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Bill No. 17-25 <br /> i <br /> i <br /> RESOLUTION NO. <br /> A RESOLUTION OF THE COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY <br /> OF SOUTH BEND,INDIANA,SUPPORTING THE CITY ADMINISTRATION'S <br /> ALTERNATIVE COST SAVINGS APPROACH TO ITS CSO LONG TERM CONTROL <br /> PLAN AND ENCOURAGING THE FEDERAL AND STATE ENVIRONMENTAL <br /> REGULATORY AGENCIES TO ADOPT THIS INNOVATIVE PLAN <br /> I <br /> i <br /> i <br /> i <br /> WHEREAS, the City of South Bend has been a leader in seeking ways to maintain a <br /> clean and safe St. Joseph River, having been the first Indiana city on the St. Joseph River to I <br /> construct a wastewater treatment plant, and prior to 2011 it had invested over one hundred <br /> million dollars ($100,000,000) into upgrades and improvements of its sewage system to enhance <br /> environmental protection; and <br /> WHEREAS, in December 2011, the City of South Bend enacted a 20 year CSO Long <br /> Term Control Plan(CSO Plan)to reduce combined sewer overflows (LSO's) into the St. Joseph <br /> River to ensure compliance with the federal Clean Water Act, which CSO Plan was incorporated <br /> into a Consent Decree filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of <br /> Indiana; and <br /> WHEREAS, the City's original CSO Plan required a massive new investment by the City <br /> to reduce down to four (4) the number of annual events of CSO excess sewer discharge into the € <br /> St. Joseph River; the expectation of the remedial cost was approximately five hundred million a <br /> dollars ($500,000,000) to be paid through a series of sewer rate increases born by customers of <br /> the City sewer utility, most of whom are individuals and families, of which about $149 million <br /> has been paid to date; and <br /> WHEREAS, today the estimated cost of the City's original five hundred million CSO <br /> Plan is around eight hundred sixty-one million dollars ($861,000,000); and <br /> i' <br /> WHEREAS, The South Bend Common Council, as the City's fiscal agent, pursuant to <br /> Ind. Code 8-22-1-8, is concerned with cost as well as operational efficiency of City programs; <br /> and <br /> WHEREAS, at the time of its enactment, the City's CSO Plan incorporated novel, state e <br /> of the art technology and was based upon then existing knowledge, solutions, and treatment e <br /> S <br /> techniques; and <br /> WHEREAS, in the years since 2011, the City has had the benefit of the wireless sensor <br /> and smart valve technology used in the original Long Term Control Plan, almost unique in the <br /> world, which has provided real time, highly reliable data to identify actual needs and points of <br /> weakness in the system, and the City has also had the benefit of a comprehensive study of its i <br /> sewer treatment system;and <br /> 6 <br />