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e <br /> Provisional Cane Creek Recommendations 4 <br /> June 26, 1997 <br /> Page 2 <br /> presented at three public meetings, including one in Bingham Township in the watershed. <br /> Verbal and written comments were received from nearly 50 individuals. These were compiled <br /> by OWASA staff and reviewed by the Watershed Advisory Committee in March and April 1997. <br /> An additional management scenario emerged from this process and was evaluated by Tetra Tech, <br /> Inc. (successor contractors to the Cadmus Group) for compliance with previously established <br /> water quality goals. <br /> These provisional recommendations by the OWASA Board are based on these efforts, which <br /> lasted nearly three and a half years. <br /> Guiding Principles <br /> Long-standing water supply principles emphasize the importance of high quality source water. <br /> OWASA's own Water Supply Protection Policy expresses a commitment to high quality drinking <br /> water through a combination of source water protection and treatment technology. <br /> The overall goal developed by the Watershed Advisory Committee and adopted by the OWASA <br /> Board was to manage the Cane Creek Reservoir to meet or exceed all applicable state and <br /> federal standards and to ensure its excellent water quality and long term viability as a public <br /> water supply source. This goal was characterized by four water quality and two non-water <br /> quality objectives. The most important was minimizing risks to public health, but of the <br /> non-water quality objectives, both the Committee and Board considered minimizing impacts on <br /> County residents who are not OWASA customers to be more important than minimizing rate <br /> increases to OWASA customers, and nearly as important as the public health objective. These <br /> objectives established benchmarks against which alternative management scenarios were <br /> evaluated and measured by Cadmus. <br /> Additional principles and core values that underlie the recommendations presented in this report <br /> are noted below. Virtually all are related to the long period of time during which Cane Creek is <br /> expected to serve the community. <br /> • The Cane Creek Reservoir is a valuable resource in which the people of Carrboro and <br /> Chapel Hill have invested more than 20 million dollars. It is essential to protect this <br /> investment for the next 100 years or more. <br /> • OWASA and other water providers are responsible for making decisions today and for <br /> managing resources for a future too distant to see with clarity. Sound management <br /> requires making these decisions with care and caution in order to sustain as many options <br /> as possible for future generations. <br /> • Water quality problems typically develop over periods of years or decades and may <br /> require years or decades to resolve. Even though Cane Creek water quality is in <br /> compliance with current State and federal standards, actions are needed today in advance <br /> of environmental and regulatory conditions of tomorrow. Important lessons exist in the <br />