Tag Archives: Applied Technologies

Addressing 4th District Flooding

We’re making strong progress in addressing flooding concerns in the 4th District and across the city … even if there are no quick fixes or silver-bullet solutions.

City Engineer Kyle Vandercar is sending residents in the Parkway Drive area an update on what’s being done to address issues with the stormwater and sanitary sewer systems.

You can see the whole letter here.

You’ll recall that following the July 22 storms, the city contracted with engineering consultant R.A. Smith National to analyze the storm sewer system in the Parkway Heights area and find solutions to ongoing flooding problems there. We also contracted with Applied Technologies to evaluate the sanitary sewer system in certain areas of the city and make recommendations to reduce “inflow” into the sanitary system and increase capacity.

The Parkway Heights storm sewer study is complete, and you can see the full report at City Hall. It includes several alternatives to ease flooding in and around two especially hard-hit areas — the 500 block of Parkway Drive and 17th Avenue south of Oak Street.

In both places, water is essentially funneling from large sections of the northwest side of town and overburdening the storm sewer infrastructure during larger storms. The fixes involve adding capacity … essentially widening the bottom of that funnel.

  • On Parkway Drive, the staff-recommended option is to build a 36-inch-diameter relief storm sewer between 521 and 531 Parkway, with a new outlet to Oak Creek Parkway.
  • On 17th Avenue, the recommended option is to build a secondary, overland drainage path in addition to the existing pipe system to reduce flooding.

Neither option is set in stone and will require approval by the City Council. And neither option is cheap.

For now, 4th District and Parkway Heights residents should expect to see survey workers in the area before the end of the year, weather permitting. That will be followed by design and preparation of construction plans. I’ll keep you posted as this moves forward.

Meanwhile, the sanitary study work continues across the city, and a final report is not expected until March. The fixes here are more complex, and likely even more costly — including addressing inflow, lift station capacity, emergency relief station pump capacity and pipe design.

Keep in mind that any storm sewer work (like the Parkway Heights options) would also help reduce basement sewer backups, in addition to helping prevent water from flooding streets, spilling over curbs and into front lawns.

I say “help” because it’s become clear to me in the past year that there are no 100 percent fixes here. As Kyle puts it in the letter, “unlimited capacity to the storm and sanitary sewer systems cannot be cost effectively engineered.” Instead, we’re working to identify “improvements which will greatly reduce the chance of flooding and the potential for sewer backups.”

Obviously, the issue quickly becomes how much money it will take to truly make an impact. Most of these are not small projects. The recommended 4th District stormwater project alone, for instance, may cost more than $200,000 — and that doesn’t include any street repaving and sanitary work.

As you know, money is tight and might be getting tighter, and there is limited money from the stormwater and wastewater utilities to fund these. So we’ll have to find other sources, potentially including borrowing.

This raises two questions …

How much should the city spend to address these problems? And how much will citizens support, especially if that means higher taxes?

They are big questions we’ll have to answer in short order. I look forward to the debate — and finding ways to smartly invest in our infrastructure.

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Flood Update: Committee Unanimously Endorses Two Studies

The sewer studies are one step closer to reality.

The Common Council’s Public Works and Public Property Committee voted unanimously Monday night to recommend moving ahead with two separate studies of our sewer system, in light of the July flooding:

  • One, to be done by Applied Technologies, would evaluate the sanitary sewer system at specific areas and make recommendations to reduce inflow and improve system capacity during big rains. The study, which is expected to cost just shy of $30,000 and take four to six months to complete, will specifically look at areas like Parkway Drive/Hemlock Court, Brookdale Drive and Blakewood Court.
  • The second, to be done by R.A. Smith National, pertains more specifically to the 4th District. It would evaluate the stormwater system around the Parkway Heights area (the broader neighborhood around Parkway/Hemlock). This study is expected to cost around $12,000.

The full City Council will consider the studies at its meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday at City Hall.

The committee (in front of about 10 residents) had a good discussion about the scope of these studies, and everyone is anxious to get some answers here. These reports will certainly help.

As to the Parkway-area stormwater study, the study will focus on the area between Hemlock and Walnut streets and essentially be an extension of the 2008-09 study work done by R.A. Smith for the area west of Hemlock to 15th Avenue.

According to a memo from our city engineer: “There are numerous intersections that flooded during the July 22 storm, but this area has reported flooding during even minor storm events, and water from the street is ponding to a level where it is entering homes.”

Of course, this is not the only area of the city where this is occurring, and our engineering department continues to investigate and assemble information for other areas of significant flooding, including Blakewood Court and the intersection of 6th and Marion. Some of this analysis may be done internally, without the need for a formal third-party study.

Indeed, I have been impressed to hear about the ongoing work of our engineering and wastewater departments, who continue to do their own analysis of problem areas by going neighborhood to neighborhood, basement to basement in many cases, to learn more about specific issues faced by property owners.

In other flood-related news, new numbers from the city released Monday showed that 416 property owners have reported damage from water and sewer backups related to the July 22 storms, and the Street Department has picked up nearly 89 tons of flood-damaged debris since July 26.

Repair work in the 200 blocks of Hawthorne Avenue is “substantially completed,” with one lane opening soon.

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Previewing Tuesday’s Council Meeting

Update: Here is the link to the actual agenda. You’ll also note an item about condominium garbage pick-up — a discussion about if, and when, the city should pick up trash for condominium owners. We currently do for some and not for others, with factors like density and whether or not the development is on a public road driving our practice. A formal proposed policy will be discussed be on Tuesday.

It promises to be a busy City Council meeting on Tuesday.

Expected to top the agenda is consideration of two different studies aimed at getting to the bottom of what has caused ongoing flooding in several problem areas in the city, including the areas around Parkway Drive and Hemlock, Blakewood Court and Brookdale Court.

Two of the expected agenda items are:

  • Discussion/motion regarding proposal and engineering services contract with Applied Technologies to evaluate sanitary sewer system at specified areas and make recommendations to reduce inflow to sanitary sewer and improve system capacity during high flows.
  • Discussion/motion regarding authorization for City Engineer to contract with R.A. Smith National for storm sewer analysis at various locations.

The goal of both studies is the same — to see what can be done to limit future flooding problems like those in late July. I emphasize “limit,” as I’m not certain any potential solution, no mater the scope and cost, can completely prevent flooding, even basement backups, during certain record rain events like the one we experienced on July 22.

Still, these studies may provide some answers for residents desperately seeking, and deserving, them.

I and other city leaders are committed to keeping residents posted on this issue and what these studies find.

(In the meantime, here is a copy of a letter with more information on the flooding and next steps being sent this week to hundreds of residents who called to report damage, ask for special pickups, etc.)

The meeting start at 7 p.m. at City Hall. Among other items expected on Tuesday’s agenda are consideration of ordinances restricting “convenient cash establishments” and portable storage units like PODS. Click here to see my previous post on this.

And one other note on the flooding studies: They will also be discussed at a Public Works & Public Property Committee meeting at 6 p.m. on Monday at City Hall. I expect the committee will make a recommendation to the Council at this meeting.

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