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HomeMy WebLinkAboutMemo - Mail Packet - 1/25/2022 - Memorandum From Theresa Connor Re: Regional Water Efforts Through American Rescue Plan (Arpa) Funding Utilities Executive Director electric · stormwater · wastewater · water 222 Laporte Ave. PO Box 580 Fort Collins, CO 80522-0580 970.221-6702 V/TDD: 711 utilities@fcgov.com fcgov.com/utilities M E M O R A N D U M DATE: January 14, 2022 TO: Mayor Arndt and City Councilmembers FROM: Theresa Connor, Interim Utilities Executive Director THROUGH: Kelly DiMartino, Interim City Manager RE: Regional Water Efforts through American Rescue Plan (ARPA) Funding As a follow-up to discussion at the January 11, 2022, Work Session, staff would like to provide clarification on the Regional Water initiative, being used internally to frame a reorganizat (Water, Wastewater, and Stormwater) areas together under a single leadership position in Utilities. The In December of 2018 the Regional Leadership Initiative, a group convened by the Community Foundation of Northern Colorado and Weld Community Foundation, initiated a strategic plan around water security in Northern Colorado (Larimer and Weld Counties). These conversations between water suppliers in Northern Colorado have begun to determine how organizations can work together more effectively to deliver reliable, affordable water to the communities and the region at large. Initial conversations were held with the City Managers and Utility Directors from a subset of cities within Northern Colorado, as well as the General Managers of the Water Districts. An initial briefing was provided to the Mayors, Mayor Pro Tems, and City Managers at the Regional Leadership breakfast on October 7, 2021, to get initial feedback and . Regional water conversations can generally be framed of the doabl , referring to the notion that it can be difficult for collaboration across service boundaries due to a number of legal, regulatory, financial and organizational factors. Further, there is a shared concerned throughout the region that, as communities throughout the Denver Metro region and Northern Colorado grow, the competition for water is becoming very fierce in part because efforts to protect western slope water have grown in the past decades, which has driven communities in the Denver Metro region to look to Northern Colorado for water sources. This is evident with the Thornton water strategy that began in the 1980s to acquire high quality water resources and continues today with Aurora purchasing the Whitney Ditch in Windsor. Without a coordinated, consolidated approach to state and federal legislation related to water supply policy, Northern Colorado communities will continue to face more competition for water resources with the potential to drive further scarcity and greater impact to natural systems within the region. The need for an inclusive, productive environment for these discussions is critical to their success. The next step for the regional water discussion is to send letters of commitment out to the various municipal water suppliers in the Northern Colorado region to determine if there is interest in continuing these discussions. The Community Foundation has been sponsoring this effort to date. The plan has always been to expand stakeholder involvement at key points in time after a working agreement is established. Strategies for effectively engaging other stakeholders including, but not limited to, irrigation ditch companies, agricultural users and watershed coalitions are being formed. These regional discussions are very preliminary and aimed at finding where there is ability to work together to strengthen all of the systems. Within the discussions, there are also other ideas being discussed such as emergency interconnects between the water transmission and distribution systems of the various water suppliers to be able to address mutual aid needs such as impacts to water systems from natural disasters or other service interruptions. Currently, these are only ideas and there is no consensus on moving these discussions forward. Any such idea would take substantial discussion and action by various elected bodies to implement. The intention of the discussions is to add value to regional water initiatives, avoid redundancies, and encourage existing autonomy through greater collaboration. Regardless of the direction and character these regional discussions take, staff and Council alike are obligated under our Code and Charter to ensure that any Utility expense or programming exists to serve the collective benefit of Fort Collins Utility ratepayers, in this case the service area of Fort Collins Water customers. Modifications to the recovery plan have been made to clarify the regional water opportunities as well as include language to promote use of ARPA funds to address utility assistance options for customers of water districts as suggested. When considering the need for transformational actions to ensure Fort Collin recovery both today and in the future, the pandemic and natural disasters experienced in 2020 demonstrated the need for reliable utility services and especially that sustainable, reliable water supplies are critical to the communities recovery and resilience for future challenges. There is need to transform our approaches with our regional partners, engagement of our community and our approach to workforce development to meet future challenges and ensure delivery of high- quality services. The pandemic and wildfires further demonstrated that none of us can stand alone or in isolation from these influences and therefore we must consider how we work together for true resilience as we prepare to face further uncertainty in the future. CC: Travis Storin, Chief Financial Officer SeonAh Kendall, City Recovery Manager Lindsay Ex, Environmental Services Director