Thursday, October 15, 2009

METERS A TO Z Thursday, October 20 - Bloomington, IL

Illinois Section AWWA Presents:
METERS A TO Z
Thursday, October 20, 2009 - Bloomington, IL

REGISTRATION & HOURS
Registration begins at 8:30am. The training will start at 9:00am and will conclude by 3:00pm. Earn up to 5 PDHs or RTC hours. Continental breakfast and lunch will be included.

LOCATION
Doubletree Hotel and Conference
Center Bloomington Illinois
10 Brickyard Drive
Bloomington, IL 61701
Ph: 309-664-6446

COST
$40.00 for AWWA members
$60.00 for non AWWA members
$70.00 for on-site registration

SPEAKER
John H. Van Arsdel, M.E. Simpson Co., Inc.

AGENDA
Accurate water measurement is the means by which water utilities produce revenue to cover expenses, charge each customer equitably, prevent waste of water, and minimize the load on wastewater facilities. During this intensive one-day seminar we will explore meters from A to Z.
• What is a water meter?
• Things water meters do
• A water meter only does two things, register and record
• Types of water meters
• Fire service metering
• Sensus Fireline Meter or the Neptune Protectus Meter
• Application’s for water meters
• Sizing of water meters
• Meter testing
• Repair or replacement
• Conclusion and remarks

FOR MORE INFORMATION AND REGISTRATION:
Visit www.isawwa.org or contact Lisa via phone, 866-521-3595 ext. 2 or email, lisa@isawwa.org

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Water Storage Tank Seminar - St. Charles Illinois

WATER STORAGE TANKS
Tuesday, October 27, 2009 - St. Charles, IL

REGISTRATION & HOURS
Registration begins at 8:30am. The training will start at 9:00am and will conclude by 3:00pm. Earn up to 5 PDHs or RTC hours. Continental breakfast and lunch will be included.

DATES & LOCATIONS
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
University of Illinois Extension Office
(Next to ISAWWA Office)
535 South Randall Road
St. Charles, IL 60174
866-521-3595 x2

COST
$40.00 for AWWA members
$60.00 for non AWWA members
$70.00 on-site registration

SPEAKER
Erik Otten, Taylor Coating
James Dooley, Corrpro Companies
Ira Gabin, Dixon Engineering

AGENDA
Protective coatings and linings for the interior and exterior of water storage tanks - Erik Otten

Corrosion Basics and Cathodic Protection System Applications for Water Storage Tanks - James Dooley

Design and Maintenance Considerations for Water Storage Cellular Antenna Installations - Ira Gabin

Water Storage Tank Inspection Basics and Comparison of Drained and Underwater Inspection Methods - Ira Gabin

New Storage Tank Selection: Review of Available Styles, Relative Advantages, and Life Cycle Maintenance Cost Analysis - Ira Gabin


FOR MORE INFORMATION AND REGISTRATION:
Visit www.isawwa.org or contact Lisa via phone, 866-521-3595 ext. 2 or email, lisa@isawwa.org

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Request for Lobbying Assistants - HR3248

The House Subcommittee on Energy and Environment will on Wednesday conduct a “markup” hearing on HR3258, the Drinking Water System Security Act. This is the bill that would create a new chemical security program for drinking water utilities. We still have outstanding concerns over this bill, primarily over provisions that would place the final decision on what chemicals and processes a water utility could use with state officials, or the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency if the state fails to make a decision. A “markup” is a hearing in which a committee or subcommittee accepts or rejects amendments and then votes to send bill language either a full committee or the full House.

While the committee has made some improvements to the bill due to concerns you all have expressed, these provisions, under the section titled “Methods to Reduce the Consequences of an Chemical Release from an Intentional Act” remain a concern. We understand that some amendments to address our concerns will likely be offered. AWWA members are urged to call, fax or e-mail their members of Congress immediately to say that water treatment choices must be made locally. A draft letter follows.




October 12, 2009


The Honorable Xxxxx, XXXXXXX,
U.S. House of Representatives

Dear Representative Xxxxxxxx,

As the House Subcommittee on Energy and Environment prepares to mark up HR3258, I ask you to support amendment of the bill to preserve the ability of communities to make their own decisions regarding the treatment of local drinking water. I have first-hand, on-the-ground experience in this as a provider of safe water to XX,XXX people in your district.

In HR3258 there are provisions titled “Methods to Reduce the Consequences of a Chemical Release from an Intentional Act.” These provisions would place the final decision on which materials – primarily disinfectants – or processes a drinking water utility may use with state drinking water primacy agencies.

Drinking water utilities tailor their treatment and distribution processes according to regulatory obligations (such as the federal requirement to use chlorine in some form and to achieve certain levels of disinfection), to critical variations in source water characteristics (such as temperatures, pH, pathogens, etc.), and to other local factors (such as delivery options for disinfectant chemicals, the need to maintain reserve supplies in the event of supply interruption, spatial limitations at the plant site, local ambient temperatures that affect the “shelf life” of chemicals and the attendant chemical degradation and breakdown products, etc.

We also ask that you support amendments that would
• strengthen criminal penalties for disclosure of sensitive information to make them similar to such penalties under the Bioterrorism Act of 2002;
• prevent discovery of sensitive information through civil suits filed via Safe Drinking Water Act citizen suit provisions; and
• provide an appeals process for utilities in case amendments to preserve local decisionmaking are defeated.

We look forward to hearing from you on this issue, and offer the expertise of our staff to further discuss how water utilities choose the materials and processes that we use to provide safe and sufficient water to the people in our community.

Sincerely,