ROBIN B. HAMERS -- Community Commentary
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Residents in the city of Costa Mesa and portions of Newport Beach and
the county can be proud they are part of the Costa Mesa Sanitary
District.
The sanitary district provides two services: collecting and recycling
trash for 21,000 residences, and owning and operating a 325-mile sewer
system serving 110,000 people. By having only two duties, the elected
officials and staff can stay focused on their responsibility of
maintaining a very high level of service.
In the case of the sewer system, the officials do not have to weigh
funding for programs such as parks, police or fire instead of the sewer
system. The system gets top priority. The directors and staff consider
the sewer system a prized asset and treat it as such. In 1989, the
district began a four-year comprehensive videotaping program in which
cameras were sent down the entire sewer system, and the tapes were
cataloged and used as the basis for a maintenance program. Any problems
found in the system were immediately fixed and, consequently, the system
is in excellent condition with a long life expectancy. Small yearly
televising projects are completed to insure the system remains in top
condition.
Whereas some agencies are just now finding their system has
significant leaks or deteriorated pipelines and are considering a
televising program, the Costa Mesa Sanitary District is considering
whether to embark on its second districtwide televising program. Staying
one step ahead of the aging process is a key to successful asset
management. In 1995, the directors of the district showed additional
foresight and established a long-term replacement fund to prepare for
rehabilitating the system when it reaches its life expectancy. The
district has established a yearly contribution to the fund and maintains
an appropriate level of reserves. An adequate replacement fund is an
extremely important asset as construction costs and the cost of living
increase year after year.
The district also has two full-time cleaning crews that clean and
monitor the system day in and day out. The result of the district’s
commitment to its responsibilities has been a system where only a handful
of preventable sewer spills have occurred over the last 20 years.
Discharge of grease, mainly from restaurants, is the real culprit behind
sewer spills, and the district is testing state-of-the-art enzyme and
bacteria systems to counteract the problem.
The cost to residents in the district for all these sewer services is
only $23.02 a year for single family residences and $17.72 a year for multifamily residences, rates that have not increased in eight years.
It is interesting to note that the federal government is now
initiating regulations requiring cities, counties and special districts
to treat all their assets, such as sewer systems, in a manner that
requires more awareness, maintenance and planning. This will insure the
infrastructure systems across the United States do not fall into
disrepair. In the case of the residents of the Costa Mesa Sanitary
District, they can rest assured these steps have already been taken.
* ROBIN B. HAMERS is the manager and district engineer of the Costa
Mesa Sanitary District.
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