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A REGIONAL APPROACH
The deteriorated state of the Pittsburgh region's sewage
infrastructure is creating unsafe and unhealthy conditions in our
streams and rivers. The sewage collection system within the ALCOSAN
service area is an integrated network of systems that have evolved
more than 100 years.
Adding to the complexity of the problem are the number of municipalities
involved, each owning a piece of the total sewage system.
Like gas and electricity services, sewage collection systems should
be operated as a utility. One or several municipal authorities or
entities could more effectively operate and maintain the sewage
collection system in the ALCOSAN service area. This type of regional
approach would result in a system-wide, cost-effective, sustainable
solution.
Currently, 83 municipalities and authorities operate and maintain
individual portions of the collection system independent of each
other. However, this current process has limitations.
- It's ineffective because municipal systems are interconnected.
Municipalities do not have complete control over flow from other
communitiesupstream and downstream. Therefore, municipalities need
to cooperate to identify the causes of overflows and develop a system-wide
solution.
- It's expensive due to the equipment and services required
for the regular operation and maintenance of a sewer system. It
is not cost-effective for each community to purchase its own equipment.
- It's not the most cost-effective approach. If individual
municipalities make costly investments in one small part of the
system, the investment may burden ratepayers more than necessary. Communities must
work together to create a common vision for the
futureone that incorporates the benefits of area-wide management
and organizational strength and sustainability.
- Municipalities must develop a plan to assess and evaluate
the entire collection system in a standardized, methodical manner.
If municipalities continue to work only within their own boundaries
to assess, evaluate and rehabilitate their portion of the system,
compliance will be more difficult to achieve and more costly overall.
- Regional planning identifies the investments that are needed
most. Addressing problems only within individual municipal boundaries
is ineffective because the repair or rehabilitation may not significantly
contribute to a system-wide reduction in overflows.
- Regional organizations have greater buying power. Municipalities
can purchase public works supplies in bulk and pass the savings
on to their communities.
- Regional action reduces duplication. Rather than each community
owning the equipment necessary to maintain its sewage infrastructure,
municipalities can share these resources.
- Regional financing saves money. Cooperative financing mechanisms,
such as
bond pools, can decrease the cost of borrowing money.
- New regulations require collaboration among neighboring
municipalities. Municipalities are subject to increasingly stringent
requirements covering the management and operation of a sewage collection
system. With hundreds of interconnections among the municipal collection
systems, regionalizing the operation can save time and money by
consolidating operations and thereby reducing the number of permits
and inter-municipal agreements needed.
- A regional approach reduces municipal burden. Removing
the responsibility for the sewer collection system from municipal
government allows officials to focus on projects that can be addressed
within an individual community's boundaries.
- Regionalism results in a stronger voice in Harrisburg and
Washington. Where a single municipal voice is often lost at the
state or federal level, a regional voice can carry
significant influence on issues such as enforcement and funding.
To begin developing a comprehensive regional strategy to solve
the problem,
municipal officials throughout the ALCOSAN service area have been
participating in the 3 Rivers Wet Weather Basin Groups, meeting
monthly to develop a regionalization strategy that offers the best
solution to a complex problem.
They are tackling the issue of efficiently and cost-effectively
rehabilitating the sewage infrastructure to meet federal, state
and local requirements, as well as to improve Pittsburgh's water
resources.
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