Were 9 memoranda produced to hide the truth?
We do know that GVW staff manipulated water consumption and other information that led to the 2012 Master Water Plan, all the while strong-arming water consultants (who averaged between 5 and 7 revisions to each client memoranda), until text and statistical tables satisfied GVW engineers).
Yes, the memoranda hide the truth.
Residents' abhorrence to irrigating farms with chlorinated water from Duteau Creek Water Treatment Plant (DCWTP) resulted in their soundly rejecting the borrowing referendum last November.
the solution is...to no longer throw good money
after bad.
Chlorinated water will no longer irrigate farms and orchards. Undiverted and undammed streams and creeks will flow as they were destined--to
Kalamalka and Okanagan Lakes--
ensuring fish habitat.
Today's residents will not pay for future infrastructure.
As population increases, new residents must paytheir fair share via Development Cost Charges.
Since then, Greater Vernon Water engineers--and the politicians they've misled--circled the wagons and spurned an independent professional MWP review. Greater Vernon Water engineers and colluding politicians instead chose to appoint 18 laypeople to a Stakeholders Advisory Committee to conduct the review. GVW engineers handed each appointee a tome of ~1,000 pages, and then "guided" each review segment, overseen by Committee chair Jim Garlick and GVAC chair Juliette Cunningham.
Do Cunningham and Garlick have vested interests in seeing the MWP proceed unchanged?
Sure they do.
They're two of a contingent of eight elected officials, the majority of whom approved the current Master Water Plan.
Back to the truth.
The tireless champion of truth is Gyula Kiss, whose membership on SAC was denied by the manipulators--GVW engineers--because he was deemed to be "biased".
So GVW are conducting a fixed horse race.
"By making
the adjustments I recommend,
Kalamalka Lake—with the transfer of upland licenses—
could supply
domestic water well past 2052!" G.Kiss
Gyula Kiss' analytical brain has found the solution to the Master Water Plan dilemma. The public will support the solution because it no longer throws good money after bad. Chlorinated water will no longer irrigate farms and orchards. Unamended streams and creeks will flow as they were destined to flow--to Kalamalka and Okanagan Lakes--ensuring sufficient water for fish habitat. Current residents will not bear the brunt of the area's future water costs.
Grab a coffee, and learn the truth from the expert, Gyula Kiss:
"Re: Greater Vernon Master Water Plan 2012
This
plan does not produce the desired outcome of a cost effective solution of
Greater Vernon’s water problems. Instead of maintaining the low cost agricultural
water system the early settlers of the valley built and providing a cost
effective separate domestic system, we maintain a significant, expensive mixed
system that created the problems in the first place.
I would
like to offer some alternate solutions which could reduce the immediate
financial burden on the taxpayers and improve the chances of a positive outcome
of an infrastructure financing referendum.
Technical
Memorandum #5 states:
“Agriculture is an important
industry in Greater Vernon whose on-going economic viability relies on access
to an adequate supply of low-cost water.
Currently, the Greater Vernon Water Utility (GVW) services domestic and agriculture users with treated
water from the Mission Hill and Duteau Creek Water Treatment Plants. Most
agricultural practices, however, do not require
treated water; particularly irrigation or stock watering. The current
agricultural demand averages (180 ML/d),
significantly higher than the peak day demand for domestic use of 57 ML/d. A
strategy within the 2012 Water Master Plan
will be to implement capital projects that, in the long term, reduce use of
potable water for agriculture, while
maintaining a robust, reliable and cost-effective supply/distribution system.”
The
following statement was provided in the 2004 Addendum to the Master Water Plan:
“Separation of the existing combined
water system will provide the most cost effective water management in the long term. Portions of the existing
water distribution system serve both domestic and agricultural irrigation customers (termed the “combined
system”). On an annual basis, approximately 80% of this water is used for irrigation of agricultural land.
With the increasing requirement for drinking water treatment, it does not make economic sense to treat the water
going to irrigation. Separation of the existing combined system into separate domestic water and irrigation water
systems will allow the appropriate water quality to be applied to the end use.
The
newest version of the Greater Vernon Water Master Plan was summarized to the
Stakeholders’ Advisory Committee, with plan objectives as follows:
“Supplying domestic water quality
to the domestic customers within the GVW service area is the primary issue driving the development of a
regional water supply scheme review. Interior Health has stated that treatment improvements and a plan to finance
the necessary capital investments need to be completed. The development of optional regional water supply
schemes that result in the supply of Interior Health compliant drinking water
to the existing customers is a critical
outcome of this study.”
As the
appointed political representative on the Greater Vernon Water Technical
Advisory Committee,
I had an opportunity to assess the proceeding from a perspective that differed from
that of consultants and staff.
One of
my observations was that the existence of the $29 million Duteau Creek Water Treatment
Plant (DCWTP) biased the decision-making process of the consultants and staff.
The
other issue was the fact that significant funds were expended on trying to make the
plant work.
The
current plant at 162 ML/day was not large enough to satisfy maximum daily
demands;other
changes had to be made to the irrigation system at significant costs. The
majority of the $68
million spent to date was spent on the DCWTP and altering the irrigation
system.
Having
made these huge investments it is understandable that there was a major effort
to concentrate
on solutions that would include the existing DCWTP in the final MWP 2013.
In
spite of these efforts there is no denying that roughly $10 million was wasted
on the oversized
plant (the current plant was designed to produce 162 ML/d; the new plan calls for a plant size of 110 ML/d).
Suggestions
to investigate other options were not welcomed. Instead of considering ways of
making alternate solutions work, there were arguments made why it would not
work. As an example:
when it was suggested that we could expand domestic water supply to the entire Greater
Vernon Water system from the Mission Hill Water Treatment Plant (MHWTP), the first
argument was that we did not have enough water licenses on Kalamalka Lake.
When it was pointed out that licenses from Coldstream Creek and Deer Creek totaling over 4,000 ML could be transferred to Kalamalka Lake, the response was that it would be very difficult if not impossible to achieve the transfer.
However, when the consultants proposed to transfer
licenses from BX Creek to Okanagan Lake so we could pump clean Okanagan Lake
water to Goose Lake for irrigation purposes the comment was that the transfer
would be no problem.
The recommended solution of the 2002 MWP was to create an independent, stand-alone domestic system.
The 2013 plan will not do that.
"...Duteau is primarily for cheap water supply for
agricultural purposes."
If
total separation was done the two systems could have operated independently
without interruption.
This
kind of event could happen in the peak irrigation period with serious
consequences. The
Duteau Creek water supply is treated as
if it were free to use however the consultants pleased.
We must
remember that the Duteau supply is primarily for cheap water supply for
agricultural purposes. There is no
agricultural land in the North Okanagan without affordable irrigation water.
All lands classified agriculture land should have the right to receive low cost
water. Otherwise they should have the right to apply for removal from that classification.
"GVW's...proposed 2013 plan will cost about double
what the first consultant group
estimated for total separation
yet the original problem will remain.
Most of
the filtered water produced by the new plant
would still end up on agricultural
crops."
According
to the consultants of 2002 the major problem with the old Vernon Irrigation
District model of delivering domestic water was that they did it through the
irrigation system. Treating all the water regardless
of use would be extremely impractical and very expensive. The recommended logical solution was total
separation.
That
recommendation was ignored in 2004 and the consequences are today apparent in
cost and
delivery problems.
The
proposed 2013 plan will cost about double of what the first consultant group
estimated for total separation yet the original problem will remain. Most of
the filtered water produced by the new plant would still end up on agricultural
crops.
There
were hundreds of pages of reports produced with charts, tables, graphs, etc.
with little
chance that politicians would be reading—let alone understanding—them.
Indeed,
some assumptions were illogical and appeared to be padded to support the recommendations.
For example, the domestic water demand
forecast table, on which the whole plan is built, started with the 2011 forecast at 9,670 ML/a culminating in 2052 at 13,360 ML/a.
In
reality the actual 2011 consumption reported by GVW was 6,359 ML/a and 5,720 in
2012.
By making
the adjustments I recommend, Kalamalka Lake—with the transfer of licenses—could supply
domestic water well past 2052!
Huge
effort was expended on ways to enlarge the Duteau reservoir capacity to
increase our
water supply. Yet the
potential of Okanagan Lake was totally ignored with the comment that we do not
have enough licenses on Okanagan Lake.
As
a matter of fact, the total volume of the licenses we hold on Coldstream
Creek/Deer Creek, BX Creek, Kalamalka and Okanagan Lakes exceeds 23,500 ML/y.
If all
these licenses were transferred to Okanagan Lake—into which all these sources flow—we
would have sufficient water supply for 80-100 years.
These
options should have been investigated at the outset as Okanagan Lake water
would be cheapest domestic source without interfering with the perfectly
functional irrigation system.
In
addition, there would be environmental benefits (e.g. fish spawning) from allowing the
tributaries to complete their flow to Okanagan Lake.
"...instead of financing various projects for the
agricultural separation ... charged cash on top of the finance charges
for the $35 million borrowed.
It would be totally unfair
to domestic customers to continue
with the practice."
"Current customers never recover the funds they
expended."
The
huge treatment costs at the DCWTP are basically recovered from domestic customers.
In 2011 the total treatment cost at the plant was over $1.7 million. Billed domestic
consumption was about 1,500 ML. Thus,
the cost per cubic meter for domestic consumption was around $1.13. That does not include the
amortization cost of the borrowed $29 million ($2 million plus).
At the
same time treatment costs at the MHWTP amounted to $625,577 and the billed
consumption was 5,000 ML. Cost per cubic meter: $0.13, a significant difference.
In the
2013 plan actual treatment costs are not quantified. Financial information is
limited and mainly deals with estimated costs of various projects. When
one compares the estimated costs of the 2004 Amendment with reality ($35
million estimates, $68 million spent) one must be excused for having doubts
about the accuracy of these estimates.
There
is no reference to how the plan is financed. Water customers have been heavily charged
in the last few years for water quality they have not received. The main reason
for this burden was the fact that instead of financing various projects for the
agricultural separation they were charged cash on top of the finance charges
for the $35 million borrowed. It would be totally unfair to domestic customers to continue
with the practice.
Currently
the annual budget of GVW includes $8 million for Master Water projects. We
cannot carry out any
plan based on an annual $8 million charge. It is obvious that the plan must be financed
over 20 years and must be completed as soon as possible so customers can reap the
benefit of their investment while they are still alive.
Another
financial error is that all costs are assigned to the current customer base. No
mention of how development cost charges will affect cash flow in the
future.
The
need for additional water supply is necessitated by growth. Developing these
additional supplies should
be covered by Development Cost Charge funds. Supplementing water supply once the Kalamalka
license is fully utilized should be paid for by DCC’s and should be supplied from
Okanagan Lake (OL).
One of
the curious proposals is to pump OL water to fill Goose Lake (GL), ostensibly
to reduce costs.
Filling GL from DCWTP costs between $129,000 to $270,00
annually. The proposed cost of filling GL from OL would require a pump station
at OL for $2.6 million (amortization over 20 years would be $180,000 per year)
and $160,000 pumping cost annually for an annual total of $340,000.
This is
between 1.25 and 2.63 times more than filling Goose Lake from Duteau Creek
Water Treatment Plant.
click table to enlarge |
MWP
2013 proposes to have a filtration plant built at DC with a capacity of 110
ML/d in 2017. The overwhelming majority of treated water would be produced
during the 92 days of peak demands at which time likely 90% of the water would
be used for irrigation.
Thus, we
would have filtered water for agricultural crops while the 80% of customers
using MHWTP water would not receive filtration until 2022.
There is something
wrong with this picture if the main aim of Interior Health's requirement is to provide
highly-treated water for domestic customers.
A
better alternative to this plan would be to dedicate the DC water supply to
irrigation as it was intended at the outset. It cannot be overstated that
affordable water is paramount to our agriculture industry.
"We
currently budget $8 million annually
for MWP projects.
for MWP projects.
That
could finance a loan of up to $114 million.
Treatment
cost savings from DCWTP could finance
an additional $20 million"
The
current DCWTP should be gradually removed from operation as the domestic system
expands. Untreated water should be provided to all agriculture classified lands
with allocation and allocation fees.
Domestic
water supply should be obtained from the Okanagan Basin water sources (Okanagan
Lake, Kalamalka Lake, Coldstream Creek/Deer Creek and BX Creek) by way of
license transfers.
It
appears that the most affordable plan would be the utilization of Option 7 -
Complete System Separation - Centralized Treatment at Mission Hill - Additional
Flow from Kalamalka Lake (license transfers). Proposed revisions to Consultants’
plans are shown in Table 1 and Table 2 below.
For the
plan to work, we would need license transfer to Kalamalka Lake from Coldstream and
Deer Creeks, both of which are natural tributaries to Kalamalka Lake. We anticipate this plan could achiever
filtration deferral until 2042.
Estimated
capital costs to 2042 would be $98.1 million. If needed, a filtration plant
could be built in 2034 using DCC’s and debt financing. By then earlier debts would have been retired.
For example, the 2011 treatment costs are compared at the two treatment plants: In 2011, treatment costs at Duteau Creek Water Treatment Plant were $1.7 million and 1.7 ML was used by domestic customers (about $0.99 per cubic meter).
At the same time, treatment costs at the Mission Hill Water Treatment Plant were $625,577 and billed volume was 4.6 ML ($0.13 per cubic meter).
If all of the domestic water was treated at Mission Hill, the savings in treatment costs would have amounted to $1.5 million.
Trihalomethane levels from Duteau Creek Water Treatment Plant
are up to four times higher than those at the Mission Hill plant.
Furthermore,
the MHWTP water ultraviolet treatment and chlorination produces an additional
benefit with a significantly lower Trihalomethane (THM) content (40-50 ug/l),
while the treatment at DCWTP was only DAF treatment and chlorination, where the
THM content was 100-200 ug/l.
How
would we finance the plan?
We
currently budget $8 million annually for MWP projects.
That
could finance a loan of up to $114 million.
Treatment
cost savings from DCWTP could finance an additional $20 million if needed.
The
benefit of this system would be huge and total separation would be achieved.
The
2002 MWP was reviewed by a peer group. It would be wise to have the proposal reviewed
by another independent professional review
group to ensure that we are getting the best plan for our money.
It appears
that financing would require that we must seek assent from the taxpayers to borrow
the needed funds.
The
promise of total separation of the domestic system from the agriculture system
would greatly increase taxpayers’ support."
compliments of G. Kiss
Councillor, District of
Coldstream
Greater Vernon
Advisory Committee
Tables (click to enlarge) follow:
(ignore incorrect reference to Option 4 Capital Costs) |
(ignore incorrect reference to Option 4 Capital Costs) |
Addendum:
The following are what SAC members will consider at their Dec. 3 meeting:
Note: the yellow highlighted area, referring to the 2014 winter residential demand at 286 L/ca/d and the July per capita demand at 1,779 L/ca/d. If we use 31 days in July and 55,000 users the total consumption would be 3,033 ML just for that one month. Let's say we would be using only 286 L/ca/d for the rest of the year (a very charitable assumption) it would amount to an additional 5,253 ML for the rest of the summer months the total sum of the consumption would be 8,286 ML for the year. While GVW admits they had some troubles with their software that would be a significantly higher consumption than what was published in their 2014 Annual Report (5,819 ML).
Click table to enlarge |
The following table shows the actual consumption in
Coldstream for the years 2013, 2014 and 2015 partial. Using a conservative
population figure of 10,000, G. Kiss estimated the quarterly water demand for all of
the quarters as presented (consumption/91.25/10,000*1,000). Note the 3rd
quarter per capita at 599 L/d.
If you used the average daily consumption value in the
Coldstream data at 300 L/d and multiplied it by 55,000 (GVW population) x 365 you will get an
annual consumption of 6,022 ML, somewhat closer to reality. click table to enlarge |
And SAC will consider Water Conservation:
Click table to enlarge |
Resources:
1. Some comments regarding the Regional Water Authority, 1991. G. Kiss
2. Greater Vernon Master Water Plan 2002
3. Addendum to the Greater Vernon Master Water Plan 2004
4. TM#9 System Separation Option Analysis 2013.
5. Greater Vernon Water Annual Report 2011.
6. Greater Vernon Water Annual Report 2012.
7. Mike Stamhuis' letter in 2013, comparing Options.
The most important segment of Stamhuis' letter is this: "For example, full separation would permit the option of a separate sub-regionally governed agricultural distribution utility which would have a substantial rate impact on the different jurisdictions in a devolved utility. Independent of devolution, a separated distribution system provides many administrative benefits in that it simplifies decision making around farm classifications, sale of non-potable water, new allocations, and use designation. In addition, there could be economic benefits with expanded use of non-potable water."
8. This from Trafford Hall, head of RDNO in 2012:
"The public will realize that $98 million will solve all the Water Plan's problems," says Kia, adding "which $70 million would not have done...current domestic customers would've paid, virtually forever."
Separating agriculture water from potable for domestic customers should've been the plan all along.
Greater Vernon domestic customers find themselves in an ongoing mess, with no thanks to GVW engineers.
A huge thanks to Gyula Kiss.
We should've listened to him back in 1991.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Share YOUR thoughts here...