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Water Conservation Planning June 3, 2008

Water Conservation Planning June 3, 2008. Lee Keck Division of Water Supply. Why discuss Water Conservation?. Conservation appears inevitable Informed and knowlegable of the subject Framework for discussion, consensus and action. Objectives of this presentation.

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Water Conservation Planning June 3, 2008

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  1. Water Conservation Planning June 3, 2008 Lee Keck Division of Water Supply

  2. Why discuss Water Conservation? • Conservation appears inevitable • Informed and knowlegable of the subject • Framework for discussion, consensus and action

  3. Objectives of this presentation • Why do we need a Water Conservation Plan? • What is Water Conservation? • Do all plans look the same? • How is a plan developed?

  4. Basis for Needing a Water Conservation Plan

  5. Tennessee Safe Drinking Water Act 68-221-702. Declaration of policy and purpose. — Recognizing that the waters of the state are the property of the state and are held in public trust for the benefit of its citizens, it is declared that the people of the state are beneficiaries of this trust and have a right to both an adequate quantity and quality of drinking water.

  6. Inter-basin Water Transfer Act T.C.A. 69-7-201 et Seq. Requires that the transfer of water from one basin to another be permitted

  7. Water Resources Information Act of 2002 T.C.A. 69-8-301 et seq. Requires the Registration of Water Withdrawals

  8. Other mandates related to conservation and water supply: • Soda-Straw Amendment (heavy pumping that interferes) • ARAP (Aquatic Resource Alteration Permit) • Source Adequacy Requirement (Design Criteria) • NPDES (Waste Assimilation)

  9. SDWA Rules Related to Water Supply and Conservation 1200-5-1-.05(9) – Where feasible require PWSs to interconnect 1200-5-1-.05(10) – Water Systems must plan for expansion when they reach 80% of design capacity 1200-5-1-.17(7) – CWSs must have an EOP (Emergency Operations Plan) – Many CWSs had Drought Management Plans. Some were reluctant to implement them. 1200-5-1-.17(9) - Minimum positive pressure of 20 psi throughout distribution system 1200-5-1-.17(14) – 24 hours of distribution storage based on average daily demand (or meet other requirements) 1200-5-1-.17(37) – Demonstrate viability (CD Rule)

  10. Legislative Mandates focusing on drought management, water conservation and regional water development include: HB 2669 SB 3613 HB 4209

  11. Drought Management Planning, Water Conservation and Regional Water Development are inter-related. • Each plan depends on the other, or is a contingency of another.

  12. What is Water Conservation? Water conservation is an attempt to reduce the amount of water lost, wasted or used (not just during an emergency or water shortage caused by drought but at all times) moving forward. The goal is to allow water purveyors and users to make the most efficient use of a seemingly diminishing and valuable resource.

  13. Issues To be Addressed • The benefits of Water Conservation may have unintended consequences. Benefits depend on the source and the receiving source. • Unused treatment plant capacity could require higher rates. Water Systems need to sell water (up to their capacity). It pays the bills. • Water Quality problems may result from lower demand, storage tank turnover, etc. requiring increased flushing

  14. Issues To be Addressed Cont. • The Benefits of Water Conservation vary: • A greater beneficial impact on aquifers (such as the sands in West Tennessee) than on stream sources where water is returned to the source. • Conservation benefits are greater when derived from lawn irrigation, agricultural irrigation, sod and nursery production and recreational uses (these include irrigation of golf course fairways, greens and athletic fields). • Conservation can also conserve energy as well as reduce water treatment costs (plant size and chemical use)

  15. Conservation must address • Local conditions. Every community has unique water, economic, and social needs. • These include: • Industrial needs • Recreational opportunities and needs • Population and groups served • Critical Uses – hospitals, elderly, etc.

  16. Specific Needs and Concerns • Livestock (Non-potable uses, sometimes resulting in additional demands on Public Water Suppliers) • Nursery Industry, Landscaping (Also non-potable) • Golf Courses, (Greens and Fairways) Athletic Fields, Institutional Landscaping • Water quality issues – temperature, disinfection byproducts, etc. • Conflicts between uses (livestock, recreation, drinking water, etc.) • Cross-connections • Concern for aquatic life

  17. 9 Steps in Developing a Water Conservation Plan Step 1 Develop a Water System Profile. Consider: sources customer groups seasonal uses hydraulic limitations critical water needs water loss area growth

  18. 9 Steps in Developing a Water Conservation Plan Step 2 Prepare a Demand Forecast. Consider: Population projections Non-residential demand (industries, commercial, etc.) Un-accounted for water (without conservation)

  19. 9 Steps in Developing a Water Conservation Plan Step 3 Describe Planned Facilities. Project the facilities the system would need to construct in order to meet future demands. Water Treatment Transmission Lines Water Storage Sources

  20. 9 Steps in Developing a Water Conservation Plan Step 4 Identify Water Conservation Goals. Goals of communities will not be the same. Expectations differ with regard to per capita water use, landscaping, initial costs associated with conservation, level of efficiency, etc.

  21. 9 Steps in Developing a Water Conservation Plan Step 5 Identify Water Conservation Measures. Meter replacement Separation of irrigation systems Service connection metering Automated sensors/telemetry Rebates Landscape efficiency programs Pricing schedules

  22. 9 Steps in Developing a Water Conservation Plan Step 6 Analyze Benefits and Costs. Marketing, public information and technical assistance Program Administrative costs Additional infrastructure costs Post-phoned infrastructure costs Rebate programs (replacement of fixtures, etc.)

  23. 9 Steps in Developing a Water Conservation Plan Step 7 Select Conservation Measures. Factors influencing selection will include: Overall program costs Rate structures that favor use of recycled water for some uses Staff requirements and other resources Regulatory issues and legal constraints (e.g. cross connection potential) Environmental Impacts

  24. 9 Steps in Developing a Water Conservation Plan Step 8 Integrate Resources and Modify Forecasts. Once water conservation measures have been evaluated and selected, the supply and demand forecasts should be revised.

  25. 9 Steps in Developing a Water Conservation Plan Step 9 Implementation and Evaluation Strategy. The final step in a plan is to determine what actions and resources are need to implement the plan. Staff required Ordinances (new and/or changed) Training of staff Public Information, Technical Assistance Monitoring, Evaluation and Updating Timeframes for implementation

  26. Currently Missing? • State Mandates • Rules • Policy and Guidance • Evaluative Tools

  27. Questions? Comments? Omissions? Lee Keck Environmental Manager 2 Division of Water Supply E-mail Address: Lee.keck@state.tn.us

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