HomeMy WebLinkAboutWater Commission - MINUTES - 12/07/2023
WATER COMMISSION
REGULAR MEETING
December 7, 2023, 5:30-7:30 p.m.
Hybrid in person at 222 LaPorte Ave and online via Zoom
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The Water Commission advises City Council regarding water, wastewater, and stormwater
policy issues such as water rights, planning, acquisition and management, conservation and
public education, floodplain regulations, storm drainage, and development criteria. Read
more at https://www.fcgov.com/cityclerk/boards/water.
1. CALL TO ORDER
5:32 p.m.
2. ROLL CALL
Commissioners Present In Person: Jordan Radin (Chairperson), Paul Herman (Vice
Chairperson), Jason Tarry
Commissioners Present via Zoom: James Bishop, Tyler Eldridge
Commissioners Absent - Excused: Kent Bruxvoort, Rick Kahn, John Primsky, Greg
Steed
Staff Members Present In Person: Jill Oropeza, Katherine Martinez, Kelly Wasserbach,
Christina Schroeder, Matt Fater, Leslie Hill, Richard Thorp, Kelly Gordon, Mariel Miller
Staff Members Present via Zoom: None
Members of the Public: Kevin Greer/HDR, Inc.
3. AGENDA REVIEW
Chairperson Radin briefly summarized items on the agenda and announced agenda
item #7(b)(i) would be moved up before Staff Reports due to time constraints.
4. COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION: None
5. APPROVAL OF MINUTES
Chairperson Radin asked for comments and revisions on the draft minutes.
Commissioner Tarry moved to approve the Nov. 16 minutes.
Vice Chairperson Herman seconded the motion.
Vote on the motion: it passed unanimously, 5-0.
6. ANNOUNCEMENTS
a. Staff appreciation related to Agenda Item #9(b): Commissioners thanked
Business Support III Katherine Martinez for her service this year managing agendas
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and meetings, and for providing various other administrative support to the Water
Commission.
b. Chairperson Radin offered congratulations from the Water Commission to
Commissioner Bishop and his wife on the birth of their first child.
7. NEW BUSINESS
a. Regular Items
i. Agreement Regarding the Upper Poudre Watershed Source Water
Protection Plan
Watershed Program Manager Richard Thorp provided a summary of the
intergovernmental agreement (IGA) to develop a regional cost-share
collaborative source water protection plan. This item is scheduled for the Jan.
16 City Council meeting.
Fort Collins Utilities and several other regional water providers (City of
Greeley, Northern Water Conservancy District, Soldier Canyon Water
Treatment Authority, and City of Thornton) have drafted a detailed scope of
work. The source water protection plan would delineate each water provider’s
source water supply boundary, identify overlapping projects between
partners, and link to existing watershed protections, programs, and projects.
The plan is expected to foster increased communication, alignment, and cost-
sharing of the implementation of best management practices. Initial funding --
for hiring a consultant to facilitate development of the plan -- is $150,000:
$50,000 grant from Colorado Department of Public Health and the
Environment; $50,000 from the Colorado Water Conservation Board’s Water
Plan Grant Program; and $10,000 from each project partner (Fort Collins
Utilities plans to use $10,000 in existing Watershed Protection funding).
Discussion Highlights
Commissioners commented on or inquired about various related topics
including program funding, sharing data, cost-sharing agreements in the
future once framework is established; regional collaboration began about 15
years ago, therefore relationships and trust are in place for this project that
formalizes the structure; suggestion for staff to contact North Front Range
Water Quality Planning Association regarding its similar effort for a North
Front Range Nonpoint Source Watershed Plan (
https://nfrwqpa.colorado.gov/nps-watershed-plan ); whether there’s any
downside to this project (none; it will help everyone align projects); the
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intergovernmental agreement doesn’t govern a program, it is for development
of the plan itself; formal structure makes sense for collaboration and
resource-sharing.
Commissioner Tarry moved that the Water Commission recommend City
Council formally approve of the Utilities Watershed Program entering into the
agreement regarding the Upper Poudre Watershed Source Protection Plan.
Vice Chairperson Herman seconded the motion.
Vote on the Motion: it passed unanimously, 5-0.
b. Staff Reports
i. Water Reclamation and Biosolids Master Plan Update
Civil Engineer III Kelly Wasserbach provided an overview of the master plan
scope and Director of Plant Operations-Drake Water Reclamation Facility
(DWRF) Christina Schroeder and Director of Civil Engineering Matt Fater
assisted in answering questions.
The plan includes management of Meadow Springs Ranch, condition
assessment, Maximo asset management program; current and future state;
treatment alternatives analysis; protection prioritization; innovation and vision
and master plan integration (One Water approach; diversity, equity, and
inclusion (DEI); innovation; stakeholder engagement); and considerations
related to four-generation workplace and industry.
An innovation workshop is scheduled for spring 2024 and a final draft is
scheduled by end of 2024.
Discussion Highlights
Commissioners commented on or inquired about various related topics
including Maximo asset management program (90% of inventory catalogued;
past staff turnover was a challenge; there is staff now in place to oversee it);
Fort Collins Utilities began using Maximo software about eight years ago;
need to prioritize use of Maximo; using Maximo to make decisions during
Budgeting For Outcomes (BFO) process; staff knowledge transfer and
training between tenured staff and new staff; relaunching asset management
program with current staff.
Senior Director of Integrated Water Sciences and Planning Jill Oropeza
shared that Utilities has set up a new project management structure led by
Senior Director of Integrated Water Operations Jeremy Woolf.
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ii. Water Loss Audit
Water Conservation Assistant Kelly Gordon presented a summary of the
audit with support from Water Conservation Manager Mariel Miller.
Fort Collins Utilities has participated in the American Water Works
Association (AWWA) Water Loss Audit annually since 2016 to ensure the
operation’s accountability and efficiency. All water utilities experience
inevitable water losses during production and supply, which result in financial
loss due to uncaptured revenue and wasted water that could be put to more
beneficial uses.
Staff uses the AWWA M36 Water Loss Audit Manual and Tools and Fort
Collins Utilities Water Utility Data (water supplied, authorized consumption,
system data). In 2022, Unit Total Losses were 10.4 gallons per connection
per day, compared to avoidable real losses of 21.9 gal/connection/day, and
to national scores of 20 to 100 gal/connection/day. Water losses have
improved from 20.22/gal/connection/day in 2019 to 10.4 gal/connection/day
in 2022.
Fort Collins Utilities also participates in the Colorado Water Loss Initiative, a
free program provided by the state’s Department of Natural Resources,
Colorado Water Conservation Board. Next steps: check and understand data,
identify data validity score improvements, and identify water loss prevention.
Discussion Highlights
Commissioners commented on or inquired about various related topics
including the way in which water is valued (80 million gallons of loss per year
or 245 acre-feet [1% of total water] is the equivalent of $15 million per year if
valued based on Colorado Big-Thompson Project share prices); important
exercise to engage in; how to know when cost is justified; fascinating and
challenging question to answer; whether the 10-gallon loss per day per
connection is too low: Water Conservation Manager Mariel Miller stated it’s
not a perfect accounting system but a benchmark to compare from year to
year; a lot of linear feet and miles of piping, aging infrastructure and planned
replacement.
Commissioners commented that enjoyed the presentation; they like the
program and the fact staff is analyzing and addressing data validity
questions; model, estimate, and ways to meter in the future are under
discussion (e.g. City employees who fill a water tank truck with unmetered
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water to irrigate the flowers and plants downtown).
iii. Water Utilities Update
Senior Director of Integrated Water Sciences and Planning Jill Oropeza
reported on one project of interest to the Water Commission: staff members
are working on a raw waterline project in Poudre Canyon below Gateway
Park: a 27-inch waterline became exposed during the 2013 flood; the project
is to trench it deeper and encase it in concrete to protect it; environmental
protections are in place; any questions can be answered by Director of Civil
Engineering Matt Fater; project is going well despite the challenges of
working in the canyon (e.g. water higher than expected this time of year;
hope it will go down as temperatures decrease); completed transition from
old pipe; about 100 feet of pipe in the ground; 500-foot section replacement;
goal is to complete the project by April 1 when spring runoff typically occurs.
iv. Financial Monthly Report
The report will be available later this month; staff will share it with
Commissioners.
8. COMMISSIONER REPORTS
A. Chairperson Radin reported that he and Commissioner Steed attended the Dec. 4
Boards and Commissions “Super Issues” Meeting on Halligan Water Supply
and Water Efficiency Plan; about 35 other boards and commissions members
attended; great presentations by Halligan Project Manager Darren Parkin and Water
Conservation Specialist Alice Conovitz; great questions from other boards and
commissions members; enjoy these interesting “Super Issues” meetings; attended
to see what others thought of these projects; discussion included how the Halligan
project will affect Fort Collins affordability; tension between affordable housing and
water supply; City’s water rights portfolio is highly valued and that’s why costs are
so high; continue to invest money in infrastructure, which leads to increased costs.
9. OTHER BUSINESS
A. Annual Report
Chairperson Radin reported that he’d drafting the 2023 annual report, including a
summary of topics from this year’s meetings, and will share a draft for review before
the Jan. 18 meeting.
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b. Staff Liaison and Business Support III Transition
Announcement that Senior Director of Integrated Water Operations Jeremy Woolf
and Business Support III John Song will fill the Staff Liaison and Administrative
Support roles for one year starting in January.
These roles are on a one-year rotation to provide an opportunity for staff to work
with the Water Commission, and for Commissioners to gain the perspective of staff
working in different areas of the Water Utilities: Water, Water Reclamation and
Biosolids, Stormwater, and Capital Projects.
10. ADJOURNMENT
7:03 p.m.
These minutes were approved by the Water Commission on February 15, 2024.