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SSS, <br />Substitute Bill #64 -13 <br />AN ORDINANCE OF THE COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SOUTH BEND, <br />INDIANA AMENDING VARIOUS SECTIONS OF CHAPTER 17, ARTICLE 2, <br />OF THE SOUTH BEND MUNICIPAL CODE TO ADJUST SEWER RATES AND <br />CHARGES INCREMENTALLY THROUGH 2017 <br />STATEMENT OF PURPOSE AND INTENT <br />On June 28, 2010 South Bend enacted a sewer rate adjustment through Ordinance #10019 -10 which <br />set rates for the years 2010 through 2013. At this time the 2013 rates in Ordinance #10019 -10 apply to <br />South Bend's sewer utility customers. <br />South Bend received a National Pollution Discharge Elimination Permit ( NPDES) in conjunction <br />with a Long Term Control Plan (LTCP) required by the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) <br />and the Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) to greatly reduce combined sewage <br />overflow (CSO) events in the St. Joseph River in compliance with the Clean Water Act. The LTCP <br />resulted from a negotiated consent decree to resolve a complaint by EPA and IDEM alleging that South <br />Bend had violated sections of the federal Clean Water Act. <br />South Bend's cost of complying with the LTCP and its NPDES Permit in protecting the St. Joseph <br />River is substantial, and South Bend has prudently planned for this remediation through a 20 year <br />environmental infrastructure improvement and replacement process. The cost of river protection through <br />improvements to the sewage utility's infrastructure is financed through sewer rates; and South Bend's <br />current rates are inadequate to cover total EPA mandated changes to the City's sewage treatment system, as <br />recognized in Ordinance #10019 -10. Additionally, South Bend's basic costs of operation and maintenance <br />of its sewer utility have increased despite innovative cost savings programs initiated by the City's <br />Environmental Services Department. <br />The sewer rates which have been in effect for the past four years were implemented on an <br />incremental basis to correspond with projected near future increased costs of Clean Water Act remediation, <br />and the expected increased costs of general operation and maintenance over a four year period. The <br />additional income to the utility will pay for improvements to separate sewers, to reduce sewage overflows <br />to basements, and to increase capacity of the Wastewater Treatment Plant. This incremental approach to <br />maintaining a fiscally sound sewer utility capable of complying with South Bend's federal NPDES Permit <br />should be continued for the next three years. The rates set forth in this ordinance remain highly <br />competitive with those of similarly situated Indiana cities. <br />NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF <br />SOUTH BEND as follows: <br />