MUNICH, Germany (June 2, 2016)—Team KSB-USA was awarded the gold medal in Munich, Germany, as the overall winner of the third Open German Championship in Wastewater Technology as part of IFAT 2016. The all-star Operations Challenge team competed against 36 teams from six countries as part of the world’s leading trade fair for water, sewage, waste and raw materials management, which runs from May 30 to June 3.
Organized by the Water Environment Federation (WEF) and sponsored by KSB Inc., the U.S. team included Coach Dave Vogel (CH2M, Lanesborough, Massachusetts) and members Dale Burrow (TRA CReWSers, Dallas, Texas, winner of 5 Division 1 Operations Challenge Championships); Donnie Cagle (Terminal Velocity, Wake Forest, North Carolina, winner of 10 Division 1 Operations Challenge Championships); and Steve Motley (Terminal Velocity, Virginia Beach, Virginia, winner of 5 Division 1 Operations Challenge Championships).
“We are so proud of Team KSB-USA and congratulate all of the participants of this fantastic international competition,” said WEF Executive Director Eileen O’Neill. “It was our great honor to have been invited to be a part of IFAT and the Open German Championship, which along with WEF’s own Operations Challenge competition, showcases the incredible dedication, professionalism and outstanding skills of our operations personnel. A special thanks to KSB Inc. for their support and to everyone who helped make this event a success.”
During the two-day competition, the teams were judged in five core competencies of wastewater operations. Team KSB-USA accumulated the most combined points from each individual discipline to take first place, followed by two German teams: second-place winner Nuremberg–Die Drei Wreckla and third-place winner Stadt Stuttgart Pumpis.
“We are extremely pleased with results and the overall experience,” said Vogel. “What is most significant to us is what we have learned, the friends we have made and how all of the participants, along with all operators around the world, will continue to perform this important work every day in their own communities.”