In Northeast Wisconsin, community leaders offer commendations to NEW Water, the brand of the Green Bay Metropolitan Sewerage District, which has served the community for more than 90 years.
In 2023, NEW Water cleaned more than 15 billion gallons of water for Northeast Wisconsin. That equates to the volume of about one Lambeau Field, per week. This 24-7-365 service enables the community to flush the toilet, do the dishes, and run their businesses whenever they want.
“I am continually humbled by the dedication of our team. Rain, snow, sleet, or shine, they ensure the protection of our most valuable resource, water,” said Tom Sigmund, P.E., Executive Director of NEW Water. “This recognition of wastewater professionals is not just a gesture of gratitude; it is acknowledgement of the profound impact of their service to this community.”
In addition to recognizing the critical role that wastewater plays in protecting public health, the proclamation also lauds wastewater professionals’ participation in the Wisconsin Wastewater Monitoring Network.
Scientific research into wastewater in COVID-19 began quickly after the pandemic struck, and has become an important indicator for public health across the U.S. NEW Water was invited to join the study in early 2020. Sigmund, an engineer and past president of the National Association of Clean Water Agencies, reflected that had someone asked him about this kind of scientific research with wastewater prior to the pandemic, he would have called it “science fiction.”
NEW Water continues to participate in the program (learn more from the Wisconsin Department of Health Services). Learn more about NEW Water’s response to COVID-19 here
Modern sanitation and wastewater treatment are responsible for reducing diseases such as cholera, which was prevalent in Wisconsin, with epidemics sweeping the state in the 1800s (Wisconsin Historical Society: Diseases and Epidemics in Wisconsin).
The British Medical Journal declared that sanitation is the most important milestone in more than a century and a half (Reuters: “Sanitation ‘greatest medical milestone’ since 1840").
Wisconsin currently has 630 municipal wastewater treatment plants, according to the Wisconsin Department of Natural Services.