Sunday, October 20, 2019

Patriot Environmental Services Expands Into Fresno, California

PES Logo
Image: patriotenvironmental.com/

Cary Meadow is a financial and legal professional who has spent several years working with a variety of companies across several industries, including the investment and oil niches. Since 2014, Cary Meadow has served as chairman and CEO of Patriot Environmental Services (PES), a firm that has recently expanded into California by opening a new Fresno-based facility.

The new facility looks to be a multi-use space that offers a range of services, including waste management and transportation, emergency response, and much more. Josh Teves, VP of Northern California and Fixed Facilities at PES, notes that the expansion into Fresno allows the company to maximize its coverage in the state, with the premises also benefitting from proximity to its existing Kern County premises.

PES CEO Brian Johnson highlights that the Fresno location allows the firm to help clients with their waste management needs while also ensuring regulatory compliance across a range of industries, such as food and beverages, general manufacturing, agriculture, and more.

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Wastewater Treatment - How Does it Work?

Washing hands
Photo by mrjn Photography on Unsplash

Cary Meadow acquired Patriot Environmental Services in 2014 and since then has worked to grow the firm into the preeminent environmental solutions provider it is today. As chairman and CEO of the company, Cary Meadow helps the firm carry out complex projects, including those related to wastewater treatment facilities. 

The water used and disposed of down millions of drains every day often undergoes a special process to restore it to drinkability. Untreated water, also referred to as wastewater, originates from multiple different sources, including that from homes, called sewage water, and that from industrial facilities, called industrial wastewater. Municipal wastewater encompasses sewage as well as industrial wastewater. 

Wastewater begins its journey to treatment by entering the main sewer, which takes it to a wastewater treatment facility. Once there, the water goes through a series of filters that prevent large and small objects from passing through. 

After that, the water gathers in specialized tanks to undergo sedimentation, a process that encourages particles to fall and create sediment at the tank’s bottom. Thus completes primary wastewater treatment, after which the water is 60 percent less polluted than it was when it first arrived at the facility. 

In the second phase, the process relies on natural actors, like bacteria and chemical processes, to breakdown and consume pollutants in the water. After treatment, the water is inspected to ensure it is drinkable, and it is then allowed to enter circulation for commercial and domestic use.