Reference Documents

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Property Sought for Sewer

Off the BOS agenda:


Tuesday, January 07, 2014 
CONSENT AGENDA
REVIEW AND APPROVAL

Consent Agenda - Public Works Items:
14. Submittal of right of way documents accepting conveyance from Timothy R. Solipasso, Trustee et al for the Los Osos Wastewater Project, Los Osos. District 2.



I had seen this announcement in the paper a few times and now I know why.

The question is, will the usual LO BOS malcontents make something of this or will we only be subjected again to the usual litany of complaints? Molehills to mountains one might ask in this case? Tune in Tuesday for the answer!

When the support documents for this item are posted, I'll provide a link.

Here is the link to all the relevant documents!
http://agenda.slocounty.ca.gov/agenda/sanluisobispo/Proposal.html;jsessionid=260A23E4BBFC72045E6E8DBF5E58DB52?select=2903

Monday, December 30, 2013

New Year's Resolutions, PZ Style!

What would a New Year's sewer resolution look like anyway one might ask? The answer is simple for Prohibition Zone residents (and anyone on a septic system, in the Zone or not) and the answer is supported by each of our bottom lines: Be more kind to your septic tank! Unless you have replaced yours, and, as septic tanks have a 25-30 year lifespan, you might want to be very, very careful as no houses were built in the PZ since 1987, you do the math!

PZers, you DO NOT want to replace or repair your tank or your leach field/pit if you do not have to before 2016 when we start using our brand new sewer system, as that would not be cost effective!

Our wastewater system is barreling ahead toward our eventual personal hook-ups. We are over three-quarters done with the collection system and the project treatment plant contract will be awarded in January and the estimate for completion is 24 months. The pump stations will be complete in early 2015. So to have to spend any money on the present systems that will be abandoned in 2016, makes no dollars or cents, sense, or, ugh, scents.

If you aren't already, do the simple steps below:
  • Don't overload your system
  • Don't drive over or park on your system
  • Don't pour cooking grease, paints, oils, pesticides, solvents, drain cleaners, other household or automotive chemicals into your drains
  • Don't flush diapers, baby wipes, feminine hygiene products, condoms, kitty litter, coffee grounds, dental floss, cotton swabs, cigarette butts, paper towels, hair or Kleenex (can you add to that list)?
  • Pumping/Inspection. Times vary. Some pump every two or three years, some haven't pumped for 30 and everything still works. Inspections are supposed to be done every 2-3 years. Well, let your conscience be your guide, or you can read about what the EPA says to do here.
Personally, we stopped using our garbage disposal as well. Granted, it broke, but we did not replace it in the kitchen remodel. But we have a vacant electrical switch for 2016, just in case. (I know I should do a compost heap but I don't. I would be a bad parent, best not to create one!)

*


Well, that about does it! Have a safe and sane night on the 31st! All my best wishes to you readers for a Happy 2014 in all your endeavors, sewer or otherwise!

*My eternal gratitude to Don Bearden for providing the community a real tank to view so we could see what we don't see buried in our yards. And this is the pristine view, before burial and use. (There are also concrete models and—shudder—really really old redwood models and—worse—55-gallon drum models, right here in our town.....)

Friday, December 27, 2013

LOWWP Progress Report for November Online

Time to update your info on our sewer project! Here is a link to the November report!

http://www.slocounty.ca.gov/Assets/PW/LOWWP/document+library/PM+Monthy+Update+November+2013.pdf

Also of interest is the information on the five contractors bidding on the treatment plant:

http://www.slocounty.ca.gov/Assets/PW/Design+Division/bids/300448.08.02+-+LOWRF+-+Bid+Results.pdf

The contract will be awarded at a January meeting of the Board of Supes, date yet to be announced.

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Holiday Gifts for the Sewer Obsessed!

'Tis the season and all of that, but have you shopped yet for the sewer obsessed in your life? It's tough, I know! But below is a list of handy vendors who can help you find the perfect gifts! These would be good resources for finding birthday items too! Happy shopping!

Home Decor
Sewer Cover Doormat
http://www.thefind.com/family/info-manhole-cover-mats

http://www.marketsofnewyork.com/2013/12/photo-of-the-day-december-12-2013-vernakular-sewer-cover-doormats/

Cushions
http://www.trendhunter.com/trends/sewer-cover

Faux Manhole Cover Light
http://www.trendhunter.com/trends/sewer-cover

For Readers
Manhole Cover Books
http://www.amazon.com/Manhole-Covers-Mimi-Melnick/dp/0262133024

Sewer Book Collectible
http://www.ebay.com/itm/1961-CATALOG-CAMPBELL-CONSTRUCTION-CAST-FOUNDRY-SEWER-MANHOLE-GRATE-HARRISON-NJ-/220861788958?_trksid=p2054897.l4276

Manhole Cover Collectibles (don't miss the book on quilting manhole covers!)
http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=manhole%20covers&clk_rvr_id=563532390174&adpos=1s4&MT_ID=71&crlp=18583841779_2416792&device=c&geo_id=10232&keyword=manhole+covers&crdt=0

http://www.amazon.com/Designs-Underfoot-Manhole-Covers-York/dp/1585746398/ref=pd_bxgy_b_img_y

For the Do-It-Yourselfer
3IN HIGH "S" HAND UTILITY STAMP - Stamp concrete with locations of sewer lines
http://www.mansiontools.com/sewer-utility-stamp-cf403-tools-concrete-stamps---texture-mats.html

And for the Children
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Secret Sewer Lair
http://www.kmart.com/teenage-mutant-ninja-turtles-secret-sewer-lair/p-004W005091813002P

Friday, December 20, 2013

Party In Our Future!

I was thinking today that once we are up and flushing in 2016, it might be nice to celebrate with a party that perhaps only Los Osians could appreciate—a sewer party!

So I noodled around on the Web and came up with these possible food and drink items to include on our festive party menu. Click the links and see what you think!

Main dish:

Brownies & pudding dessert, a nod to Mutant Ninja Turtles (scroll down)

Sewage soda and fake sludge cakes (thanks City of San Diego!)

Sewer related, and the real thing is a no-no to flush, but who could resist Kitty Litter Cake? View these stellar images!

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Mystery Solved, Disruption Displayed

Yesterday's mystery of the video capture was revealed today on YouTube. It was to be a hit piece against Supervisor Adam Hill. Instead it actually revealed what the official Board of Supervisor's videos don't capture: the obnoxious and disruptive behavior of the weekly sewer complainers from Los Osos. Really, If anyone had any doubt, please play the video below and hear this for yourself. Thanks to Ms. Mordaunt and/or "Slohealth nut" who posted this video, they may be one in the same, I don't know.

The excellent point Mr. Hill makes is that if the accusations against the project were as bad as they were described every week, scores of people would be there to complain, not just the angry, repetitive, boring five. The italics are my words but my feelings are shared by many. That anger does Los Osos no good on any front or in any venue.

Advised, But No Consent


Today at the Board of Supes there was an item on the Consent Agenda regarding the Los Osos Wastewater Project.  It was to approve two contract amendments for more money out of the wastewater budget to extend work on the project. Naturally, the usual Los Osos' public speakers were challenging the entire project once again. The item was postponed to some late date in January for a couple of frustrating reasons:
• Supervisor Mecham hadn't had time to look at the staff report until Sunday as he was busy with the Paso water issues, leaving no time to consult with county staff with his questions. So he was unprepared to vote on anything he hadn't studied. 
• Supervisor Arnold wanted a presentation to hear more. She didn't like that this was placed on the Consent Agenda.
Mecham responded to an angry Supervisor Hill saying that he wasn't pandering to the L.O. people who blurt out from the back of the room (who had been among those pushing for a postponement). Chairperson Gibson then had to tell the back of the room to be quiet and stop interrupting or they would be asked to leave the chambers; they'd had their time to speak uninterrupted. (I wonder how sick and tired he is of having to keep doing this? I'm fed up with those speakers' displays of rudeness and entitlement in their boorish behavior.)

Hill was angry because of the 30 years of sewer obstruction, people had found ways to sabotage projects. Clearly this delay was feeding the angry speakers red meat. That is my opinion anyway, and I was temporarily really mad at them "winning." But then, this is merely a battle, not the war. This WILL pass in January.

(Oh, what will they have to complain and bash the County over once we are wastewater compliant?  Fast food? Bus routes? I know, solid waste rates!  What kind of lives do these people have that all they can come before the Board with is anger and complaints? I'd hate to be any one of them. Really, is it a good psychological strategy to just swing with a sledgehammer every week? How well does that work in their own lives when they are on the other end? But then, this all really is just punishment to the County for voting to take a project they didn't like or want—and certainly did not want to pay for. Watchdogging is only a guise. What logic do you operate with when your own obstructionism caused massive price increases in the project? In 2001 the estimated cost for a wastewater treatment plant was $84.6 million; in 2005 it was $154 million; now it is $173 million (if you don't count the part of the approximately $20 million bond where the environmental work and permits for the last project were paid from. But I digress.)

Supervisor Ray tried to make peace and suggested that a delay in voting would be OK if time time was not of the essence.

John Waddell, Project Manager said that it was desirable to have approval this year for budgeting and planing but that there was money still left to pay contractors until the end of January so this could work.

Another frustrating part for delaying this item; upping the money HAD been discussed twice before, on June 18 and October 8. The Corollo contract had been approved and more money was just being disbursed today with a vote. Their overall design and job performance was to be evaluated before releasing these additional funds. On the HDR adjustment, its not their fault that the trenching schedule was pushed out six months (and the pump station work comes after that). This requires them to do the additional project management. Any budget adjustments later won't come out of community money, but from unanticipated revenues from grants anyway. The amounts from the 218 vote and the 2007 estimates remain the same. The strategy Paavo Ogren said, was to award tighter amounts of money to contractors and then adjust upward when more money is required, its not good to put all the money out there at the beginning.

Now for the mysterious part of today's BOS meeting! Why was Agenda 21-er Laura Mordaunt taking a video of John Waddell and Paavo Ogren with her phone? She lives in San Luis Obispo, not Los Osos. Her red phone case matched her red sweater perfectly though!



The far odder part was non-Los Osos resident Mike Brown from COLAB bashing the County on this Los Osos item. He fronts a group whose board and members remain anonymous! Kinda creepy!

Monday, December 16, 2013

Sewer Fishing!

Well, we won't have a way to do this EVER, but this is the latest fad in some unnamed part of Texas. I can only hope that this is a storm sewer ONLY, which is bad enough actually with dog poop and all......

http://ftw.usatoday.com/2013/12/sewer-fishing-is-the-newest-rage-in-fishing/

Also I thought I found a link to a recipe for Sewer Cookies, but it was only about people who sew (needle and thread) sharing their Christmas cookie recipes.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Puts Our Sewer In Perspective!

Follow this link to a fascinating sewer video and learn who the patron saint of tunnels is!

http://londonfirst.co.uk/londons-super-sewer-can-no-longer-wait-london-first-tells-the-ft/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=londons-super-sewer-can-no-longer-wait-london-first-tells-the-ft

Water for Willows

Some Academy Award performance whining has been served up at the Board of Supes over the past few months on the topic of the sewer project's dewatering component. And I put it in those terms as those whining should have read the documents that legally allow such a practice, but it seems they have ignored them, perhaps in order to emote with a more sincere pitch in displaying their anger over yet one more component of the project, leaving no stone un-thrown (so far anyway). In any case, dewatering is winding down as not nearly as much water as was expected was found, and the pipe-laying part of the project is 75-80% complete. No awards will be handed out.

One of the dewatering outlets is through a marshy spot surrounded by trees in Sweet Springs East. Today Audubon volunteers (such as myself) were assisting in planting native willow cuttings in this mashy area, which despite the drought, are now guaranteed the needed extra water for that better chance of taking root! Go willows!

If you look closely, you will see little green flags that show where the willow cuttings were placed. Click on the pictures for a larger image and click the triangle on the video (with sound) to see dewatering in action!






Thursday, December 12, 2013

Sewer News From a US World Heritage Site

Jefferson's home in Virginia, Monticello, needs to dump its aging septic system and hook up to Albemarle County's public sewer system! But the County is resistant! Read about it at the link below!



Fun fact: If this hook-up happens, it might coincide with our hooking-up to our sewer system in 2016!

Fake Sewer Snow on 16th!


Found this rendering of a photo of mine on Google+
Only way we'll see the frozen, falling, flakey, stuff in Los Osos!

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Finishing Up!

The carved out sections of the street for the laterals have been progressively replaced here on 16th. Looks like our part of 16th will be finished today! Here are some shots from the past few days.

Driveway trench restored.

Another driveway trench being restored.

Measuring the base to assure there is enough.

The steam pictures are so cool!

Hand finishing after the riding roller is done.

Our street surface is better now than it was before!

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Shrieks of Protest Upcoming

Be prepared! Next week at the Board of Supes a Los Osos wastewater item is on the agenda!

Consent Agenda - Public Works Items:

23. Request approval of 1) Amendment No. 2 with HDR Engineering, Inc. in the amount of $2,840,642 for Construction Management Services for construction of the Collection System (increasing the contract amount from $6,891,632 to $9,732,274) and 2) authorization of Engineering Services during construction of the Water Recycling Facility, under the existing agreement with Carollo Engineers, in the amount of $1,444,099 for a revised total contract amount of $4,826,599, Los Osos Wastewater Project, Los Osos. District 2.

Be warned in advance on the public exhibit of gnashing of teeth and spittle flinging. With the three minute public comment limit however, you'll only need to endure around fifteen minutes of angst.

When the support documents are posted, I'll post the link! Here it is:

http://agenda.slocounty.ca.gov/agenda/sanluisobispo/Proposal.html;jsessionid=334F3662BBED3F2567D52F8343E853E0?select=2863

Read the last column off the document link below "Remaining Budget." No reason for anyone to panic, yet this will be ignored. And off the transmittal document, "(9) BUDGETED? Yes." 

http://agenda.slocounty.ca.gov/agenda/sanluisobispo/2863/RXhoaWJpdCBBIC0gQnVkZ2V0IFN0YXR1cyBVcGRhdGUucGRm/12/n/22429.doc

I will pull out a quote or two from the transmittal document located at the link below:

http://agenda.slocounty.ca.gov/agenda/sanluisobispo/2863/SXRlbSBEb2N1bWVudCAoUHVibGljKSA=/14/n/22438.doc

Page 3The bids are currently being evaluated and the apparent low bid is for $46,390,171, or about $200,000 under the Engineer’s Estimate. A staff report being prepared for recommendations to award the contract, which is expected to be presented to your Board in January. 

Page 4 - However, after the start of construction, the project team began receiving a significant volume of requests from property owners to confirm or relocate the lateral connect point. To date, there have been about 850 requests to relocate laterals. The project team, including HDR and the surveying sub-consultant, has worked to accommodate almost all of the requests, since this is the single interface that exists between the project and most properties. The cost impacts of these changes to the construction management team are largely the result of additional survey efforts, as the lateral locations are staked multiple times. 

Page 5 - The recommended amendment and services authorization are for services necessary and planned for the completion of the Project and is within existing authorized budget. 

Out With A Whisper

Today at the Board of Supervisors, the very, very last bit of the LOCSD's bankruptcy business was concluded and now all that remains is to make the payments to creditors. Off the agenda documents on the Consent Agenda:

1. The Chairman of the Board to execute the Assignment of the Solid Waste Collection Franchise Agreement between the County, the Los Osos Community Services District (LOCSD), Waste Connections, Inc. and Mission Country Disposal; and

2. The Auditor-Controller-Treasurer-Tax Collector (ACTT) to remit $2,800,000 from the County General Fund to the LOCSD for distribution among the LOCSD creditors; and

3. The ACTT to remit $772,029 from the Los Osos Wastewater Project Fund to the LOCSD for distribution among the LOCSD creditors.

There was one, lone public speaker, Marshall Ochylski. He thanked the BOS for their help on resolving of the seven year long bankruptcy. He certainly represented my thankfulness to them on getting that money and the thankfulness of my friends too. 

I congratulate Marshall on his success in this matter. As was mentioned at the last LOCSD meeting December 5, Marshall's many hours of legal work to get this done was all UNPAID. I truly and humbly thank him for those many, many hours. That the CSD could not have afforded to pay him was also mentioned at that meeting. I'm just glad that he had the time and the will to help out this community, which had no way to pay him.

Truly, the BOS authorizing the transfer of funds was our only hope for enough money to resolve the bankruptcy. Of course Marshall said nothing about the huge burden placed on the current board to finally get agreement and resolution to the mess that the "recall board" created in late 2005. That board, by their defiance of the State of California's rules and laws, not to mention the abandonment of common sense, resulted not only in the bankruptcy, but also in this expensive and lengthy standoff to the much needed work on repairing the damage to our only source of water, the one beneath our feet here in Los Osos. That damage to our aquifers has continued more or less unabated until our present wastewater project stepped in with the conservation funds to start the process of repairing the damage. That, and the product of the ISJ the Draft Basin Plan, with the physical steps needed to continue the repair work, will determine how well we will be able to live with what water we have left and if those vacant lot owners will ever get their investment back.

Sunday, December 08, 2013

The Word "Sewer"

I was reading the New York Times on Kindle today and ran across an article called "In a Scoreboard of Words, a Cultural Guide" by Natasha Singer. Excellent article, I might add. Anyway, it got me to thinking that I should try out this technology Google Ngram on our favorite word here on this blog, "sewer." Be sure to click the picture below to see it large enough to actually read!



Then I did a search with the words "sewer" and "Los Osos." I will this time imbed the graph.
You can move the cursor over the lines to see the actual percentage of instances of the word. You will note that the words "Los Osos" are a flatline compared to the word "sewer."

HOWEVER, I suspect that if this data collecting was inclusive of technical journals, newspaper and magazine articles, these words might be off the charts and tied closely together in many instances. Food for thought digestion. And perhaps elimination, pun intended. You can find the tool at this link to have fun with your own data queries at this link! https://books.google.com/ngrams

Saturday, December 07, 2013

Water Board Meeting Notes

I attended the Regional Water Quality Control Board's meeting today in SLO. Staffer David LaCaro was giving an update to the Board on the status of the wastewater project. John Waddell, Project Manager from the County, was there to answer questions from the Board. The Los Osos regulars were there too of course.

The first and only public comment at Public Forum (comments for items not on the agenda) mentioned CDOs (Cease and Desist orders). You might recall those orders were issued because the LOCSD Board stopped the sewer project in 2005 after a recall election. These orders were "the stick" to get a sewer project going again as the Water Board was NOT pleased, to say the least. This technique was objected to by a group called PZLDF and they went to court to try to overturn these orders. They kept losing in court after higher court—up the food chain—but until they stopped suing the Water Board, the Water Board was not going to drop the CDOs. It finally ended, and you can read about it here, but since the sewer IS being built, the CDOs are meaningless and the desire to drop them was forgotten until now. The request was noted for investigation by the Water Board's legal counsel.

There was a report on a field trip to the sewer project by Water Board Vice Chair Dr. Wolff. It had been attended by two locals, LOCSD District Engineer Rob Miller, the Water Board's Executive Officer Kenneth Harris and board members including  Dr. Wolff. How this trip came into being is a bit of a mystery, as only a large community activist and a local developer represented the public of Los Osos on this trip. I looked back on Water Board minutes and my notes from a meeting on February 1, 2013 and found that Chairperson Young had directed board members Wolff and Hunter to a sub-committee meeting with the County at the that Water Board meeting to study the wastewater plans. I'm not sure what the nexus to this trip might be or why this trip happened. In any case, the report was glowing, that the project was coming along in an organized and clean fashion. Not what some Los Osos members of the audience wanted to hear.

Anyway, not to write a book, but the main points were these:

  • On the water to dewater from the trenches, there was only 10% of the expected amount predicted;
  • Some areas expected to have high groundwater had none;
  • It was clear that both discharge to land and bay were permitted;
  • The Water Board has an unclear, or not much of an, ability to influence the ISJ;
  • There were 12 citizen comments and 3 agency comments on the Draft Basin Plan;
  • The Draft Basin Plan has no timeline to meet the goals;
  • The Basin Plan should hopefully be released in early 2014;
  • Anything Los Osos water purveyors wish to do regarding water improvements requires coastal review;
  • Dr. Hunter had multiple questions on everything and was asked by Dr. Wolff to give other Board members a chance to get their questions out;
  • Private well metering was discussed in the context of getting accurate data for modeling the basin—the Board of Supes can issue ordinances forcing well owners to meter, but politically it is a burning-burning-burning hot potato;
  • Walker Ditch (used for three weeks only) and the Solano pump station property are no longer needed for dewatering;
  • The contractors are rapidly wrapping up dewatering, the flows average 50,000 gallons per day now;
  • Dewatering water is going into a blackberry thicket and a eucalyptus grove where plant uptake helps to remove nitrates;
  • The salts in the dewater water are significantly less than has the seawater in the bay;
  • The dollar per acre foot cost on the recycled water being sold to the farmers is comparable to their pumping costs to give them incentive to use it;
  • Once the resistant farmers see how well the farmers taking the treated water are doing, they will be encouraged to sign up;
  • The Board was VERY unhappy getting Keith Wimer's hugely long Draft Basin Plan comments submitted 5 minutes before the meeting started; several Board members commented on that. The staff will read the document and make comments in May;
  • Some of the public's comments on the wastewater project do not fall into the Water Board's preview;
  • The Water Board cannot assist Los Osos citizens if they do not like their Supervisors, as they are elected;
  • The Regional Water Board has no latitude to change the nitrate limit requirements (none at this time) in the discharge permit, those comments should go to the State Board;
  • Mr. Young and Mr. Harris spoke to the public commenter's and Dr. Hunter's hoopla over the amount of nitrate in the dewatering water going into the bay—
 —the reason we are here today is because of the environmental impacts of the septic flows into the bay....any pumping into the bay is minor compared to what is going in there now. Any nitrate impacts to the bay (if there even are some) are transitory and will self correct (example; the Elkhorn Slough);
  • Mr. Young would rather staff take up issues on saltwater intrusion than those around dewatering water's nitrates.
Great staff report by Mr. LaCaro and very helpful background information from Mr. Waddell, thank you both!

And that was pretty much it. (Meeting time: two and one half hours.)

Our new CSD General Manager was in attendance which was a good thing. Her professional, positive, friendly attitude is vital to the success in the relations between the CSD and the County on the subject of the wastewater treatment plant.





Thursday, December 05, 2013

Repairing the Street

Getting the street surface back to (better than it was) in pictures and videos.


Doing the lines for the cuts.


The first grinding left this trench.


Grinding went on more than once.


Ptooey.


Slurry dump.


Moving the slurry in place.


Squashing it smooth.










Going down the street.





Wednesday, December 04, 2013

Bankruptcy Here and There

Need I repeat the sad tale of the LOCSD's bankruptcy again? Well, I won't. But the bankruptcy lives on, perhaps to FINALLY end with the conclusion of these two meetings…one can hope anyway…too optimistic maybe…

Goodbye solid waste franchise, it's been nice knowing you.


Los Osos CSD meeting
Thursday, December 5, 2013
6:00 PM

2. CLOSED SESSION

A. PENDING LITIGATION (Government Code §54956.9(a).)
Conference with Legal Counsel Regarding Existing Litigation (Formally initiated:
-In re Los Osos Community Services District (ND-06-10548) United States Bankruptcy Court,
Central District of California, Northern Division


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Board of Supervisors meeting
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
9:00 AM

Consent Agenda - Public Works Items:

9. Submittal of a resolution authorizing and directing the actions necessary to satisfy the conditions to effectiveness of the amended bankruptcy in In re the Los Osos Community Services District. District 2

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Dig's Thanksgiving Post

The new post from Michelle this evening - the holiday schedule and a thank you!

Read it at this link:
http://www.diglososos.com/2013/11/25/holiday-work-thanksgiving/

Do NOT miss the photos at the bottom - really cute!

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Starting December for Dig Los Osos....

......new office hours:

Off the Dig site:

Effective 12/1/13 office hours will be held only on Thursdays from 9 am to 11 am, or by appointment.

http://www.diglososos.com/contact/

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

LOCSD Special Meeting Today Cancelled!

I wonder what that means?

Sewer Geeks! Important Water Board Update!

Friday, December 6, 2013, 8:30 a.m.
Save the date, don't miss this meeting!

Central Coast Water Board
895 Aerovista Place, Suite 101, San Luis Obispo

See the agenda and related documents off this link.

World Toilet Day!

Darn, we missed it, it was yesterday! Well, check out the link here to see what it was about. Be sure to click through all the pictures as they are rather fun! You can go out apparently to celebrate, or you can celebrate at home!


However, it is very sobering to see what the lack of sanitation can cause. An excellent book on the topic is The Big Necessity The Unmentionable World of Human Waste And Why It Matters by Rose George. A fascinating read.

Los Osos is having its own daily toilet celebration I guess, seeing that the aim of the World Toilet Day was SANITATION! Our sewer project is moving along swiftly in the attempt to clean up the disgusting fact of, dare I say it? (sure, why not, it's my blog), peeing and pooping right on top of our water supply! Ugh. UGH. UGH!

A major side note to the cleaning up of things beyond water in Los Osos will occur Wednesday afternoon, November 20, 4:00 p.m. at the District Office on 9th Street. The BANKRUPTCY. This meeting is for the directors to vote on transferring the solid waste franchise to the County for $2.8 million. Read all about the meeting here.

This quote out of the staff report outlines a brief history:
As a result of the District's termination of the wastewater project being constructed under contract to the District, the creditors filed a series of claims and initiated legal action against the District.  As a result of those actions, the District declared Bankruptcy in August of 2006. The total amount of the creditor's claims at that time exceeded $46,500,000.
The bankruptcy was finally, finally approved on October 9, 2013 and this transfer is the last thing to be done to conclude these years of stress and I'd say torture even, imposed by a clueless, feckless board on its successors and our town. Fortunately for us, the final settlement amount was whittled down to  a mere $11,396,505.

For perspective, the entire operating budget of the District has been around $4.9 million yearly, but with the income from the Solid Waste Franchise gone, it will now be less. The periodic rate adjustments to our bills will no longer be determined by our LOCSD board, but by the County. The $151,000 in yearly franchise income, flushed down the toilet as it were. And that is the event on our agenda for the day after World Toilet Day. Get the facts here.

Friday, November 08, 2013

Infeasible Is Not A Dirty Word

Much ado has been made in the blogoshpere and public meetings of late over "dewatering." For those who have not chosen to fully live every phase of the sewer project, or prefer to leave water matters in the hands of the professionals, this water is that which is being pumped out of the trenches where the contractors are putting in the sewer pipe in the low lying areas. It is important to know that 1) You cannot lay and seal the pipe in water; 2) Anywhere from 300,000 gallons to 1 million gallons of water is going into the bay DAILY as a matter of natural course.

The County and contractors have been under fire by certain long-standing sewer critics for not using all of that water for recharge (at Tri-W, or rather the Mid-Town site, gets as much as it can percolate), or for dust control on the roads. And at Broderson. Some of that water has been pumped into the bay as there has been no other feasible place to put it, meaning trucking it "somewhere" or running pipe and pumps to some of the town's drainage basins would have had huge logistical and cost impacts.

The most definitive answer regarding Broderson, the place the sewer critics are pushing to put it lately, came from the County yesterday in the form of a letter from Dave Flynn, Deputy Director of Public Works to Kenneth A. Harris, Executive Director of the Central Coast Regional Water Control Board. Broderson is not feasible. Read the attached letter to see why.

The point is, the low lying areas needed to be dug up when there is no rain. Broderson has been a very lengthy process with all of the environmental work that was necessary and the project could not wait around for it to be finished.

To habitually scream 8 to 16 million gallons of water going into the bay!, with NO ACTUAL figures is just plain wrong, not to mention the irresponsibility of churning up panic or anger in the general populace by false statements. We now know that since July, there has been on average 750,000 gallons of dewatering a day. The average land disposal per day has been 550,000 gallons per day; of that, 400,000 gallons per day to Tri-W and 150,000 gallons per day used for construction purposes. So an average of 200,000 gallons of water is going into the bay (keep in mind 300,000 gallons goes in there NATURALLY).

So what is all this about? Critics latching onto a plausible-sounding argument with which to bash the County. Frankly, that just sucks and I am pretty sick of it.

I can only hope that County will consider the source of this dissension; it is tiny, long-standing in hating-every-aspect-of-this-or-any-other-doable-sewer-project, and while annoying, very annoying, it is only a small part of the populace who is otherwise getting along good-naturedly with the bumps and beauties of the project.






Another Sort Of Sewer Tour

Yesterday I posted a different sort of sewer tour. One that was lighthearded. This video is hard core, depressing. You might not want to watch it. Sewers have different uses. I guess these people are glad they have someplace to hide.

Anyone whining about what is happening here really needs a reality check about what happens in the other parts of the world.



Thank you Thomas Morton for making this video.

Thursday, November 07, 2013

Plan Ahead For Your Summer Vacation in Paris!

I ran across this video on YouTube and thought we sewerphiles might like to view the sewer tour under the streets in Paris. This place has a sewer museum! I'm not sure that we could apply that idea here, but we do have a rather famous sewer history in Los Osos. We could sell manhole cover keychains, grinder pump coffee grinders (scaled down of course), sewer rats (ours would have to be pretty small, our pipes are dinky), and Eau de Toilette, a scent yet to be determined!



Thanks to Chris of Yellow Productions!

Sunday, November 03, 2013

"Fatberg" in London Sewer

We septic tank users don't often, if ever, get a view into the tank. Because pumping is expensive, and we are sitting on top of our water source, most of us try to be mindful of what we put in there. But in 2016 we will all be hooked up to our new sewer, and since some of us are imports from cities where we really don't give much thought to what goes down the potty, here is a glimpse of what could happen, on a much smaller scale of course, to our spanking new pipes (try not to gasp or puke, or maybe just don't go to this link):

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2417381/The-Fatberg--bigger-Londons-dirty-secret-grown-THREE-tonnes-just-month.html

So think before flushing. Our town's collective septic system at Bayridge Estates had a blockage on October 24 due to large chunks of grease and wipes. So now is a good time to start practicing good sewer stewardship as ghastly as that sounds.

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Sewer Work on Sixteenth

Similar to, but different from the reconstruction of the tanks on16th (and the street being torn up for the new piping that went with it), the sewer construction is the most exciting thing to hit 16th. OK, the broken unmarked water pipe near the bike path was high drama a few days back, but it was over pretty fast. This is going on for a while.


It started with the pot holing.


Then the street was unzipped.


Water applied at every step to keep down the dust.


Electrical wires lifted out of the way.


Coming up the hill.


Digging sand.


The point of digging, placing pipes. Rather a pretty color!


The trench boxes are moved around with surgical precision.


Tap, tap, tap. Then more digging inside the box.


Plates go down to keep the sand contained.


When the pipe is in the trench boxes come out. 
Note the lift in the back, they are pretty heavy.


Plates arrive to cover the excavation.



Look to the upper left at the holiday appropriate antenna decor!

There is so much more to say about the mind boggling dexterity of the equipment operators. How they lift, trek, nudge and tap these giant hunks of steel as though they didn't weigh tons.
And the fantastic project coordination with the many steps that require perfect timing between the different parts of the team—the guys constantly measuring, guys cutting pipe, so as soon as the trench is ready, in goes the pipe, the street sweeping and watering both with the equipment and by hand, new water arriving via truck, two trucks lined up to keep the dirt coming up and away from the trench, the dirt coming back to go into the newly piped section, putting on the plates with some hot asphalt to keep them firmly in place. Today is Saturday and the watering trucks came twice (while I was paying attention). 
I got nothing done Friday watching this oh, so, beautiful show.








Tuesday, October 22, 2013

16th Street Water Works!


Well, it was a tough day on 16th Street for both the ARB construction guys and our own CSD water crew (and for residents and one of the schools too). There was an unmarked water pipe (where have we heard that story before?) a tad north of the El Moro Bike Path and one of the big machines hit it. I missed the first part, the fountain, but will show some later shots of the event. I only knew something had happened because I went to wash my hands, two drops of water came out, then nothing.

The CSD crew had already jumped into action, Frank was running up the street to the tanks to turn something off and our other CSD water crew guys were locating the shut off valves to shut the water off, of which there were more than one.

The ARB crew had to halt work until the water stopped off course, but some brave residents motored out of the mess with no problem.

Fortunately the drainage project at the bottom of 16th had been set up years ago and it worked to get the water across and under Paso Robles down to Walker Ditch and beyond.

Once the water stopped, the ARB crew was all ready to go with a new section of pipe and two couplings. So as one guy said, "we have an upgrade!"

The main things about this, no one was hurt, no homes flooded and the repair was done amazingly fast. Sure, too bad about the water loss, but now that the CSD is FINALLY out of bankruptcy, maybe some money will be available to do some capital improvement upgrades which have been on the back burner for years.

I had two in-depth conversations, one with with ARB's Paul Gallagher, Project Manager and one with HDR's Jim Brantley, Construction Manager. They both were on top of the problem immediately. They both have had experience with big projects like this, so this was not anything new to deal with, they had seen it all before. We are in good hands, no question, these guys and their crews are quite amazing and we are lucky to have them working for us!

Looking South

Drainage at Work

The Hidden Pipe

Looking North

All Fixed