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ORGANIZING A STORMWATER UTILITY

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Presentation on theme: "ORGANIZING A STORMWATER UTILITY"— Presentation transcript:

1 ORGANIZING A STORMWATER UTILITY
2006 SESWA Stormwater Utilities and NPDES Permitting Seminar ORGANIZING A STORMWATER UTILITY Stephen R. Lienhart, P.E. Water Resources Program Director URS Corporation Daryl Hammock, P.E. Water Quality and Environmental Program Manager City of Charlotte, North Carolina

2 Starting With an End In Mind

3 Charlotte Before the Program
General fund paid for projects in City right-of-way. (Although solutions are watershed-wide) Private property owners could participate through watershed assessment. Most projects were not constructed due to lack of support from citizens. Projects constructed were “segmented” in City right-of-way.

4 Charlotte Before the Program
1985 NCSU Water Resources Research Institute Study 1987 City Council Awareness Raised by staff Clean Water Act / Phase I Rules coming 1989 City Council endorsed development of a comprehensive program including service fee 1989 Storm Water Advisory Task Force; Staff, consultant, & citizens

5 Storm Water Task Force Key Policies
Council Adopted Policy: 1991 Fund SW service with SW revenues Already spending 5.5m in several areas Meet NPDES requirements; improve water quality Address the existing backlog of repairs within 10 years – defined as problems coming in faster than can be repaired Routinely clean and maintain system Complete master planning in 5 years

6 Storm Water Task Force Key Policies
Educate public about SW services and activities Distribute cost to rate payers in accordance with their contribution to the problem (impervious area) Simplify rate structure for single-family residential customers Maintain initial fee rate for 5 years Coordinate (and eventually consolidate) with Mecklenburg County Charge fee to all public properties including streets, roadways, highways

7 Extrapolations About Infrastructure: Forming Goals
Basis for Funding level 2400 miles of storm drainage 170,000 storm drains 10,000 were >80 years old 50,000 were >30 years old 2,500 were broken 9,700 were blocked Replacement of inadequate system will cost between $100 and $500 million Would need funding program / fee structure to provide this…

8 What We Thought We Needed
More on the fee in a moment…

9 Public Education Efforts

10 Public Education Efforts
Early Public Education Efforts Ongoing Public Education Efforts Customers with service requests Individual project communication General Public & NPDES requirements Program Measures

11 Early Public Education Efforts
Utility created in 1993 Massive education campaign started Continued justification of program Bills are coming! Charlotte Observer newspaper articles on projects and visible benefits of the fee

12 Financial and Implementation Realities

13 What We Thought We Needed

14 Developing Financial Options
From goals and revenue requirements, Determine Revenue Sources Residential accounts(114,000 homes) Commercial accounts(14,500 acres) State / City accounts? Service fee or some sort of tax? Set out to answer these questions

15 Developing Financial Options
Get guidance from Elected officials through choices !! Minimal Recommended Expedited Maintain Current Efforts Meet NPDES Provide Maintenance Provide Capital Improvement

16 The Fee vs. Tax Illustration
Single Family Residential @ 2500 Sq. Ft. Impervious $.06 Property Tax Value Monthly Fee(’93) Tax Increase $ 71,000 $ $3.55 $ 50,000 $ $2.50 $150,000 $ $7.50

17 The Fee vs. Tax Illustration
Commercial/Industrial Accounts @ Variable Impervious Square Footage $.06 Property Customer Monthly Fee Tax Increase Bank of America $ $15,000 (1.9 acres) Eastland Mall $4, $ 2,900 (78 acres)

18 Charlotte’s Initial Storm Water Fee
Determined fee needed to generate revenue from accounts Original proposal: $3.07 variable + $.48 fixed City Council made two major fee-reducing decisions: City-owned impervious fee: $2.5 million in 1993 1 cent Property tax contribution; $2.5 million in 1993 Final proposal: $2.12 variable + $.48 fixed

19 Early Revenue Projections

20 Reality of New Utility – Early 90’s
Awareness of new program was high & Charges began appearing on bills Citizens began becoming very assertive in requesting service The utility induced new demand for drainage repairs 10-year goal of high priority repairs could not be met Master Planning as envisioned was never completed Changes to financing strategy were needed

21 Reality of New Utility – Early 90’s
An “accelerated” program was introduced Council directed staff to begin “Balanced Portfolio” to meet wider range of needs Committed funding to numerous high priorities, instead of all to flooding Included some funding for Neighborhood Improvements, Economic Development Investments, Transportation Projects, Water Quality and Stream Stabilization Master Planning as envisioned was never completed

22

23 The Acceleration Proposal
Six years of 10% fee increases beginning in FY97 Bond Funding became a huge part of the accelerated program Through high citizen awareness and expectation, City Council supported this accelerated program

24 The Acceleration Proposal

25 Success Factors and Flaws

26 Mistakes That Can Be Avoided
Not realizing affect new fee has on citizen expectations, goals, and projections Evaluate State legislation on; Ability to have a utility at all Ability for local utility fees to be applied to NPDES requirements – 1999 Durham, NC case Operation of a utility in a County as well as a Town Ability to establish Post-Construction Ordinance that meets local drivers Specific long term plans rarely hold true – Plan on “Adaptive Management” Realize that things are going to cost more than you think - Allow some cushion

27 Successes Comprehensive Fee model Early and often public communication
Helps to have combination of flooding/infrastructure drivers in addition to NPDES drivers SWAC – Citizen Advisory Committee trust and support Consider combinations of financial options Simple and strong ranking system – Just say NO to squeaky wheels Street water qualifies…and get elected official buy-in Impervious basis to fee

28 Successes: Balanced Portfolio Capital Strategy
Modern Version Repairs to Storm Drains Channel Projects Flood Control Neighborhood Projects Transit/Transportation Projects Economic Development Pollution Control Stream Restoration

29 Challenges of Success Expenditures lag behind appropriations
May cause significant buildup of funds Causes concerns with accountants Retrofits are much harder than new construction Stop using fee model as a cash flow tool Use Fee model for long term budgeting Use Cash flow model for month to month

30 Our Future Success Programmatic Goals
Complete the backlog of large capital projects and erosion problems Meet federal mandates, support City goals Continue transition from reactive, to proactive repairs Maintain a Balanced Portfolio of activities Integrate water quality into projects Financial Goals Revenue bonds to complete backlog Stop selling bonds; reduce debt service, become PAYG-supported Fee increases = minimal, inflation after all backlog complete

31 Questions and Answers


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