MEMORANDUM

 

 

To:

Debbie Van Saun, ACM, Community Development Services

 

 

From:  

Michael Tubbs, Management Analyst

 

 

Re:     

Department of Utilities - Conservation Programs

 

 

Date:  

September 7, 2004

 

 

City of Lawrence Department of Utilities Conservation Programs

 

 

I.       COMMITMENT TO CONSERVATION

 

The City of Lawrence department of Utilities recognizes water conservation as a priority in our water resource strategy.  The long-term goal of the department’s water conservation program is to continue to place our treatment capacity and water supplies at their highest and best use.   The Department of Utilities has demonstrated its commitment to conservation with effort to educate users regarding water conservation best management practices (BMP’s) through press releases, interviews, bill inserts, our website conservation page and brochures.   The department is committed to use good faith efforts to develop new cost-effective practices, and to initiate these practices as they become feasible.  For us -“water conservation is the efficient use of water”.

 

The City of Lawrence Department of Utilities does not currently operate a formal conservation program.  We do have a statutorily mandated Conservation Plan pursuit to the state of Kansas 1990 Conservation Guidelines.  Our emphasis has been on customer education regarding water conservation.  Customers may receive educational materials on demand as well as through bill inserts, brochures and our website conservation page.  We hope to transition to a more comprehensive conservation program in the future, as outlined on the attached matrix.

 

II.      EXISTING AND FUTURE CONSERVATION MEASURES

The attached conservation matrix is a work plan showing how, what, when and where future conservation measures may be implemented.  Additionally, the matrix shows existing conservation measures used by the City of Lawrence Department of Utilities.


Program Areas

Program Levels

Program Strategies

Program Tactics

Scheduling Horizon

Resources Required

Performance Measures/ Impact

(e) Existing

Conservation Measures

City Cost

 

 

 

PUBLIC

AWARENESS,

EDUCATION/

ACTIONS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

American Water Works Association Training

Certification in water resources/conservation

TBD

Literature, multimedia, reading, certification of city staff for teaching via AWWA , Water Conservation Coordinator

Course evaluation by participants and follow up surveys

(e) conservation seminar attendance by staff

 

Various accordingly to type of training

Public Water Conservation Campaign or develop in-house effort if not using WUIW campaign

Newspaper Ads, Brochures, Transit Shelter/Bus Ads, posters, Theatre Slide, Landscape watering guide Radio Spot, TV PSA, KU Sports Arena Ads, Speaker/presentations, K-12 program, website, WUIW ID system on internal material.

2005-2015

 

One-time License Fee of $5k or fee for item.  Funding approx $15-25 K annually, Coordination with USD 497, KWO, and AWWA for K-12 program.

Follow up questions in KU MPA Citizen Survey on awareness

(e) – brochures, Ads, Landscape watering guide and Press Releases Conservation Tips; Web-page.; Plant tours

 

Various - currently less than $5,000 yearly average

Residential Sector:

Single –family

Multi-family

Homeowners irrigation classes; rain harvesting; water audits of domestic use

Teach efficient irrigation methods to homeowners; both sprinkler and drip system

2-4 workshops per year  through 2015  20-25 attendees per class

UT staff scheduling/reservations; P&R staff teach or contract out; literature, AV equipment, demonstration equipment; City facilities as classrooms

1Class Evaluations

2 Number of attendees

3 Track water use

 

 

Est. $500 per workshop

Homeowner landscape (Xeriscape) workshop

2-hour residential workshop

(develop demonstration garden)

2-4 workshops per year  through 2015 20-40 residents per class

UT staff scheduling/reservations; P&R staff for teaching; Xeriscape literature, AV equipment, demonstration equipment; use of city facilities as classrooms

Follow-up survey of attendees to assess implementation of Xeriscape information learned

(e) Low Maintenance Landscape Utility Bill Inserts

 

Est. $500 per workshop

 

Demonstration Garden $2,000

Public Events

Conservation Displays

6 Public Events per year

Staff in cooperation with other departments, display materials, conservation literature

Public Comment books at event

 

 

Initial cost for display $500; $50 per event

PUBLIC

AWARENESS,

EDUCATION/

ACTIONS

 

Non Residential Sector:

Commercial

Industrial

Other (RWD)

Workshops –Top 25 Large water users

Workshop on conservation plan development/other topics

1 workshop per year 2005 - 2015

Video training program, city facilities training/classrooms

1 number of plans developed

2 number of attendees

3 workshop evaluation forms

 

 

$200

Internal city facility management

Workshops/ continuing education for managers of city facilities

2005 – 2015

on-going

Staff time, consultant time, literature; waterless urinals in all city facilities. Demonstration gardens/landscaping

Monitor/ CMO oversight

(e)  low maintenance landscaping at Kaw Plant/ reuse irrigation at WWTP

 

$100

Internal city facility/staff  water efficiency training

P&R/PW department water management training

4 classes/ year

Staff time; literature; AV equipment, demo equipment

Track P&R / PW water use over time

 

 

$100 per class

New employee orientation

Immediate

Develop module for personnel use employee orientation; literature

TBD

 

 

$0.00

 


 

Program Areas

Program Levels

Program Strategies

Program Tactics

Scheduling Horizon

Resources Required

Performance Measures/ Impact

(e) Existing

Conservation Measures

City Cost

Regulation

Large Turf-related facility ordinance

 

Mandatory conservation at facilities of 10 acres or larger

Advise users, check on compliance, and offer technical help to facilitate compliance

TBD -         recommended schedule 2005-2025

Staff time; Water conservation technician; Water conservation coordinator

Level of compliance

 

 

$0.00

 

Water/Wastewater  rate structures

 

2004 Rate Study

 

Inverted block rate for residential ratepayers to reduce average or peak use

 

2004-2009

 

 

Staff time; consultant time

 

Level of use and impact on demand; impact on demand capacity at existing WWTP

 

Pending consideration by CC

 

$60,000 cost of study (approx.)

Water waste ordinance

 

Enforced by Water Conservation Coordinator. Mandatory guideline for daily outdoor water use

Advise users, check on compliance, and offer technical help to facilitate compliance

TBD

Staff time; Water conservation technician;  Water conservation coordinator

 

Level of compliance

 

 

 

$0.00

Incentives to implement water use efficiency techniques

Rebates/ tap fee reduction for reduced tap size/peak demand /retrofit kits

Advise users of use via audit; target high bills users for audit;

2006-2009

review every 3 years

Staff time, funding to set up incentive program

Follow-up survey; number of customers served

 

Est. $10,000 annually

Distribution System leak detection/repair/rehab program

Annual waterline repair/replacement

Current unaccounted for water loss is 6%.

Monitor sales & compare to master meter readings; repair leaks within 24 hour of detection.

On-going

Staff time, consultants, funding

Percent of unaccounted for water greater than 10%

Level of compliance(Leaks repaired within 24 hours)

(e) Water line Rehab/repair program

1M per Year

 

(e)  Water conservation plumbing requirements

 

Enforced by NR

New construction and permitted reconstruction

Advise users, check on compliance, and offer technical help to facilitate compliance

On-going

Staff time

Level of compliance

Uniform Plumbing Code 2000 Edition

(e) water-efficient fixtures new construction

 

$0.00

Planning/

Research

Recycled Wastewater and Rain Harvesting Program

Develop recycled water option for any new wastewater plants to serve outdoor water needs to the south and west growth zones of the city Lawrence

Recycled water used for new development irrigation system that can be served by a wastewater plant on the Wakarusa River.  All large turf related irrigation can be served with recycled water

TBD

Staff time; consultant time; Option needs to be considered during current master plan development

Implementation; level of use and impact on demand

 

Design needs to be incorporated in new WWTP design

 

$10,000 consultant fee; minimal cost since new WWTP on Master Plan list 2011.

 

Post-Implementation Evaluation

Citizen Surveys/ consultant  studies

Coordinated by CMO/ KU MPA

Track/monitor demand model

TBD

Staff time; consultant time

Level of use and impact on demand

 

(e) water demand model  -  B&V

 

$2,500 – 5,000 per  consultant study/survey