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,xN14?1 y' .*07' <br />Special City Council Meeting <br />September 19, 2002 <br />Page 4 <br />account for sidewalks, curbs, street and alley repair. Mr. Campbell said they <br />were obligated to maintain good roads to their plant and to the master lift station. <br />They also have concrete work that they do around the plant. It may not be a curb, <br />but it will be like a curb where you knock -off something on one of the basins and <br />have to do concrete repair. <br />Mr. Campbell explained the $85,000 in the filter beds and valves account for the <br />Water Production Department. He said that amount is to replace the effluent <br />valve controllers on ten valves on the filters. Mr. Campbell said the new rules <br />and regulations require that all of the filters be monitored continuously for the <br />quality of the water output. If you surge the filters, then that water quality can <br />go up and spike the controls that are on the filters, which were put on there eight <br />years ago when the plant was modified. They are wearing out and they are going <br />to upgrade them to better controls. <br />Councilman McCarthy questioned the sidewalks, curbs, street and alley repair <br />account again and Mr. Campbell advised that the street and alley repair is <br />basically for materials that are put on the roads. After discussion, the City <br />Council agreed by a show of hands to cut $6,000.00 from this account. <br />Councilman Plata questioned the Account for Sludge Removal at the Water <br />Treatment Plant. Mr. Campbell said two old settlement basins from the Maxey <br />Water Plant were used when the sludge handling facility was put in. Workers <br />cannot get the sludge out fast enough. Mr. Campbell said he wanted to put <br />automatic sludge handling equipment in the bottom of those basins. This will <br />scrape the sludge and keep it mixed up so it can be sprayed on the field. He said <br />there is a new rule called the recycle rule. The water that goes around to <br />backwash the filters goes to a sump and it is pumped back for the sludge to be <br />removed out of it. Then the water is decanted over and goes back to the head of <br />the plant for treatment. If you cannot take the sludge out of the pit efficiently <br />then the water that comes back is a bad quality and they have to shut down the <br />recycle system and dump it into the creek. If you dump into the creek, the water <br />has to meet a certain quality. The city does not have the facility to treat water <br />that goes to the creek so they have to make sure that they recycle all of the water. <br />