Orange County NC Website
91 <br />Chair Bernadette Pelissier <br />January 9, 2012 <br />Page 2 <br />At our January 12, 2012 meeting, the OWASA Board will discuss a Proposed Drought Response <br />Operating Protocol (DROP) which describes the procedures (including water purchases) and <br />criteria that OWASA will use for making water supply and demand decisions during an extended <br />drought. At the meeting, the Board will also discuss the timing of when OWASA should initiate <br />a request to the North Carolina Environmental Management Commission to convert our Jordan <br />Lake water supply Level II allocation (future) to Level I (active). The agenda materials for the <br />January 12, 2012 meeting can be found at: http:// www. owasa. org/about/board- meeting_s.asl2x. <br />Rogers Road Community <br />OWASA continues to work closely with the County staff (and other local governments) to <br />provide information regarding the provision of water and sewer services to the Historic Rogers <br />Road area. We have developed technical information and cost estimates for various conceptual <br />layouts and have provided lists and maps of properties and existing water and sewer <br />infrastructure in the vicinity. <br />Since the October 4, 2011 meeting where the Orange County Board of County Commissioners <br />approved funding for providing water service to certain properties within the Historic Rogers <br />Road area, OWASA staff have worked closely with Orange County staff to establish streamlined <br />procedures so that eligible property owners can request and receive the intended benefit. <br />Working within the parameters of the State Statutes and our policies and founding agreements, <br />we will continue to support this important initiative. <br />Forestry Management <br />Pursuant to the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission's (WRC) forestry management <br />plan for OWASA's 490 -acre Cane Creek Wildlife Mitigation Tract, 25 acres of declining quality <br />Virginia pine were clear -cut, and 25 acres of hardwood forest were thinned during the fall of <br />2010. The 25 -acre clear -cut was replanted with loblolly pines in January 2011, as prescribed by <br />the WRC plan. All operations were conducted according to forestry management best practices; <br />however, our plan protects substantially larger buffer areas than required by existing regulations. <br />We will complete the phased implementation of additional forest management measures on this <br />property in the coming years in compliance with conditions of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers <br />404 Permit that allowed construction of the Cane Creek Reservoir. <br />Upon the recommendation and guidance of the WRC and North Carolina Forest Service, <br />OWASA also commissioned development of a draft plan for sustainable management of our <br />remaining forest lands. We hosted a community meeting in November 2010 to present and <br />receive comments on the draft plan prepared by our consulting forester, and we received <br />extensive comments from citizens, local elected boards, several State agencies, and others. We <br />will make presentations and receive comments from the local elected boards before the OWASA <br />Board considers formal action on a management plan for our remaining forest lands. <br />