
National Rural Water Association
2915 S. 13th Street
Duncan, OK 73533
580-252-0629 FAX 580-255-4476
Contact:
Chris Wilson, nrwacw@nrwa.org
May 30, 2008
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Wastewater employee's success runneth over with Ill.
water award
DANVERS, Ill. -- Most people take it for
granted when water comes out of the faucets or they
flush a toilet. But for Scott
Seniff, such routine maneuvers consume his every waking
moment. Seniff, a Danvers town
employee, has been named Wastewater System Operator of the
Year by the Illinois Rural Water Association, the state’s
largest rural utility association.
“He is very conscientious and takes his job very seriously,”
said Frank Dunmire, executive director of the rural water
association. The
Taylorville-based association is a private non-government
organization coordinating water and wastewater programs on a
statewide basis in rural areas of 10,000 or less. Dunmore
said the field staff of eight visits 2,500 sites annually.
Two-thirds to three-quarters of the water that goes into a
typical household goes out as wastewater that must be
treated to a point where it can safely be released into
streams and the like.
Those on-site visits throughout the year figure into
narrowing the field to the top three wastewater system
candidates, one of the award categories for the association.
They then compare notes to select the top three operators in
wastewater treatment.
Association representatives visited the Danvers facility in
January. “Basically, they interviewed me about operations —
what we do and how we do it,” said Seniff.
And it is one thing to achieve something when money is
plentiful, but quite another with limited resources such as
in rural areas. “These operators know how to stretch a
buck,” said Dunmire. “I was
tickled to death,” said Seniff, after learning he won the
award. “I’ve got the trophy in my office for now.”
Seniff, superintendent of public works since 1991, credited
fellow village workers Jon Slaughter, who works full-time,
and Greg Lemons, who works part-time, with helping make the
award a reality. “I told the
selection committee and the (village) board I couldn’t have
done it without their help,” he said. Record-keeping
requirements by the Environmental Protection Agency also
have greatly increased over the years, he noted.
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