World Photo by Lou Sennick
The Coos Bay/North Bend Water Board is planning a project to upgrade its water filtration system. The staff is considering whether to add more filters or change the system to another method. The plant was finished in 1991 and designed to add components as needed.
World Photo by Lou Sennick
Inside the water treatment building, operator Rodney Clemons makes a quick scan of the controls and checks the status of the various components needed to purify the water before it hits customer’s taps. The Coos Bay/North Bend Water Board is having a rate increase to help pay for upgrades and expansion of the water system.
COOS BAY - Summer usually brings sunshine and more visitors to the South Coast. It also means greater water demands for the Coos Bay-North Bend Water Board's treatment plant.
The 18-year-old facility can treat up to eight million gallons of water a day if it runs at full capacity for all 24 hours. That's what happens during the last two weeks of August. The plant can still meet the needs of thirsty lawns and tourists, but if some equipment failed, water production could fall to six million gallons or less.
That wouldn't be enough to meet the area's needs. And increasing water demands in the area could make eight million gallons insufficient in the future.
So, the Water Board is in the planning stages of a treatment plant upgrade that would increase capacity to 12 million gallons treated a day. To prepare to do that, the Water Board will bump water users' rates by 8 percent. Starting this month, the average in-city water user will see another $2 on the monthly bill.
The agency plans to rework the way water is treated. Once it goes through the treatment plant, it's funneled into a nine million-gallon storage well where it continues to be treated. If the level falls below six million gallons, customers would receive water that might not meet treatment standards, Schab said.
Plans to upgrade the treatment plant have been in the works for several years, said general manager Rob Schab, and a design should be selected by the end of the summer.
The Water Board is looking at several options that would allow all the treatment to take place within the plant, rather than sending it to a storage tank where treatment continues. It's also considering whether to build more treatment basins or build them in such a way that they give water more time to be in contact with treatment chemicals.
The agency also is considering new ways to combat the manganese water-discoloration problems that have plagued the agency since the Pony Creek Reservoir expansion. The Water Board's also exploring the possibility of incorporating a hydro-electric generation facility to help off-set the increase in power use produced by the expansion.
The Water Board sought federal stimulus funding, but didn't get any. Still, the agency has two-thirds of the funding in savings, with the rest coming from the rate increases. This year, the average in-city resident will pay an extra $2 a month, which equates to about an 8 percent increase.
The increase is greater than the average 4 percent bump during Schab's tenure, but he sees it as money well spent.
It will ensure the Water Board has funding in place to begin construction in 2010. The project is expected to take two years.
Even though the plant has never had a failure, it's important to stay ahead of the curve with facility upkeep, Schab said.
Doing the rehabilitation work now avoids having to make emergency repairs or limiting water use if something breaks. It also means water users won't have to worry about paying for the plant for decades.
"It's going to serve the community well for the next quarter century," he said.
• What: Coos Bay-North Bend Water Board plans to increase the capacity of its treatment plant from 8 million gallons to 12 million gallons.
• Cost: $10.5 million, paid from a mixture of existing revenues, system development charges, and rate increases.
• Cost to customers: In-city customers who use little water will see about a $1.25 increase to their monthly bills. The average in-city household using about 5,200 gallons a month will pay about $2 extra.
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Maybe they should kill two birds with one stone and consider auctioning off hunting access to the highest bidder to control the elk population on water board property. Oh yea......and Dragonman is right...snooty, high brow bureaucrats...thats the water board.
Maybe they will be able to afford people that are not rude and nasty to work there. I cannot believe how much the bill is for these services. It can be as much as my electric bill some months, and if you call them you get attitude. It’s getting to be ridiculous, but what can we do. They got us by the ----!
What you saw on 14 was on the Sewer plant rebuild which was mandated, and Charleston/Bunker Hill districts who contract for Sewer. The Sewer is owned by the City of Coos Bay/Empire/Eastside and the Water is owned by Coos Bay/North Bend. Two separate entities that are not connected. I don’t think Water Board meetings are broadcast, but I could be wrong.
Who was the source for this article? This is not what I heard in the meeting on channel 14. They are increasing rates because the federal government has mandated the work be done. My impression was as a result of the spills of raw sewage into the bay. Right where they collect yum yum clams.
You just got a 5% sewage increase a couple of months ago???? My bill has doubled in the last 6 years. We have no new construction, we dont have people beating down the doors to move here. It rains darn near 300 days out of the year! Where is OUR water going!
We have alot of capped wells in this county, you may see a decrease in business.
The World welcomes your comments about stories, and we encourage a robust dialogue on this site. All comments must meet reasonable standards of decency and civility.
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The World generally does not edit comments, but we reserve the right to edit any comment that does not meet our standards.
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