontinuation of Residential Water Service Policy - English

Politica de la Descontinuacion de Aguas Residenciales - Spanish

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