Showing posts with label Wastewater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wastewater. Show all posts

Friday, October 19, 2012

Sunrise Beach seeks citizen input on sewer; refinancing bonds for Hwy 5 widening

The Sunrise Beach Board of Trustees wants to hear from its constituents about their sewage.

The board has scheduled three public hearings to give the citizens of Sunrise Beach an opportunity to voice their opinion and ask questions regarding a pending Sunrise Beach Phase 1 Sewer Project. The three consecutive hearings are scheduled for 6 p.m., 6:45 p.m., and 7:30 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 19 at the Sunrise Beach Fire Protection District No. 1 Administration Building. They will cover the following three topics:
  • The establishment of a user-charge wastewater system in the village.
  • The establishment of an ordinance regulating the use of public and private sewers and drains and providing penalties for violations thereof.
  • The environmental impact of and the need for a sewer system in the village. Schultz Surveying & Engineering will present an environmental impact report on the Phase 1 Sewer Project.
The Phase 1 Sewer Project will consist of an extended air sewer treatment facility, with a forced main that will run along Highway 5 from the Hurricane Deck Bridge north to Lake Road 5-39. The estimated cost of the Phase 1 sewer project is $2.2 million.

Engineers report

At the board’s Oct. 11 meeting, Jim Fisher, Lake Manager for Schultz Surveying & Engineering and Village Phase 1 Sewer Project Engineer, reported his firm is working hard to get the sewer project rolling. Fisher said he will have the specifications and tentative plans for the Phase 1 treatment plant by the November board meeting. He also announced Kerry Metscher as the head right-of-way manager. Metscher will work to get the necessary easements for the Phase 1 sewer project. Fisher and Trustee Charlie Bott are collaborating on two sewer ordinances to be presented at the public hearing.

Bond refinancing
In other business, Charlie Zitnik with D.A. Davidson & Co. attended the Thursday meeting to discuss bond refinancing. The board cleared Zitnik to draw up the necessary paperwork for the refinancing of the 2003 Certificate of Participation (COPS), along with paperwork for the financing of the Phase 2 Highway 5 widening project. The Phase 2 widening project will turn a section of Highway 5 into three lanes, from Lake Road 5-36 north to Lake Road 5-32, at a cost of approximately $600,000. The project is slated by the Missouri Department of Transportation to begin in 2013.

Zitnik reported the city is currently paying 5.34 percent interest on $50,000 payments annually. With the refinancing, Zitnik projects the interest could be lowered to 3.8 percent, over a twenty year period. “The savings are astronomical,” Zitnik said.

Board approvals
The board approved an intergovernmental agreement with the Sunrise Beach Fire Protection District. The city will forgive 10,000 gallons of water usage each month for training purposes. The district will pay the regular business water user rate for anything over 10,000 gallons.

The board also approved the low bid of $1,045 from Bartley Pump to seal and plug the village well.

The village issued a merchant license to the Pexco Company, LLC, and Impressions. The board also issued a liquor license to the Woods Super Market.

A media event is scheduled for 1 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 16, during which the United States Department of Agriculture will present loan funds in the amount of $104,000 to the village for the purchase of City Hall. The village is purchasing the building and less than an acre of land immediately surrounding the building from Village Attorney Greg Williams.

The board changed the November meeting date to 6 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 13 as the regular meeting fall on a holiday.

Monday, February 13, 2012

SCHULTZ AND SUMMERS ENGINEERING & SURVEYING DESIGNS NEW BERNIE WASTEWATER TREATMENT PLAN

Progress on Bernie
BERNIE, MO – Residents in Bernie will soon get a much needed new wastewater treatment facility to keep their sewer system running smoothly.   Their old oxidation ditch was constructed in the 1970’s and began having significant problems serving the City’s 768 homes and businesses.  Cracks could be found in the facility’s structural walls, the controls were worn out, and the bearings on the mixer were on the brink of collapse.  These problems were first identified in 2004.  In 2009, Mayor Tillmon’s asked Schultz and Summers Engineering (SSE) to evaluate any deficiencies with the system and help identify what funding was needed to replace the plant.  SSE owner Bob Summers said, “The problems Bernie’s older system was experiencing are similar to what we have seen in other communities in Missouri.  We enjoy designing projects that keep sewer rates low for the residents and keep communities in compliance with all the DNR rules and regulations.”

After a careful review of all the problems with the old treatment plant, SSE put together a design that addressed all the deficiencies.  They also developed preliminary designs and cost estimates for the project that were made available to the public.  Once the voters looked at the new design and the option to use public financing in order to keep sewer rates low, they passed a $5.0 million dollar bond issue at the November 2009 election with over an 80% approval.   Mayor James Tillmon added, “The plan Schultz and Summers developed was a cost effective way to solve our sewer problems.  Their help in informing the voters about the new treatment plant was very useful in gaining passage of the bond issue.”

The new plant under construction
Once the bond was successfully passed, a Preliminary Engineering Report was submitted by SSE to the Missouri Water and Wastewater Review Committee in January of 2010.   Schultz and Summers then worked with USDA-Rural Development to secure over $2.5 million in low interest loan dollars for Bernie.  Rural-Development provided the City these loans at a 2.25% interest rate, which was fixed for 35 years.  Summers commented, “We have helped several cities in Missouri obtain low interest loans over the years, but it was almost unbelievable for Bernie to receive a fixed 2.25% interest rate for 35 years!”  

The project plans were completed in mid-2010 and submitted to both USDA-Rural Development and the Missouri Department of Natural Resources (DNR).  The plans were approved in October 2010 and Rural Development approved the bid advertisement that took place in November 2010.  The project provided the low bidder with a Notice to Proceed in January 2011 and the new treatment plant should be completed sometime in the fall of the this year.

Mayor Tilmon concluded, “I can’t say enough about how helpful Schultz and Summers Engineering were during this whole process.  It was nice having a company help us who understood the process and knew all the key players involved.  Their experience was one of the main reasons we were able to pass the bond issue and get so much support from government agencies such as DNR and USDA-Rural Development.”   

Monday, October 17, 2011

Missouri DNR Fees Are Extended - Message From Bob Summers



      


Bob Summers
   


As I write this, the year is half over, the summer is here and our business is continuing to grow.  I don’t know if you kept up with the MoDNR fee issue this year but the statutes allowing the Missouri Department of Natural Resources (MoDNR) fee collection for wastewater discharge permits expired December 31, 2010.  While this has caused financial problems within the department most of us were concerned about the possibility of the EPA taking over these responsibilities.  

          I’m sure we all have a situation where MoDNR didn’t rule in our favor or didn’t approve a permit as fast as we would have wanted, but I don’t know of anyone who wanted the EPA managing the state’s clean water program. 

          Fortunately, on the second to last day of session the legislature approved HB 89, reinstating the fees that fund the water regulation programs in Missouri.  The fees are paid by commercial developers, home builders, utilities, manufacturers and livestock producers.  They expired in December 2010 and this legislation reinstates them with no increase, until September 2013.  The bill also requires the MoDNR director to conduct a study of fees and report back to the legislature. 

          House members gave the legislation final approval Thursday, sending it to Gov. Jay Nixon.  The bill included an emergency clause which allows it to take effect as soon and the Governor signs it, instead of having to wait until August 28th like other bills.

          Here is a copy of the summary outlining the fee authorization.

CLEAN WATER NOTICE REQUIREMENTS AND FEES (Sections 644.036 and644.054)
The bill removes the expiration date on the public notice requirements of the Clean Water
 Commission of the State of Missouri when listing any impaired waters of the state under
 Section 303(d) of the federal Clean Water Act.  The commission's authority to charge
 fees for construction permits, operating permits, and operator's certifications related to 
water pollution control is extended from December 31, 2010, to September 1, 2013.
The Director of the Department of Natural Resources must conduct a comprehensive 
review of the water pollution fee structure including input from stakeholders.  The 
department director must submit a report to the General Assembly by December 31, 2012, 
including the findings and a recommended plan for the fee structure.
 
          This 56 page omnibus bill dealing with natural resources made many other changes to our laws. Some of the key changes effecting our water quality programs and DNR dealt with permit time periods, and appeals.  These changes were designed to speed up the permitting process by putting more responsibility on the department.  Time will tell how the new rules affect the permitting process in Missouri.  Here is the summery language concerning those provisions: 


ENVIRONMENTAL PERMITS (Section 640.018)
In any case in which the Department of Natural Resources has not issued a permit or made a permit decision by the expiration of the statutorily required time frame, the permit must be issued as of the first day following the expiration if all the necessary information has been submitted for the application and the department has had the information for the duration of the required time frame.

CLEAN WATER COMMISSION PERMITS AND APPEALS (Section 644.051)
(1)  Allows a potential permit applicant to appeal the terms and conditions of a water
pollution control general permit template to the Clean Water Commission within 30 
days of the issuance of the template by the department if the applicant can demonstrate
 that he or she is or may be adversely affected by any permit, term, or condition;
 
(2)  Specifies that the permit applicant has the burden of proof only for an appeal relating
 to the denial of a permit, license, or registration; but for all other appeals, the commission 
will have the burden of proof.  Currently, the burden of proof in an appeal hearing regarding
 the issuance of a water pollution control permit is on the permit applicant;
 
(3)  Authorizes the department to modify, reissue, or terminate a water pollution control 
permit at the request of the permit holder.  All requests must be in writing and contain facts 
or reasons in support of the request; and
 
(4)  Requires the department to implement permit shield provisions that are equivalent 
to the provisions implemented pursuant to federal law.
 
AFFORDABILITY DETERMINATIONS (Section 644.145)
The Department of Natural Resources must make a determination regarding the affordability
 to communities and their residents of permit requirements and other department decisions 
related to combined or separate sanitary sewer systems or publicly-owned treatment works.  
 The affordability determination must be made prior to issuing a permit or rendering a decision. 
 If the department fails to make a determination, the proposed permit or decision will be void 
and unenforceable.  The bill specifies the criteria that the department must follow when making 
a determination.
 
          Passing this bill was the right thing to do and I hope you take the time to thank your legislator for dealing with this very important issue.  If you are a local govern official or you help supply water and waterwater services in Missouri I would encourage you to visit http://www.moga.mo.gov and look up HB 89. 
          It has been a busy year here at SSE and this issue is one we have monitored closely.  It has a direct impact on our ability to help communities all across Missouri with their water and wastewater needs.  Feel free to call me with any questions and I hope you have a fun and relaxing summer.

Sincerely,
Bob Summers  

Thursday, September 15, 2011




Sewer resolution needed in Sunrise Beach


By Amy Wilson
Posted Sep 15, 2011 @ 05:10 AM
 

Sunrise Beach, Mo. — Businesses in the Village of Sunrise Beach are desperate for a sewer solution.
A group of business owners attended the Monday, Sept. 12 trustees meeting to find out more about the status of getting a municipal wastewater treatment system in the ground and just what area that system will cover. The message was clear - move
forward.

The Issues
Time and money are the obstacles hindering progress on the town's wastewater woes.

1. Businesses can't keep waiting.
"With DNR (Missouri Department of Natural Resources) on the hunt right now, the longer we wait, the options get less, not more," said Sunrise Beach businessman Matt Sutcliffe. "There are businesses that are not going to survive waiting this out ... You're going to see businesses close up and not make it."
The municipality's budget is based almost entirely on sales tax revenues - there are some minor police-related revenues. The village does not collect any property tax.
Ron Duggan said he needs help "desperately" right now due to the legal action his business, Captain Ron's Bar & Grill, is facing from the Missouri Attorney General's Office for its wastewater treatment system. Duggan said they have to expand the wastewater treatment facility for the restaurant and bar.
Hired by Duggan, Schultz & Summers Engineering (SSE) have come up with an individual solution for Captain Ron's —  at a price tag of $50,000-$55,000. But even that solution is only temporary, expanding enough to buy more time, but it would still have to be pumped out on busy weekends.
However combined with the loss of Cannon Smoked Saloon to fire (since relocated to Laurie), Duggan indicated that it could be a struggle to fund even the temporary solution, and was looking for any help the village could give.
Home to the Lake of the Ozarks Shootout, the restaurant and bar is one of the biggest sales tax contributors to the small town.
But Captain Ron's was not the only one in trouble.
The campground owned by Dave Buehler, in attendance at the meeting, was shut down for part of the summer due to sewer issues, a direct loss of sales tax for Sunrise Beach. Rick Escobedo of Tortilla Flats Restaurant & Lounge said their situation is not desperate yet, but that it is becoming a concern.
Sutcliffe, owner of Bear Bottom Resort which is another big sales tax contributor, urged the board to move forward. His business is not facing action from the state, but he wants to expand and can't without a larger wastewater treatment system.
West Shore Landing developers, Ron Cragun and Bruce and Jan Adams, are also pushing for sewer to benefit their commercial project at Lake Road 5-41.
U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development (RD) provided the bulk of funding for the city's drinking water system. The second phase is currently under
construction.
RD has stated in a letter to Sunrise Beach that it will not commit to funding sewer with low interest loans and grants until the water system is complete and has been in
operation for one year.
That pushes the timeline for any municipal wastewater system funded through RD to early 2013.

2. Residential user fees must be reasonable.
To get government agency financing, it is required that the village's residential user fee be a minimum of 2 percent of the median household income (MHI). With an MHI of approximately $27,679, the monthly sewer bill would be about $46 per month.
About $38-41 was the amount originally promised to voters when revenue bonds were passed in 2006.
The unobligated portion of the city's capital improvement sales tax revenue could, however, be used to lower the residential sewer bill.
Sutcliffe also reported that the committee, through water attorney Bill McCaffree, had found that the idea for businesses to pay a higher rate to help offset residential user costs was acceptable to RD.
This could have an exponential effect for the town. A central sewer system helps create a more attractive environment for businesses. If there are more businesses, it means not only more sales tax revenue but also more sewer customers paying that higher rate.

The Status
Sutcliffe was on the committee that recommended the board make the "Mid Town" area phase one.
The committee's recommendation was based on a preliminary engineering report (PER) from Midwest Engineering. Two months ago, the board hired Olsson Engineering at a cost of approximately $18,000 to do a new PER of the north area of town, termed City Hall Ridge.
A second study, looking at the south end, by Olsson was considered Sept. 12. It was the topic for a closed session portion of the meeting, but was ultimately tabled.
Board members have said they are simply looking for the best plan. Without the entire scope of funding available for any plan, chair Curt Mooney said they are taking the time to search for the best numbers to make it affordable for residences.
After the July meeting in which Olsson was hired, another engineering firm came into the picture for the village, the previously mentioned SSE. With the board's stated intention of looking for better numbers, they offered to review Midwest's existing PER.
SSE has now entered into an agreement with Midwest to work on the Sunrise Beach municipal project. The joint venture will include SSE designing the wastewater treatment facility and coordinating with the appropriate government agencies to get funding.
Getting government funding in place is SSE's specialty. Since 1998, it has obtained almost $93 million in grants and loans through USDA Rural Development, Missouri Department of Natural Resources and Community Development Block Grants (CDBG).
SSE founding partner Stan Schultz shared the results of their review at the Monday night meeting.
The findings were positive, in that Midwest had followed the funding agency outline, the proper documents had been filed with the agencies, detailed layout maps had been completed and a realistic cash flow had been forecasted. The unit prices for the construction work were also conservative in SSE's opinion.

What's Next
SSE advised the board that DNR money may be a better option for funding. Through Midwest, the village has applied to DNR for funding a system for the entire Highway 5 corridor, just as it has with RD.
According to Schultz, the application for the overall system scored in the top 7 percent of proposals made to DNR for that cycle. The entire system was too expensive - more than $7 million - to be funded to the extent needed to make it feasible for the village.
The overall system can, however, be built in stages, Schultz said.
He recommended the board identify its scope for phase one by developing a target area of 100-120 residences (considered the "magic" minimum number to receive the best grant funding from funding agencies) and identifying what commercial customers wanted sewer out of the largest 25 potential commercial customers.
The committee that has studied the issue believes that target area is Mid Town, not City Hall Ridge.
Mid Town and City Hall Ridge are different proposed first phases to get the overall system started.
According to the committee's findings based on Midwest's PER, City Hall Ridge would cost an estimated $1,888,171 to construct, but Mid Town hits that 100 potential residential user mark that makes it eligible for much more in low interest loans and grants. City Hall Ridge has 68 potential residential users.
In addition to the 100 residential users, Mid Town also has more potential commercial users, 64 compared to City Hall Ridge's 39. Mid Town's overall construction cost is an estimated $3,559,000.
Sutcliffe and other business owners have indicated they would like to see the board start pushing to get Mid Town funded, instead of paying more money out of the capital improvement sales tax revenues for other engineering firms to do more studies.
Existing businesses have indicated their willingness to pay a higher user rate to help offset residential costs - for now.
If the village cannot move forward with sewer, many businesses will either close or be forced to go out on their own for individual solutions, Sutcliffe said. And if businesses resolve their wastewater issues on their own, they have no incentive to then support a municipal system, especially one in which they subsidize lower residential ­­rates.


Conflict of interest
Discussion turned ugly at the Sept. 12 meeting when concerns were raised that the city attorney had a conflict of interest in the matter of advising the board on the proposed phasing of the sewer system.
West Shore Landing developers Ron Cragun and Bruce and Jan Adams expressed their concern about the board meeting in closed session at the July meeting with their longtime attorney Greg Williams. In that closed session, they hired Olsson Engineering to study City Hall Ridge.
The developers/realtors said Williams owns property within the City Hall Ridge area that is being marketed for commercial development. The City Hall Ridge area would include Williams' property but exclude the West Shore Landing property. The larger proposed Mid Town area would include both.
Bruce Adams said it was a concern to them that a "competitor" was advising the board in closed session. Even if Williams were strictly sticking to his role as city attorney when in closed session, there is still an appearance of conflict of interest, he said.
Adams formally objected to closed door sessions about sewer with Williams "under the guise" of personnel issues and asked that his objection be included in the minutes.
Cragun added that it appeared there was "politicking" going on behind closed doors.
Williams said that there was no one on the board who was unaware that he was a landowner in the village.
"It is not a conflict," he said, adding that the trustees had been "fully disclosed" and were "fully aware" of his situation.
"I was tasked with developing alternatives," said Williams about the board's search for a feasible plan to sewer the city. As a result, he has had discussions not just with Olsson but also with SSE and village business owners.
Hiring Olsson to study City Hall Ridge is merely part of the search for the best course of action, according to the board.
"He (Williams) is not running the project," trustee Debby Stoller said.
According to chair Curt Mooney, the board had two previous interviews with Olsson; it was not something that just happened.
Bruce Adams also objected to the decision to spend $18,000 to hire Olsson being made in closed session. Any talk about sewer, with or without Williams, should have been made in open session, he said.
Jan Adams added, "We were under the impression ... that the whole sewer issue had been tabled."
Cragun said that the $18,000 should have been used for the actual sewer system instead of funding another preliminary engineering report.
The open session discussion centered around how to phase a sewer system for the Highway 5 corridor. It was tabled to get more information on whether higher commercial rates could be used to make residential rates lower to make the recommended Mid Town area acceptable.
The board then went into closed session and decided to hire Olsson to look at City Hall Ridge. The City Hall Ridge area was a potential first phase that was developed by the committee, but was not recommended due to its low potential for grants and low interest loans.
Trustee Ray Kline said the open session discussion and the closed session decision were two separate items. Just because they are having City Hall Ridge studied does not mean that Mid Town is out.
It is unclear how the board arrived at the decision about which phase to study further as none of the trustees verbally indicated a preference for any of the proposed phases in its lengthy discussion in open session. The committee provided the information from their study for the first time publicly at that July meeting.
 

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Cardwell Council Discusses Wastewater Treatment Facility

Marvin2.jpg

Daily Dunklin Democrat


The Cardwell City Council focused its attention on Marvin Nesbitt, of Schultz and Summers Engineering, as he gave the latest update on the Lagoon Wasterwater Project on Thursday evening...

Read full Daily Dunklin Democrat article