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Water is treated by the City's water treatment plant originally built in 1967 and expanded <br />in 1995. The plant has a treatment capacity of 36 million gallons per day (MGD). The City has a <br />total of 14.5 million gallons of potable water storage capacity, with 4 million gallons of the total <br />capacity contained in elevated storage. <br />Industrial is the primary retail water use for the City. In 2023, nearly eighty-two (82) <br />percent of retail water metered was for industrial use. Single-family residential use accounted for <br />nine (9) percent, commercial use was five (5) percent, agricultural use was less than one (<1) <br />percent, multi -family use was two (2) percent, and institutional use was one (1) percent of water <br />use in 2023. <br />See.12.06.073-Utility Profile <br />The Certificate of Convenience and Necessity No. for the City of Paris is 10480; The Public <br />Water Supply No. is 1390002; The Texas Water Development Board Regional Water Planning <br />Group is Region D; The utility is located in Lamar County, Texas; The service area covers 38.12 <br />square miles; Pat Mayse Lake and Lake Crook are the water sources; Pumping capacity is 54 <br />MGD; Treatment capacity is 36 MGD; Storage capacity is 14.5 million gallons; Wastewater <br />treatment capacity is 7.25 MGD; Annual water reuse volume is between 5 and 17 million gallons. <br />A completed Utility Profile for Retail Water Suppliers that includes information regarding <br />population and customer data, water use data, water supply system data, and wastewater system <br />data for the City of Paris will be submitted with this Plan to the Texas Commission on <br />Environmental Quality and the Texas Water Development Board. <br />See. 12.06.074 -Water Conservation Goals <br />Due to the level of industrial use of water in the city, the total gallons per customer per day <br />(GPCD) metric is disproportionate and largely not influenced by residential water use. The level <br />of industrial use is independent of population, climate and behavioral factors and instead based <br />primarily upon the economic drivers of the individual industries. As a result, meaningful five (5) <br />and ten (10) year conservation goals for total GPCD are not practical to obtain and are solely <br />dependent upon industrial demands. The total GPCD for the City in 2023 was six hundred thirty- <br />three (633). <br />Residential use from 2019 to 2023 averaged fifty-six (56) GPCD, a value that is well below the <br />residential GPCDs of most public water suppliers in the state. The goals for the City are based <br />upon guidance from the State of Texas Water Conservation Implementation Task force of 2004, <br />which suggested a 0.5% reduction in usage per year. The City's five (5) year goals are four hundred <br />fifty-three (453) for total GPCD and fifty-six (56) for residential GPCD. The City's ten (10) year <br />goals are four hundred thirty (430) for total GPCD and fifty-five (55) for residential GPCD. <br />Page 14 of 17 <br />