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T ha nk yo u fo r jo ining ! We will b e g in sho rtly . I f yo - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

T ha nk yo u fo r jo ining ! We will b e g in sho rtly . I f yo u a re c a lling in, ple a se ma ke sure yo u dia l yo ur a udio pin to fully pa rtic ipa te in the me e ting . I f yo u a re using yo ur c o mpute r, ple a


  1. T ha nk yo u fo r jo ining ! We will b e g in sho rtly . • I f yo u a re c a lling in, ple a se ma ke sure yo u dia l yo ur a udio pin to fully pa rtic ipa te in the me e ting . • I f yo u a re using yo ur c o mpute r, ple a se ma ke sure yo u a re c o nne c te d to a mic ro pho ne a nd spe a ke rs. A he a dse t is re c o mme nde d. 1/ 29/ 20

  2. We lc o me ! Me la nie Mo w Sc huma c he r, 1/ 29/ 20 Cha ir

  3. I ntro duc tio ns

  4. Hig hlig hts fro m Re c e nt Me dia I vo nne 1/ 29/ 20 Go nza le s

  5. Case Study: Pure Water Monterey Water Mike Mc Cullo ug h a nd Ra c he l Ga udo in, 1/ 29/ 20 Mo nte re y One Wa te r

  6. PIECING TOGETHER PIECING TOGETHER THE BEST COMMUNICATION THE BEST COMMUNICATION EFFORTS FOR YOUR COMMUNITY EFFORTS FOR YOUR COMMUNITY A Case Study on Pure Water Monterey’s Outreach Strategies

  7. CENTRAL COAST OF CALIFORNIA CENTRAL COAST OF CALIFORNIA 101 1 Watsonville Moss Landing San Juan Bautista Monterey Bay Prunedale Castroville 156 Marina Salinas Sand City Seaside Pacific Grove Monterey MRY Pebble Beach 68 Del Rey Oaks Chualar M Carmel-by-the-Sea O Pinnacles Carmel Gonzales National Valley N Soledad Park T T T T T 1 E E E E E E E 101 R R R R R R R R R R E E Big Sur Greenfield Y Y 146 Los Padres National Forest C King City O O O O San Lucas 198 U U U U N Lucia T San Ardo Y Jolon

  8. WHY DO WE NEED PWM? WHY DO WE NEED PWM? Water supply diversifjcation and sustainability Water supply diversifjcation and sustainability TRADITIONAL SOURCES PORTFOLIO APPROACH 22% 22% 25% 8% 75% 5% 40% 2% 1% Carmel River Pure Water Monterey Sand City (Desal) Aquifer Storage & Recovery Seaside Groundwater Basin Desalination Pacifjc Grove (Rec Water)

  9. PURE WATER MONTEREY PURE WATER MONTEREY 3,500 3,500 ACRE FEET / YEAR ACRE FEET / YEAR 4 STEP 4 STEP Advanced Purifjcation Process after Primary & Secondary Treatment of Advanced Purifjed 1 2 3 4 Recycled Water OZONE MEMBRANE FILTRATION REVERSE OSMOSIS UV + H 2 0 2 produced for groundwater replenishment of a critical drinking water basin 1 Acre Foot = 325,851 Gallons ~22-33% ~22-33% of the $125 MILLION $125 MILLION Monterey Peninsula’s for project costs; future water supply portfolio 20% grant funded

  10. PROJECT PARTNERS PROJECT PARTNERS

  11. ONE REGIONAL TREATMENT PLANT ONE REGIONAL TREATMENT PLANT Regulated Ocean Discharge Non-potable Reuse Indirect Potable Reuse Predominantly Wintertime Agriculture Irrigation Groundwater Replenishment

  12. PROJECT COMPONENTS PROJECT COMPONENTS Source Water Diversion Structures Advanced Water Purifjcation Facility Conveyance Pipeline Injection Wells

  13. PROJECT SOURCE WATERS PROJECT SOURCE WATERS Municipal Wastewater Agricultural Wash Water Agricultural Drainage Water Urban Storm Water Runofg

  14. SAMPLING & PILOT TESTING SAMPLING & PILOT TESTING 7,057 SOURCE WATER 7,057 SOURCE WATER 11,576 TREATMENT 11,576 TREATMENT SAMPLES SAMPLES SAMPLES SAMPLES Sampled for 435 Constituents • Most were undetectable • Few were above regulatory levels Sampled for 24 Pesticides of Local Interest* • 15 detected in at least 1 source water • 2 detected above regulatory levels or public health goals *Pesticide regulations document usage by area

  15. PILOT  DEMO FACILITY PILOT DEMO FACILITY #FutureOfWater #FutureOfWater

  16. OUTREACH TOOLS OUTREACH TOOLS Gaining Public Support Gaining Public Support Environmental / Engineering public review process 1 Community presentations 2 Project-specifjc website and social media with fun, memorable branding 3 Demonstration facility tours 4

  17. EXTERNAL AFFAIRS EXTERNAL AFFAIRS Beyond Community Engagement Beyond Community Engagement FUNdraiser: loans, grants, sponsorships 1 Coordinate with regulators 2 Legislative updates 3 77% PWM Project partner coordination 4 Internal cheerleader 5

  18. CONSULTANT SUPPORT CONSULTANT SUPPORT Gaining Public Support Gaining Public Support Environmental / Engineering public review process 1 Community presentations 2 Project-specifjc website and social media 3 with fun, memorable branding Demonstration facility tours 4

  19. LESSONS LEARNED LESSONS LEARNED REBRANDING REBRANDING RECOGNITION RECOGNITION DELAYS DELAYS

  20. QUESTIONS? QUESTIONS?

  21. PURE WATER MONTEREY PURE WATER MONTEREY OCEAN OUTFALL • RTP to Coastline + 2 miles into the Monterey Bay & 100 fu below the water’s surface • Efgluent meets CA Ocean Plan SOURCE WATERS RO Concentrate • ~20% Rejection Rate 1 Wastewater (67%) 2 Agricultural Drainage Water (16%) M1W REGIONAL PWM AWPF: Secondary Advanced Purifjcation • Max Capacity: 29.6 MGD TREATMENT PLANT Efgluent (Indirect Potable Reuse) (Primary/Secondary) • Daily Capacity: 5 MGD 3 Agricultural Wash Water (17%) • Annual Yield: 3,500 AF + 200 AF (drought reserve) • 4,300 AF Source Water 3,500 AF Product Water 4 Stormwater CAL AM ~9-12 INJECTION Months EXTRACTION CONVEYANCE PIPELINE WELLS WELLS • ~10 mile pipeline • Lead Partner: Marina Coast Water District • Turnouts included for future MCWD landscape irrigation customers SVRP: • Max Capacity: 29.6 MGD Tertiary Treatment • Min Operational Production: 5 MGD (Ag Irrigation) SEASIDE GROUNDWATER BASIN • Travel time between injection and extraction wells is ~9-12 months • Injection wells are located near General Jim Moore Blvd and Coe Ave DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM • 12,000 acres of farmland • 9 wells + booster stations

  22. Focus Topic: Impacts of CA PFAS Regulations on Wastewater Discharges & Water Recycling Ro ya So ha na ki, 1/ 29/ 20 Ora ng e Co unty Sa nita tio n Distric t

  23. WateReuse Association Communications Collaborative Group: PFAS Impacts Presented by Roya Sohanaki OCSD Engineering Manager

  24. OCSD’s Treatment Plants OCSD OCSD OCWD Reclamation Plant No. 1 Treatment Plant No. 2 Fountain Valley Huntington Beach 115 - 130 MGD 65 - 85 MGD

  25. SOURCE CONTROL SERVICE AREA COLLECTIONS SERVICE AREA • Area: 479 square miles • Population: 2.6 million (2015) • Counties: Orange County • Cities:20 TWO FACILITIES • Reclamation Plant No. 1 in Fountain Valley 115 - 130 MGD • Treatment Plant No. 2 in Huntington Beach 65 - 85 MGD • Area: 2,840 sq. mi. • Population: 5.97 million (2010) • Counties: Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, Los Angeles (small) • Cities:58

  26. Controlling Pollutants Commercial Industrial Residential Example: Safer Consumer Products Example: Dry Cleaners use of Perchloroethylene • • • Public Outreach Public Outreach Local Pretreatment Program • • • Local, State, & Federal Legislation Local, State, & Federal Legislation Permitting & Enforcement

  27. Controlling Pollutants

  28. Controlling Pollutants Title 22 Regulations Related to Recycled Water (July 16, 2015) §60320.106. Wastewater Source Control. A project sponsor shall ensure that the recycled municipal wastewater used for a GRRP shall be from a wastewater management agency that: (a) administers an industrial pretreatment and pollutant source control program; and (b) implements and maintains a source control program that includes, at a minimum; (1) an assessment of the fate of Department-specified and Regional Board-specified chemicals and contaminants through the wastewater and recycled municipal wastewater treatment systems, (2) chemical and contaminant source investigations and monitoring that focuses on Department-specified and Regional Board-specified chemicals and contaminants, (3) an outreach program to industrial, commercial, and residential communities within the portions of the sewage collection agency's service area that flows into the water reclamation plant subsequently supplying the GRRP, for the purpose of managing and minimizing the discharge of chemicals and contaminants at the source, and (4) a current inventory of chemicals and contaminants identified pursuant to this section, including new chemicals and contaminants resulting from new sources or changes to existing sources, that may be discharged into the wastewater collection system. Last updated July 16, 2015—from Titles 22 and 17 California Code of Regulations State Board, Division of Drinking Water, Recycled Water Regulations https://www.waterboards.ca.gov/drinking_water/certlic/drinkingwater/documents/lawbook/RWregulations_20150716.pdf

  29. Controlling Pollutants • Pollutants that may or may not be subject to regulatory requirements – but pose some public health or environmental concern are Contaminants or Constituents of Emerging Concern (CECs) Some Examples CECs Timeline Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) 1970s-1980s Dimethyldithiocarbamate (DTC) & 1990s-2000s N-Nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) 1,4-dioxane 2000s-2010s per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) 2010s-

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