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Minutes - 20020516
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Minutes - 20020516
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5/16/2002
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intercannectionvith Raleigh because they're the only ones with the capacity to help us out. Certainly we car <br />improve our interconnections with everybody else as well. <br />Terry Roland: Raleigh is interested in the interconnection as we are because they have the same <br />problem and worse in that they only have one water plant. If they lase their one water plant, they would be in <br />a lot worse shape than we would be. They are very interested in the interconnection as well. <br />Dr. Moreau: They abandoned that Johnson plant, didn't they? <br />Terry Roland: Their long-range plan is to build a new facility, I think, to develop those supplies that <br />they used to rely an, they're going to redevelop those and redevelop another plant. Sa they will get some <br />redundancy in the not too distant future as I understand it. But they don't have it right now. We actually got <br />to test our redundancy during Hurricane Fran. I'll just mention that. Duke Power provides our power service, <br />and 9Q°f° of the Duke Power grid system went down. We lost a lot of things, and we lost one of our water <br />plants, but our largest plant stayed online by the sake of one power line between it and the main source of <br />power. But we did stay up and running far that whole time, we never lost our water system during Hurricane <br />Fran. We lost one waste treatment plant for about eight hours, though. North Durham went completely <br />under water, well it took us eight hours to get it back online. <br />Dr. Moreau: Let me ask if there are questions that you want to pursue. There were questions that <br />were raised. <br />Bill Strom: We are talking about hundreds of millions, maybe billions of dollars to build in <br />redundancy, capacity, etc. One tool that we have that legislative and not necessarily taking that type of <br />investment is land use planning. The notion of are we doing enough to protect Jordan Lake and our other <br />upland watersheds is something that some of us as elected officials could deal with, but I'm sure curious to <br />hear folks talk about that issue some more and address the nitrification concerns that Pat Davis talked about <br />and see haw we can certainly address those issues on a regional basis. Chapel Hill is doing some things, <br />Orange County is doing some things, but it would be very interesting to see what folk's attitude is towards <br />making a bigger investment through land use planning and protecting those watersheds. <br />Dr. Moreau: I think we've taken some very good steps on the upland reservoirs and protecting those <br />areas, but what we see now is Cary and Apex moving westward and expanding into that direct drainage area <br />into Jordan Lake. And with the Durham expansion in that direction, with South Pointe and all the other things <br />that are going along with South Pointe that are going to follow, that whole area is really experiencing a very <br />high level of development. I'm not sure that we have taken adequate steps to protect that area. We did <br />minimally on the eastside of the lake with the conditions attached to the inter basin transfer. I don't think any <br />conditions have been attached to any allocations, though. How would you react to that? <br />Terry Roland: I'd like to speak to that because I guess I've been here too long. Because Jordan <br />Lake and Falls Lake, watershed protection goes back to 1983 when those lakes were first being planned to <br />be impounded. Pat Davis has been around that long and can talk about it. Triangle J played an important <br />role in that process and we have, I think in North Carolina, as a result of that effort at Triangle J and the <br />efforts of the region for watershed protection, one of the best watershed protection rules in North Carolina <br />that covers the whole state now that exists in the whole country. We've been a leader in that in the whole <br />country. As far as the City of Durham, we attempted to do a lot in that effort to protect not only Falls and <br />Jordan Lake, but we kept the emphasis up for protecting our awn upland supplies and the concern started out <br />more with Falls and Jordan and we wanted to make sure that our upland supplies were protected and <br />couldn't expect those other folks to protect our lakes if we weren't willing to protect theirs. So that's always <br />the way we've looked at it. I think in the case of the City and County of Durham we probably provide more <br />levels of protection for Falls and Jordan Lake than mast of our neighbors with the exception of maybe Orange <br />County. I think they've done just about as much or maybe more than we have. But I think Durham has really <br />done a lot in that regard. Our buffer areas are as big or bigger than anybody's as far as what we call our <br />protected area for Falls and Jordan Lake. They are bigger than the state minimum requirements. We have <br />urban growth boundary limitations and lot size limitations that provide protection of that. In the long range <br />perspective, we were always looking at Jordan Lake especially as a potential future water supply. Sa we <br />have a keen interest in making sure that that's protected. As a result of some of that, we also, in expanding <br />our two plants, we have two wastewater treatment plants, water reclamation facilities we call them; that we <br />expanded in the 90's, and both of those were expanded with treatment capabilities well beyond permitted <br />requirements at the time they were built. They're both capable of doing total nutrient removal, nitrogen and <br />phosphorus, biologically. They both have extra filters, ultraviolet disinfectant, they're state of the art water <br />treatment plants, and we built those before they were mandated by any State regulations. Sa when the <br />
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