Laserfiche WebLink
MINUTES OF THE <br /> ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br /> Monday,April 27,2020 <br /> 6:00 o'clock p.m. <br /> roughly$250,000 yearly trying to rehabilitate the system. Studies indicate as much as 80%of the I/I <br /> comes in via the private part of the system,which is predominantly private sewer service lines.The draft <br /> ordinance includes edits to existing City Code which allow for a program of inspections primarily aimed <br /> at looking for cross-connections such as sump pumps that are plugged into the sanitary sewer system, etc. <br /> The edits are primarily regarding timelines and also to make sure the new and existing pieces of code <br /> work together.Also, Code 14-190 has been added,which aims to establish a point-of-sale inspection <br /> program. The program will have 2 components: an inspection requirement so that anytime a property is <br /> sold that is connected to a sanitary sewer system, it would need to be inspected; also, a compliance <br /> requirement that, if not compliant,repairs would need to be made. Meanwhile,for properties that are <br /> compliant,a 10-year certificate provided which indicates the property will not need further inspections for <br /> 10 years. The cost to implement the program will be just under$20,000 per year in labor and equipment <br /> costs,which would be offset by the permit or inspection fee that would be imposed,or each of those.The <br /> primary piece of equipment would be a push camera at a cost of approximately$8,000, which is already <br /> listed in the Capital Improvement Plan in conjunction with other camera equipment for sewer system <br /> work. He will accept comments and bring the document back to the Council on May 20 for final approval. <br /> After that he will spend time finalizing things so the program could start August 24. <br /> Walsh said he deals with this issue in a lot of cities. He was hopeful that Edwards connected with Marvel <br /> Sewer about what they see in some cities and what they are doing wrong and right so it does not become a <br /> fiasco.Marvel has said the majority of the I/I is coming from private connections,so even if the City does <br /> their job and lines all of their pipes, etc., it can still have tons of water coming in. If Orono wants to keep <br /> water rates as reasonable as possible,the inflow needs to be managed as well. He said that in the other <br /> cities he deals with,they have to get it done when listing their house for sale. You don't want to wait until <br /> it is sold,because then the closer is wondering where their certificate is and you can't close without the <br /> certificate. He said word would have to get out to the residents so they know the requirement is out there. <br /> Johnson said he is a little concerned about the City's capacity to communicate the information. The draft <br /> ordinance includes language that says someone cannot advertise a property for sale without the point-of- <br /> sale certificate of I/I compliance. He said the right time to do this would be before someone puts a house <br /> on the market so it is not something they are dealing with too quickly. He does not like the point-of-sale <br /> for a variety of reasons. <br /> Johnson asked how many Orono residents were on city sewer. <br /> Crosby stated between 40-50%. <br /> Edwards said 60%of the City's housing stock is on city sewer. He asked the Hennepin County Assessing <br /> Staff how many transactions there are in the City,which is about 195 sales, so 60%of 195 sales would be <br /> sewer properties. <br /> Olson said,ballparking it,about 2,250 have sewer connections. <br /> Johnson asked whether the formula is based on 130 inspections,which is 5%of the total homes with <br /> sewer connections. <br /> Edwards said he used the number 195,multiplied by 60%, and then added in a number for residential <br /> demolitions,thinking the City would also do the inspection for new-home builds, particularly new-home <br /> Page 5 of 16 <br />