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Water Board Minutes
November 17, 2016
Fort Collins Utilities Water Board Minutes
Thursday, November 17, 2016
Water Board Chairperson City Council Liaison
Rebecca Hill, 970-402-1713 Wade Troxell, 970-219-8940
Water Board Vice Chairperson Staff Liaison
Brett Bovee, 970-889-0469 Carol Webb, 970-221-6231
ROLL CALL
Board Present: Chairperson Rebecca Hill, Vice Chairperson Brett Bovee, and Board Members
Kent Bruxvoort, Phyllis Ortman, Andrew McKinley, Duncan Eccleston, Lori Brunswig and
Alexander Maas.
Board Absent: Board Members Steve Malers, Michael Brown, and Jason Tarry.
OTHERS PRESENT
Staff: Carol Webb, Katherine Martinez, Donnie Dustin, Adam Jokerst, Meagan Smith, and
Rebecca Everette.
Members of the Public: Colorado State University students Sean Houston, Emily Merrell, and
Taber Bassett.
Meeting Convened
Chairperson Hill called the meeting to order at 5:30 p.m.
Public Comment
None
Approval of October 20, 2016 Board Meeting Minutes
Board Member Kent Bruxvoort moved to approve the October 20 meeting minutes.
Board Member Phyllis Ortman seconded the motion.
Vote on the motion: It passed unanimously, 7-0 with 1 abstention.*
*Vice Chairperson Brett Bovee abstained due to his absence at the October meeting.
Staff Reports
Water Resources Monthly Report
Water Resources Manager Donnie Dustin summarized the October report. It was quite warm,
almost 9 degrees above the average temperature for October. Precipitation was only 21 percent
of average for October; very dry. Poudre River stream flows were below average. Colorado-Big
Thompson Project (CBT) system remains high at 76% of capacity; it’s 120% of what it normally
is at this time of year. The snowpack is basically nonexistent, but today’s snow will add to it.
Climate outlooks for the next three months indicate normal precipitation and above normal
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temperatures for the northern Front Range and northern mountains.
Halligan Quarterly Report
Water Resources Engineer Adam Jokerst provided an update on the Halligan Reservoir project.
The schedule for the draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) has been extended by five
months; finishing the draft will take $1.1million additional dollars; delays are mainly due to
water quality studies, which are driving this process. The studies have mainly to do with
temperature and other water quality issues. Staff finalized 17 of the 27 technical reports needed
for the EIS; chapters one and two have been written. The City now owns a mining claim on a
piece of Bureau of Land Management property near the reservoir site.
Staff has engaged in public outreach: met with Environmental Protection Agency staff, presented
to the Colorado Water Conservation Board’s South Platte Basin Roundtable, and the Northern
Water Fall Users Meeting. The City signed an agreement with Northern Water to allow Halligan
consultants to use the water quality models being used for the Northern Integrated Supply Project
(NISP) to speed the process. The City is also collecting water quality data from the North Fork of
the Poudre River if needed to validate water quality models in the future. Despite the recent
delays, which are due in part to the complicated nature of multiple projects in the same basin, the
process is reaching the point of completing the final steps and final reports for the EIS.
Discussion Highlights
Board members inquired about various related topics, including the 401 certification process, the
state’s Lean Program for improving federal and state water project permitting processes (part of
the Colorado Water Plan), the difficulties of providing information to multiple agencies that
don’t communicate, and the project’s increasing costs due to delays. One board member
mentioned a conversation with a staff member of U.S. Sen. Cory Gardner, who introduced
legislation last session that would have imposed time limits on the U.S. Corps of Engineers and
EPA and may introduce the same legislation again; the board member suggested staff share this
Halligan report as documentation of costly delays. Mr. Jokerst stated he would follow up.
Water Supply Vulnerability Study
On Tuesday, City Council approved a Water Supply Vulnerability Study in the 2017-18 budget,
which Water Board had recommended. Water Resources staff suggests conceptually creating an
advisory committee for the study, consisting of Water Resources staff, Water Board member(s)
(a board subcommittee), CSU professor(s), and community member(s). The committee would
begin monthly meeting in December to determine the vulnerability study’s strategy, goals, and to
help write a Request for Proposals to hire a consultant. Chairperson Hill stated she would email
board members to inquire about their interest in serving on the subcommittee.
Utility Rates – Status Update
Water Resources and Treatment Operations Manager Carol Webb summarized City Council’s
approval on Tuesday of utility rates increases: 5% rate increases for water, wastewater, and
stormwater, and light and power. Ms. Webb gave kudos to Chairperson Hill for her well-
articulated support of the rate increases during public comments, which Ms. Webb stated
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convinced Council to approve the increases, which are required for maintenance, repairs, and
capital projects.
A board member inquired about stormwater improvements in the Buckingham neighborhood and
whether it had been planned. Ms. Webb stated every utility follows a master plan that feeds into
a capital projects plan for future needs, and would follow up and provide details. She also stated
stormwater staff will plan to give periodic updates to Water Board in 2017.
Downtown Plan
(Attachments available upon request)
Senior Environmental Planner Rebecca Everette presented a summary, status report, and details
of the Downtown Plan. Public comment on the draft plan is from November 7 to December 11;
staff will revise and finalize the plan December 12 to 30, and City Council is scheduled to review
and adopt it on January 17.
The Downtown Plan is meant to be a strategic guiding document; the last Downtown Plan update
was completed in 1989. The vision for downtown shifted in the 1980s to bring people back to
downtown; it was competing with the new Foothills Mall. Downtown has been very successful
in recent years, with a lot of residential development. Staff is now focused on how to maintain
success and plan for the future. The planning process has spanned two years so far, starting with
issue identification, scoping project, talking with the community, and refining goals and crafting
a plan for City Council review and adoption. The project budget was $236,000 including
consultants and public outreach (community engagement).
Discussion Highlights
Board members commented on and inquired about various topics, including land use code
updates, access to parking, the Poudre River Plan, and Jefferson Park at Linden (the railroad
owns the land and chose not to renew the City’s lease). Ms. Everette replied that parking is
discussed in the plan, including reducing demand with easier access to alternative transportation.
She also suggested that Water Board request Natural Areas Department to provide an update on
the Poudre River Plan at a future meeting; the kayak park was funded with $1 million each from
the General Fund and Stormwater Fund.
Board Member Alex Maas moved that Water Board recommend City Council adopt the
Downtown Plan as it reflects the priorities and concerns of the board as discussed during
two Water Board work sessions on August 6, 2015 and November 17, 2016.
Board Member Duncan Eccleston made a friendly amendment to correct the motion to
state “August 6 work session and November 17 regular meeting.”
Vote on the motion: there was no second. Motion failed.