Composting of Biosolids & Green
Waste
North Londonry
Township

North Londonry
Township is located in Palmyra, Pennsylvania
with a population of 7,000 people served by the borough. The township purchased
a Brown Bear SC3610 compost turner through the local distributor Cleveland
Brothers Equipment for the purpose of composting yard waste and leaves
collected in the borough. The turner was mounted on an existing piece of
equipment, a CAT IT24F which the borough uses for snow removal in the winter
time. Pennsylvania DEP ACT 101 Grant funds were used for purchasing the
equipment for infrastructure development. The Brown Bear was delivered in the
fall of 2004 and was immediately put to use composting leaves from the fall
collection. Starting once again in the spring of 2005 in early May, the 116
horse-power unit began breaking down the larger stockpiles of material and
rolling them out into smaller windrow sizes of 10 ft wide by 3.5 ft tall. The
Brown Bear is the only unit of its kind that has the ability to build its own
initial windrows from a larger stockpile without the need of a bucket loader to
form the windrows. The processing of 1200 yards per hour of material by the
SC3610 requires only 1.5-2 man hours each time the piles are aerated. All the
material is collected, processed, and given to the residents on the 2 acre
asphalt pad. Town Road Master Earl Blauch picked the Brown Bear over
competitive models for the simplicity of design, the unit’s ability to pile
windrows edge to edge with no alley ways in between, and local support from a
Authorized dealer.
Click
here to see North Londonry’s SC3610 in action
Biosolids - Roswell, New Mexico
WWTP

In 1996, Roswell's
program won the Rocky Mountain Environment Association's Merit Award "for
accomplishing out-standing results in biosolids management" and the New
Mexico Water and Wastewater Association's Outstanding Achievement Award
"for exceptional performance in sludge composting." No bulking agent is added to the biosolids,
which saves expense and reduces volume.
A Brown Bear paddle aerator is Roswell’s
key material handling machine. Roswell's
Brown Bear has worked 12 months a year, every year, since its arrival on site
in 1985 and remains a highly reliable, highly effective tool. Its front-mounted
10-foot-wide, 0-140 rpm paddle-type auger does all the sludge mixing, aerating
and turning. Its 2.16 yard bucket and
12' lift does all truck loading and stock-piling. The machine's operator and a
helper exchange the two attachments in less than 30 minutes.
Biosolids & Yard Waste - Beatrice, NE
WWTP

Beatrice's wastewater plant processes the wastewater flow of the city by
primary settling and screening. The primary waste water is then mechanically
dewatered and the sludge is taken to a compost site where it is mixed with yard
waste – grass and shredded wood waste – and co-composted. It produces a Class A finished compost by the
new 503 EPA regulations. The Class A compost is unregulated for distribution
and is used by city residents on their lawns and gardens.
Green Waste - Maryville, Missouri

The city of Maryville,
MO has converted their landfill to a recycling and transfer station. Part of
the recycling program includes composting of yard waste (grass and shredded
wood). The city residents are allowed to bring their clippings and wood waste
to the site. The city employees mix the ground wood with the grass clippings
and compost the mix, using a farm tractor and a Brown Bear PTOPA35-10.5 compost
attachment. The finished product is given back to the residents of the city for
use on lawns and gardens. For more
information on the PTOPA35C series, click here.
Dial Up: Click here to see Maryville’s PTO unit in action
DSL/Cable: Click here to see Maryville’s PTO unit in action
Request the free,
full video on composting at brnbear@mddc.com
Yard Waste – Shaverton,
PA

The Dallas Area Municipal Authority (DAMA) was running out
of storage space for the increasing yearly volume of yard waste that they were
tasked to process into compost. They had been trying unsuccessfully to keep
up by composting with a wheel loader, but due to the two year processing cycle
the piles were mounting up. They purchased a Brown Bear SC3610 compost
paddle aerator in the late spring of 2003. Within 90 days the piles were
completely gone due to the increased processing speed attributed to the Brown
Bear units. Mike Bagley, Operations Manager said "We went from two
years decomposition time to a month and a half." The final compost is given back to area
residents.
Dial Up: Click here to see DAMA’s Brown Bear in action
DSL/Cable: Click here to see DAMA’s Brown Bear in action
Request the free,
full video on composting at brnbear@mddc.com
ZOO DOO of Memphis, TN

The Memphis Zoo has solved the problem of handling animal
manures and green wastes that every zoo has, without paying to landfill the
waste products. In fact, their method - COMPOSTING - generates income for the
zoo! Initially, getting a good mix and aeration with the bucket of their skid
loader was impossible. However, they have solved their problem with the Brown
Bear R24C-8 paddle aerator attachment, which mixes and aerates the windrows
about every other day. The final compost product is screened and sold under the
trade name of ZOO DOO.