Showing posts with label Detroit Water & Sewerage Dept.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Detroit Water & Sewerage Dept.. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 9, 2016

Stormwater Runoff Fees Omitted on 20,000 Detroit Properties

Over 20,000 parcels that contribute stormwater runoff but aren’t being charged will be added to DWSD’s billing system this October.

***  SUMMARY  ***

Every year, billions of gallons of contaminated stormwater runoff and snowmelt pour off roofs, sidewalks, parking lots and other impervious surfaces into Detroit’s combined sewer system, then perhaps to a retention-treatment basin (RTB) and eventually to the wastewater treatment plant. The Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD), Detroit’s retail water agency for the Great Lakes Water Authority (GLWA), says this runoff costs more than $125 million annually.
Federal and state regulators required DWSD to spend more than $1 billion in combined sewer overflow storage facilities (RTBs) to reduce polluted overflows into natural waterways like the Detroit River. The drainage charge to property owners offsets this investment and the drainage treatment costs.
Most DWSD customers have been paying for drainage as part of their water and sewer bills. The City Assessor’s Office and DWSD are working to ensure that all parcels are billed for their share of drainage costs.
DWSD intends to begin a green infrastructure credit program in October. Customers who reduce runoff can earn credits to be applied to their bill. Fair, accurate billing and green infrastructure practices will benefit the city and its residents.
DWSD provides a  Parcel Viewer  on which to search for parcel information by address. Impervious surface area is used to calculate drainage charges. DWSD says it has data from the City Assessor's Office and flyover images to determine impervious surfaces. Property owners who disagree with the data can complete a drainage survey form.
Over 20,000 parcels that contribute stormwater runoff but aren’t being charged will be added to DWSD’s billing system this October. Customers who need to update parcel information or ask questions should contact DWSD.  A Customer Steering Committee meeting has been scheduled for July 14, 2016.
http://www.detroitmi.gov/drainage

Monday, January 4, 2016

GLWA Takes the Reins


As of the first of the year, the Great Lakes Water Authority (GLWA) now manages water and sewer service for most of metropolitan Detroit. It succeeds the Detroit Water & Sewerage Department (DWSD), which becomes a wholesale service purchaser from GLWA and retail distributor exclusively to the city itself, designated DWSD-R (R for Retail).

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Stormwater: Planning to Fix the Present Crisis Twenty Years from Now

At the behest of the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) in its administration of the National Pollution Discharge Elimination System, the semi-autonomous Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD), the City itself, the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments (SEMCOG) and numerous other so-called partners created a huge, bureaucratic, long-range planning and research apparatus as an appendage to DWSD for the management of stormwater, utilizing green infrastructure.


DWSD is a hopelessly dysfunctional public utility incapable of performing duties as basic as compiling and publishing an annual audit.

The organizers set the bloated apparatus on an interminable journey, a mission impossible, gathering data (some of which is already going stale) and planning to restrain future sewer overflows in the region.


Green infrastructure includes:


  • tree planting
  • roof-top plantings
  • swales and rain gardens
  • porous pavement
  • downspout disconnection from sewers
  • the DWSD plans include demolishing a paltry few abandoned homes and replanting the vacant lots (even though the City itself presently claims to be demolishing 200 vacant buildings per week, independent of DWSD plans).


The goals set were remarkably low.  For example, one project “... depicts opportunities for underground storage and infiltration with an annual runoff reduction of approximately 5.4 million gallons at an estimated cost of $2.7 million.” (p.8)




“...[A]n approximation of the runoff benefits for the tree planting, twenty- five (25) demolitions, ten (10) vacant property treatments and one hundred sixty-five (165) residential lot downspout disconnections is 78,600 gallons. The cumulative runoff reduction estimate for the green infrastructure program to-date is 454,400 gallons.”  (p.10)

Bear in mind that annual polluted overflows can run in the billions of gallons.

The planning apparatchiks conceive of green infrastructure as “... typically designed to manage smaller rain events up to the 2-year; 24-hour event.” (p.10) They calculate that, through the end of their third fiscal year (2013), they have spent $2,518,325 to divert 454,400 gallons or (they say) $6 per gallon. (Table 1, p.10)


To sum it up, DWSD’s green infrastructure activities to date and as planned for the future strike me as (1) redundant of the City of Detroit’s similar, larger, but separate activities; (2) so puny as to be meaningless; and (3) way too expensive in proportion to the benefit.  Well conceived, long-range planning is good, but it shouldn’t be at the expense of present, urgent needs.


MDEQ and DWSD’s successor, the Great Lakes Water Authority, would be wise to re-examine the present green infrastructure project with a view of implementing now inexpensive green solutions on a massive, industrial-like scale.

A good way to begin might be to hydroseed vacant spaces or plant hundreds of thousands of seedlings instead of a few thousand saplings per year (at nearly $200 apiece), one here, one there, as they do at present.



Tuesday, October 28, 2014

GLWA, Subwatersheds & Water Quality


With the creation this year of the Great Lakes Water Authority (GLWA), succeeding the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) in the management of regional potable water and wastewater services, imagine the opportunities now to emphasize water quality in the uplands of the system that got short shrift under the old regime.

I’m talking about the small tributaries or subwatersheds of the Clinton, Huron and Rouge rivers.  This long-ignored constituency on the outer fringes has a special place in the relationship between pipes and natural bodies of water, between water chaos and water quality.  

Leaky sewer lines, stormwater overflows, malfunctioning septic tanks and agricultural runoff are all within the purview of GLWA board members, managers and technicians, if not always within their direct authority and control.

In order to better understand the downstream water quality consequences of small, remote ditches and creeks, perhaps GLWA should establish a committee to update (or complete) subwatershed management plans in coordination with the pertinent Area of Concern Public Advisory Councils and representatives of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality.

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Alliance for the Great Lakes, CSOs and Green Infrastructure


The Alliance for the Great Lakes has been monitoring the effectiveness of wastewater treatment in southeast Michigan for a number of years.  It published a report last year describing efforts by regulators to reduce pollution in the Detroit River and Lake Erie.  Following are some excerpts from the report.  http://greatlakes.org/DetroitCSOs

“The Detroit sewage plant releases billions of gallons of combined untreated sewage and runoff into the Great Lakes each year during periods of heavy rain.”

“In 2009 the Detroit plant reported such overflows sent 32 billion gallons of combined untreated and partially treated sewage with storm runoff into the Detroit and Rouge Rivers and beyond to the Great Lakes -- making the plant Michigan’s largest source of combined sewer overflows [CSOs].”

“Due to its poor financial condition, in 2009 Detroit halted work on a large storage tunnel intended to address these overflows.”

[A renewed National Pollution Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit issued to the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) by the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) on behalf of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) required a less expensive means of attempting to control CSOs.  The plan now being implemented will increase the number of retention/treatment basins in DWSD’s system.]

“In 2011, Michigan [DEQ] modified the plant's discharge permit to include green infrastructure provisions to reduce overflows and a revised plan for construction.”

[Green infrastructure as presently construed is expected to reduce CSOs by 10 to 15%.]

“Unfortunately, the final permit issued by Michigan failed to include specific milestones or a timetable for completion of the green infrastructure program…”

“In March 2013, Michigan regulators re-issued the discharge permit with several updates to protect local rivers and Lake Erie from untreated sewage overflows. Now that the permit is final, the Alliance will monitor DWSD’s progress in improving its operations, and participate in community efforts to control phosphorus discharges and develop a ‘green infrastructure’ plan to reduce stormwater entering the combined sewer system.”

[I don’t know how much confidence the Alliance has in retention/treatment basins to control CSOs, but I’m thinking that a lot more emphasis should be put on developing green infrastructure.  For example, let’s stop fiddling around with tree planting at the rate of 3000 or 4000 per year on the “neighborhood beautification” model and start planting on an industrial scale, say 100,000 each year, as they do in Philadelphia and New York.  Maybe John Hantz can help with that.]


 

Thursday, March 13, 2014

New Wrinkle in Water Talks; EM Orr's Alternate Plan; Gov's Re-election Bid

Crain’s Detroit reports a new wrinkle in city/suburban water talks.  Chad Halcom wrote on March 9, 2014:
 
(Excerpts)

“Suburban businesses and residents could have to pay $60 million or more per year into the coffers that pay retired Detroit employees if their elected leaders cannot agree on the creation of a new regional authority…”


“The money apparently would pay the annual contributions of all city workers in the General Retirement System over the next 10 years, not just DWSD's own employees.”


“...another section of [the plan] authorizes Detroit to ‘begin planning a rate stability program for city residents’ in the system, which can in turn ‘provide for affordability of retail rates to be taken into account in the development of wholesale rates…’ ”


“In other words, regional leaders said, a post-bankruptcy DWSD would add nearly $67.5 million per year to its expenses, with little or no ability to raise capital for it in the bond markets and no significant new revenue coming from city retail customers. That really leaves only one other revenue stream.”


Halcom's article doesn’t raise the question, how much of this plan has Governor Snyder’s stamp of approval?  Are Emergency Manager Orr and the governor on the same page concerning these proposals?  


Presumably, in his re-election bid, the governor plans to raise a lot more campaign money and garner a lot more votes in the suburbs than in the City of Detroit.  Is EM Orr really going to torpedo the governor’s re-election plans?




Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Detroit's Emergency Manager Expects DWSD Ratepayers to Double Down


Want to take a closer look at DWSD, water rates and the infrastructure dilemma?



It’s not as if we haven’t paid enough for water services to be in a position to meet infrastructure needs as they come along; it’s that what we paid was so recklessly squandered.  I guess Detroit’s Emergency Manager, Kevyn Orr, thinks the ratepayers should double down with DWSD on infrastructure investments and tack on a stipend for Detroit’s general fund to boot.


We may have to pay more, but I think it should be on our own account, not Detroit’s.


First, let’s consider some of the decisions, practices and omissions over the years that have cost us millions:


(1)  Years ago, DWSD’s director was a professional engineer, with the attendant standards of ethics.  Those standards were sacrificed when the city made the directorship a non-engineer, politically appointed position.


(2)  For 33 years, the wastewater system was under the control of an elderly jurist who was the dupe of some corrupt city politicians to whom the judge gave plenipotentiary powers. Mayors were empowered to disregard city council in matters concerning DWSD.  The judge tossed out the requirement of competitive bidding for water services contracts for the sake of “efficiency” under “emergency” conditions that went on for decades.  The foxes had the keys to the henhouse.


(3)  The same judge piled on layers of additional bureaucracy, none of which made a significant dent in the corruption and mismanagement at DWSD.


(4)  City government in Detroit was a byzantine maze.  Coordination was lacking (a) internally between DWSD offices and (b) externally with other city departments.


(5)  Preventive maintenance was talked about frequently but practiced very little, mainly because maintenance people were in emergency mode most of the time.


(6)  Reports bearing upon clean water standards filed with state and federal authorities contained contradictory statistics.  There is evidence that some discrepancies were intended to mislead. (Copies available on request.)


(7)  Sewage sludge disposal was an unrelenting problem.  Incinerators kept breaking down.  Landfill capacity was limited.  Sludge inventories backed up, often resulting in sludge being recycled, a costly diversion, or being dumped only partially treated into the Detroit River and on to Lake Erie. The Vista calamity came and went at the expense of ratepayers. Ditto Synagro.


(8)  It often took months to get DWSD requisitions for replacement parts to be approved by the city purchasing department.  In some cases, the delay in acquiring new parts was as long as a year or two.  Sometimes this would result in parts being cannibalized from other inoperative equipment awaiting repair.


(9)  Preferential hiring requirements, conflicting union contracts and oppressive work rules complicated personnel administration in particular and management in general.  Hiring took too long.  Preparing replacements for those scheduled to retire was too slow.  Training for state licenses necessary for advancement was untimely.  The quality of training programs was suspect.  Procedures for improvements were cumbersome. 



(10) A consulting firm estimated that DWSD was over-staffed by 80 percent.


(11) Accounting has been hit and miss.  Whole categories of accounts seem to have been unattended.  We know about a few.  For example, storm run-off fees for city businesses went unbilled in some instances for years.  Water bill delinquencies in the city have sky-rocketed.  Some reports have estimated delinquencies at 40 percent.  (Who do you suppose makes up these shortcomings in revenues when costs are tallied at the end of the fiscal year?  You guessed it -- the other ratepayers.)


(12) Auditing?  DWSD responded to my recent request for a copy of its 2013 audit report, due last fall, with the statement that the city had not yet “released” the report and suggested that I not expect the report anytime soon.


(13) Cronyism at DWSD, as in the City of Detroit generally, has been troublesome. Old pals often have the edge in the employment line.


(14) Last but certainly not least, there is the long list of crimes with which most of us are familiar:  fraud, extortion, bribery, bid rigging,  etc., etc. The cost of these is incalculable.


When I have time, I’ll work up a more complete list.


To sum it up, money for infrastructure upkeep was dissipated through mismanagement and corruption.  It wasn’t there when the need arose.  Upgrades had to be postponed year after year, decade after decade.  The water systems (fresh and waste), like the city at large, were crashing faster than city poobahs could borrow to catch up.


The truth is that DWSD is just too big, too far into disrepair, and its processes too outmoded and inefficient.


The solution is to gradually replace DWSD with smaller, more efficient facilities employing the latest technology in locations throughout the region.


Instead, the emergency manager expects ratepayers to start shelling out for it all over again AND to give a bonus of nearly $50 million per year to the city’s general fund on top of it all.


Incredible.

Thursday, February 20, 2014

DWSD: Cooking the Books?



Or trashing the books?  Maybe it's no longer a question of cooking the books.  Maybe the books are beyond cooking.  Cooking the books means dissembling, hiding something under a false appearance, deceiving.  Maybe DWSD hasn't kept  records accurate enough to support an audit.

The Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) didn’t publish its annual audit report last year and now refuses to furnish its wholesale customers in the suburbs with the financial information they need to assess a pending proposal for a regional water authority.  Omitting an annual audit is shirking a duty, dereliction of duty.  

Who's responsible?  DWSD's director is Sue McCormick.  But she may be no more than a puppet for Kevyn Orr, Detroit's emergency manager.

I googled "DWSD annual audit."  What appeared to be the most pertinent result was Detroit Water and Sewerage Department - Financials 

Didn't see any mention of a 2013 annual audit report.  It said, "The Financials page is a listing of annual report, bond and financial statements. This information is provided to show DWSD's overall performance. For a copy of DWSD's Annual Reports or other documents not listed below, please email your request to public.affairs@dwsd.org. "

So I sent an email request.  I'll update this post if and when I get a response.

In the meantime, those reading this post may want to make inquiries of their own.

UPDATE:  Received the following response from DWSD, "Thank you for your email.  The Water and Sewerage Department welcomes your comments and requests.  Please be advised the 2013 Annual Report has not been released by the City of Detroit. Unfortunately, a time frame is not available."




 



Thursday, February 13, 2014

DWSD Critic Became DWSD Mouthpiece

Who wrote this?  Who was the spot-on critic who told it like it is?


“The corruptive influences within the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) over the last several decades raise doubts that the city should remain in control of the operation.”


“...[A]ccusations ran rampant that DWSD awarded millions in no-bid contracts, failed to collect from deadbeat customers and was guilty of gross mismanagement. Some contracts were awarded on the basis of favoritism rather than qualifications.”


“...Detroit officials may be incapable of preventing corruption from polluting the operation.”


“We can only speculate why DWSD is the poster child for Detroit corruption. It may be that inherent in the DWSD structure are all the elements of a perpetuating self-corrupting entity. Whether the water department’s besmirched reputation could be made whole under a restructured regional authority is conjecture.”


This was written by none other than Bill Johnson, Media Sage, shortly before he was bought off, strike that, hired by DWSD as Resident Mouthpiece.


Those downtown government offices all seem to have revolving doors, with the same cast of characters coming and going.  And I’m just talking about the city.  Now think about the county.  Musical chairs.  And a recipe for bankruptcy, city and county.

Where are the fresh, new faces?  Fresh, new ideas?  I suspect most of them left for cleaner, greener pastures.  But I think I see a few on the new City Council.  Let’s hope.

A New Plan for Water Services in Southeast Michigan

My view is that DWSD has broken the contracts with its wholesale customers in the suburbs.  The question becomes, what do we replace them with?  I haven’t thought this out completely, but I want to keep the discussion moving.  Here’s a general outline of my thoughts:


I.    Long range goals


         A.    Prop up Detroit.  Somebody has to do it.  It should be the State of Michigan or the federal government, not Detroit’s suburbs.  It’s too big a burden.  Gov. Snyder should be pressed for a solution. He wants to be re-elected.  Let him prove his mettle.


B.    Form a regional water authority.  Include participation by counties like Monroe, Washtenaw, Livingston and St. Clair.  Elect members of its governing board. Detroit should be included as part of Wayne County. There should be one elected board member for every 350,000 county residents.  Any counties with a smaller population would have one board member.


C.    The regional water authority would own and operate all water-related facilities in the region.  All existing facilities would be appraised and the net value, if any, reimbursed over time and debt thereon assumed by the new authority.


D.    Outmoded facilities would be phased out and replaced.  Federal revolving fund legislation needs to be updated and expanded to include a broader range of infrastructure.

1.  freshwater:  negotiate with KWA to expand into the northern suburbs.

2.  wastewater:  replace the central facility in Detroit with several smaller, state-of-the-art installations throughout the region and/or expand and modernize existing plants in Pontiac, Warren, Ann Arbor, etc.

II.    Strategies for implementation:  Stay tuned.