OPERATOR GRADE V CERTIFICATION
EXAMINATION COMPLETE QUESTIONS AND
DETAILED SOLUTIONS LATEST UPDATE THIS
YEAR JUST RELEASED
The California Wastewater Treatment Operator Grade V
certification is the highest wastewater treatment operator
classification administered under the authority of the
California State Water Resources Control Board. The
examination evaluates advanced knowledge of wastewater
treatment processes, plant operations, laboratory control,
regulatory compliance, solids handling, safety
management, process troubleshooting, supervision,
maintenance coordination, and environmental protection.
Candidates are expected to demonstrate expert-level
operational judgment, leadership capabilities, and the
ability to manage complex treatment facilities.
Exam Coverage
Advanced biological treatment processes
Activated sludge process control
Nutrient removal operations
, Solids and biosolids management
Digestion systems and gas production
Secondary and tertiary treatment optimization
Laboratory analysis and interpretation
Process monitoring and troubleshooting
Regulatory compliance and permitting
Collection system interactions
Industrial pretreatment considerations
Plant hydraulics and flow management
Pumping systems and lift stations
Chemical treatment and dosing
Instrumentation and controls
Supervisory and management responsibilities
Maintenance planning and reliability
Safety and risk management
Emergency response procedures
Environmental protection practices
1.
,A treatment plant experiences persistent filamentous
bulking despite maintaining adequate dissolved oxygen
concentrations. What should the operator investigate
first?
A. Excessive sludge wasting only
B. Nutrient deficiency and septicity influences
C. Chlorination contact time only
D. Excessive grit removal
Answer: B
Rationale: Filamentous bulking frequently results from
nutrient deficiencies, septic conditions, or unfavorable
food-to-microorganism ratios even when dissolved oxygen
is acceptable.
2.
An operator observes increasing secondary clarifier
blanket depths over several days while influent loading
remains unchanged. What is the most likely corrective
action?
A. Increase return activated sludge rate appropriately
B. Shut down aeration immediately
C. Reduce influent pumping permanently
D. Stop wasting sludge entirely
, Answer: A
Rationale: Increasing RAS rates often helps control
blanket accumulation and improves solids removal
performance.
3.
A wastewater treatment facility experiences sudden
ammonia breakthrough in final effluent during cold
weather. What is the most probable cause?
A. Increased nitrification efficiency
B. Reduced nitrifying bacterial activity
C. Improved settling characteristics
D. Increased ultraviolet disinfection
Answer: B
Rationale: Nitrifying organisms are sensitive to
temperature reductions, causing ammonia removal
performance declines.
4.
Which operational condition most commonly causes rising
sludge within a secondary clarifier?