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File #: 2022-300   
Type: Resolution Status: Approved
File created: 8/22/2022 In control: City Council
On agenda: 9/8/2022 Final action: 9/8/2022
Title: Consider a resolution authorizing the Mayor to execute a Contract for Engineering Services with Plummer Associates, Inc. for the Brushy Creek East Regional Wastewater Treatment Plant Tertiary Filters project.
Indexes: Regional Wastewater Projects
Attachments: 1. Resolution, 2. Exhibit A, 3. Form 1295
Title
Consider a resolution authorizing the Mayor to execute a Contract for Engineering Services with Plummer Associates, Inc. for the Brushy Creek East Regional Wastewater Treatment Plant Tertiary Filters project.

Body
Since the Brushy Creek East Regional Wastewater Treatment Plant (WWTP) upset caused by the winter storm Uri in February of 2021, the East WWTP has experienced treatment process issues. Some have been caused by hydraulic overloading starting in May and June of 2021 while others have been compounded by the large expansion project which began in June 2020, and is still currently underway. There have been impacts to Brushy Creek past the WWTP discharge effluent outfall, and reported permit violations resulting in the WWTP being under evaluation by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ).

The East WWTP discharge permit with the TCEQ will be expiring in May 2023. The partner Cities that own capacity in the WWTP will be applying for a permit renewal by November of this year. With all of the focus on the East WWTP, there is a possibility that the permit will be renewed with even higher treatment requirements when it is issued by the TCEQ. These parameters will possibly include 5 milligrams per liter (mg/l) Total Suspended Solids (TSS), 5 mg/l Chemical Biological Oxygen Demand (CBOD), 2 mg/l Ammonia Nitrogen, and 0.5 mg/l Phosphorous once the plant receives flows over 25 million gallons per day (MGD) based on its annual average flows. TCEQ rules require that any treatment facility with a 5, 5, 2, 0.5 discharge permit will be required to have sufficient filter capacity up to its permitted amount of flow, or in this case 30 MGD of filtration capacity. The current expansion project will provide seven MGD of filtration capacity that is used to make Type I reuse water for the City of Round Rock’s Reuse Water System.

This project includes an engineering analysis to determine how the remaining MGD of filtration capacity will be added, an...

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