Albemarle Council sets public hearing on stormwater program

Published 11:22 am Tuesday, November 22, 2022

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During its meeting Monday night, the Albemarle City Council renewed discussions that had last taken place over the summer regarding a decision on the city’s proposed stormwater program.

Having recently received $250,000 in funding from the Golden LEAF Foundation to assist with a portion of the city’s proposed stormwater management program planning, which will be used for a watershed study of Little Long Creek, there was urgency among the council to work to implement the program by July 1, the start of the new fiscal year.

In order to provide Ross Holshouser, public works director, and his team enough time to re-engage its consultants, including WK Dickson, a Charlotte-based community infrastructure consulting firm, Raftelis, a Charlotte-based management consulting firm and ElectriCities, among others, to restart and complete the data migration for utility billing (the process will take a minimum of four months), a decision has to be made no later than Jan. 9, 2023.

“We have got to get our consultants back on board with utility billing,” Holshouser told council. “There’s a process that’s going to take place for us to go live, if we go live on July 1, 2023.”

During a July workshop, Council initially wanted to have more discussions about moving forward with a stormwater program and make a decision in September or October, but those never materialized.

It was decided Council would have a final public hearing at 6 p.m. Jan. 3, 2023, regarding the stormwater program. A letter will be sent to residents and nonresidents about the public hearing.

Following the hearing, Council would then make a decision on the stormwater plan at its meeting on Jan. 9.

What the revised stormwater program looks like 

The city has been working with WK Dickson since February 2021 about developing a stormwater management program to address residents’ concerns about flooding.

The original plan in January was to budget for a monthly flat fee of $11.50 and have the stormwater program, which would cost about $2.2 million, begin July 1. After several residents expressed concerns about the fee structure during a May public input session, Council worked with WK Dickson to adjust the program.

The scaled-back cost of service plan presented to Council in July totaled $1.16 million, with a monthly fee of $5.80.

Under the original proposal, residents would have seen a slight reduction in their solid waste fee as leaf collection would have been part of the stormwater program. In the new proposal, leaf collection will remain part of the solid waste fee.

Residents would pay the flat rate of $5.80. Non-residential customers would be billed based upon equivalent residential units (ERUs), which is the amount of impervious surface area on a typical single family property in the city. The median impervious surface area of such homes is 3,270 square feet.

So, for example, if a local business had about 9,300 square feet of impervious surface, that would be roughly three ERUs (9,300 divided by 3,270). When multiplied by the new monthly rate of $5.80, the business would pay about $16 per month, less than the $33 it would have paid under the original $11.50 plan.

In order to achieve the reduced monthly rate of $5.80, service levels were reduced. Each of the five components, including operation and maintenance and capital improvements, were slashed considerably.

The initial program proposed three administration staff and six operations and maintenance staff while the revised proposal would include two administration staff and three operations and maintenance staff.

The revised proposed stormwater plan, if passed, would cost $1.16 million, a notable decrease from the $2.16 million originally.

About Chris Miller

Chris Miller has been with the SNAP since January 2019. He is a graduate of NC State and received his Master's in Journalism from the University of Maryland. He previously wrote for the Capital News Service in Annapolis, where many of his stories on immigration and culture were published in national papers via the AP wire.

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