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MWRA METERING SYSTEM & RATES ASSESSMENT OVERVIEW

MWRA METERING SYSTEM & RATES ASSESSMENT OVERVIEW. ADVISORY BOARD PRESENTATION OCTOBER 18, 2012. MWRA ASSESSMENT METHODOLOGIES.

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MWRA METERING SYSTEM & RATES ASSESSMENT OVERVIEW

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  1. MWRA METERING SYSTEM & RATES ASSESSMENT OVERVIEW ADVISORY BOARD PRESENTATION OCTOBER 18, 2012

  2. MWRA ASSESSMENT METHODOLOGIES MWRA’s metro-system assessment methodologies allocates the annual (fiscal year) rate revenue requirement to the 55 communities and local bodies served by MWRA’s metropolitan water and sewer utilities. Fiscal Year 2013 Current Expense Budget WATER SEWER EXPENSES (000’s):TOTAL Direct Expenses $214,916 $ 65,883 $149,032 $ 14,644 $ 31,049 Indirect Expenses $ 45,693 Capital Expenses $375,248 $112,797 $262,452 $209,729 $426,127 Total Expenses $635,857 $ 14,617 $ 13,728 Other Revenue/Offsets $ 28,345 Rate Revenue Requirement $411,511 $607,512 $196,001

  3. MWRA ASSESSMENT METHODOLOGIES How is the Water Rate Revenue Requirement allocated to MWRA communities?

  4. MWRA ASSESSMENT METHODOLOGIES WATER UTILITY ASSESSMENT The Rate Revenue Requirement (RRR) for the MWRA Water Utility is allocated to member communities using the amount of metered water provided to each community in the most recent calendar year relative to the system as a whole. Example: Community’s Total Water Use = Community’s System Share Total Metro System-Wide Water Use Water Utility RRR x Community’s System Share = Assessment

  5. MWRA ASSESSMENT METHODOLOGIES WATER UTILITY ASSESSMENT CommunityCY2011 Water Use System ShareFY2013 Assessment1 Boston (BWSC) 64.735 (mgd) 36.56% $71,651,462 Quincy 8.935 (mgd) 5.05% $ 9,889,803 Newton 8.760 (mgd) 4.95% $ 9,695,370 Waltham 7.040 (mgd) 3.98% $ 7,792,300 Framingham 6.645 (mgd) 3.75% $ 7,355,228 SYSTEM TOTAL2 177.085 (mgd) 100% $196,001,401 1 Includes prior-year adjustments 2 Includes only the rates-based communities in the metropolitan water system.

  6. Water Meter Overview Water System • 51 Communities. • 230 Metering Sites - 192 of which are rates meters to communities. Water Metering • Metropolitan system was metered from 1900 using Venturi tubes. • Venturi tube upgrades done in the 1980’s. New ones replaced as part of capital projects. • The system captures 100% of water use. • Meter uptime typically about > 98%. • Meter accuracy is approximately 1%. • 2011 replacement of transmitters and switching to wireless data transmission to reduce costs.

  7. VENTURI METER LAYOUT • Differential producing devices • Transmitters and data recorders at site send flows to central

  8. WATER & WASTEWATER METER MAINTENANCE MWRA staff provide: Corrective Maintenance when needed, such as: • Sensor scrubs • Equipment replacement as needed • Communication repairs • Silt removal Preventative Maintenance, e.g. • Quarterly calibrations • Battery replacement when needed, (typically 6 Months) • Silt measurements • Venturi sensing line rodding Independent Checks • Pitot testing of Venturis • Flow testing of wastewater sites

  9. CURRENT WATER SYSTEM RATES ASSESSMENT - QUESTIONS & ISSUES Should there be a Right-to-Use/Standby Fee • MWRA has three member communities (Cambridge, Worcester, Leominster) that regularly take no water – but they have the right to take water in an emergency. • Partial communities take water on an as-needed basis, which can vary significantly from year to year. These communities are assessed just like the full service communities. • In 2012, MWRA sponsored an American Association of Metropolitan Water Agencies inquiry on rate methodology and stand-by fees. Of 20 survey respondents, 5 had some sort of stand-by fee.

  10. CURRENT WATER SYSTEM RATES ASSESSMENT - QUESTIONS & ISSUES Should there be a way of capturing the cost of our capacity investments due to large reductions in MWRA withdrawals if a community’s use shifts to new local sources, or reduced use of local sources? • Framingham proposes to develop local sources to supply approximately 3 mgd now met by MWRA. • Partially supplied MWRA communities may face increased restrictions on local source withdrawals in the future if DEP revises its regulations.

  11. CURRENT WATER SYSTEM RATES ASSESSMENT - QUESTIONS & ISSUES Should the emergency fee be revisited? • If a non-member community applies for emergency use of water, and the MWRA Board approves the request, emergency water supply agreements will include a premium charge added to the prevailing rate. • For water withdrawal periods (no more than 6-months) one through four, the premium charge is now 10% of the MWRA's prevailing rate; premium charges increase to 30% for periods five to seven. • Should the premium charge be revisited?

  12. CURRENT WATER SYSTEM RATES ASSESSMENT - QUESTIONS & ISSUES Should the current Rates Assessment methodology for water be revisited? Considerations include: • Three-year averaging vs. assessments based on 1 year. • Potential population component (that could partially address questions raised above). • Reponses to AWWA inquiry on rate methodology indicated that some utilities have different rates for sole source and non-sole-source (partial user) customers, or rate categories or classes of customers (that could partially address questions raised above).

  13. MWRA ASSESSMENT METHODOLOGIES How is the Wastewater Rate Revenue Requirement allocated to MWRA communities?

  14. MWRA ASSESSMENT METHODOLOGIES SEWER UTILITY ASSESSMENT Based on the FY2013 budget, on average 54% of the FY2013 sewer assessment was allocated based on flow and strength of flow, and 46% based on population.

  15. MWRA ASSESSMENT METHODOLOGIES SEWER UTILITY ASSESSMENT FY2013 Assessment Share of System Assessment Share of Average Daily Sewer Flow Population Share Community Boston (BWSC) 29.07% 28.23% $116,347,348 28.27% Cambridge 5.43% 4.81% $ 20,768,232 5.05% Newton 5.40% 3.89% $ 19,917,866 4.84% Quincy 4.47% 4.22% $ 18,073,247 4.39% Somerville 3.27% 3.46% $ 13,887,278 3.37% SYSTEM TOTAL 339.52 (mgd) 2.2M $411,510,599 100%

  16. Wastewater Meter Overview Wastewater Collection System • 43 Communities. • Number of connections to the MWRA system is 1,978 (1,008 public, 970 private). • 221 Metering Sites, 185 of which are rates meters to communities. Brief History of Wastewater Metering • Interim Metering System use initiated inDecember 1991. • First Permanent Metering System completed July 1994. • Used as part of wastewater rates development since 1996. • The last Wastewater Meter Replacement Project was begun in 2003 and completed in spring 2005. • Meters have run consistently since 2005 and are being replaced individually when appropriate.

  17. 134 Marsh McBirney Flo-Dar Radar/velocity Flow meters for most sites 53 MGD ADFM – Acoustic Doppler Flow Meters for larger conduits 26 Existing meters at local facilities reported to MWRA via RTUs 5 Marsh McBirney Flo-Totes for extremely low flow sites 3 Flume RTU’s w depth sensors Note: The Meter types were chosen based on demonstrated superior accuracy during head to head testing at a flow laboratory during vendor selection Wastewater Meter types Flo-Dar ADFM

  18. Web access to Wastewater Meter Data Upon request, MWRA can set up an account so that communities can access current wastewater meter data via the internet

  19. WASTEWATER METERING SYSTEM – COMMUNITY FLOW FORMULAS DEVELOPMENT/BACKGROUND • Original vision was to do a benefit/cost analysis to deploy only enough meters to do the job, 85% metered system-wide with some communities being as low as 70%. • Estimation of non-metered areas was to be done by scaling factors so that flow varied with rainfall. • Two kinds of non-metered area adjustments were built into the scaling factors – small direct contributions to MWRA pipes and transfers between communities. • All were field spot checked in 1994 to help develop the original scaling factors.

  20. Collection basin overview

  21. Collection basin overview Direct Flow basins

  22. Collection basin overview Net Flow basin

  23. Collection Basin Overview Unmetered basins (Green circles) Need Scaling factors

  24. Collection basin overview Unmetered Intercommunity Transfers (Outlined in green) Again, need Scaling factor

  25. WASTEWATER METERING SYSTEM – COMMUNITY FLOW FORMULAS REASONS FOR CHECKING FLOW FORMULAS/UNMETERED AREAS • The collection basins used in the original community flow formulas remain the same. • The actual sewer contributions from the unmetered areas may have changed due to I/I changes or changes in use of the structures in the unmetered areas. • MWRA needs to do a round of updated field readings to confirm proportional flows and scaling factors. • Considering a field review of 100’s of unmetered sites for all 43 communities: • Presently, only significant changes of which MWRA becomes aware trigger an in-house review and scaling factor change. • Could begin a multi-year in-house review of all communities that may take a decade to complete. • Could do aggressive one year testing using contractors. • Potential impact – May be changes but most will be fairly minor.

  26. WASTEWATER METERING SYSTEM – REPLACEMENT PROJECT Update on Meter Condition • System is running reasonably well (30+ ADFMs, 150 Flo-Dars, 20 ADS Flow Sharks). • Most meters were installed during 2004, making them about 8 years old now, expected meter life in the harsh sewer environment is 8-10 years. • Starting to see increasing failures but it hasn’t been a big cost issue yet. • Battery life and replacement costs continue to be an issue. • Movement of water meters to Telog Enterprise and wireless transmission is proceeding, Rosemount transmitter replacement project is 90% complete. Meter Age Solution • We have been carrying $200K for study starting in late FY13 to begin replacement with proper type, possibly electrifying more sites. • Replacement funds have been put in FY14 and beyond.

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