Buyers Guide '09

Calling In Outside Expertise

What cities look for when selecting a stormwater consultant

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By Carol Brzozowski

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Personal interviews also are important to ensure the firm has the team that can do the job with the necessary resources, Costanzo says. In some cases, a stormwater consulting company may be so busy with other projects that there’s a potential for one of them to get less attention.

“You’ve got to have a commitment when you develop that task order or scope of work that the resources promised to work for you are available for you,” he says.

Photo: City of El Paso Engineering Department
The storm created some powerful waterflows throughout the city.

Developing an understanding about keeping within a municipality’s budget is also important in any relationship with a stormwater consultant, Costanzo points out.

He notes that there can be advantages to using consultants the city already has onboard, if they have the capabilities for the new work the city needs. “You get some synergy there, because they know how you work, you know how they work, and maybe you can maximize their resources if they’re working on multiple projects for you. That’s another way to cut your costs down.”

With Malcolm Pirnie’s help, El Paso is set to initiate its stormwater utility this year.

“Our consultant has been with us every step of the way,” says Costanzo.

Meanwhile, in Austin, TX, most stormwater work is done by consultants. The city’s stormwater section is in its Watershed Protection and Development Review Department, which has hired numerous consultants throughout the years.

“We normally do the preliminary analysis in-house, but we don’t have the capability here to do the designs,” says Mapi Vigil, supervising engineer for the department. “In more than 90% of the cases, we hire an outside consultant.”

Consultants perform everything from broad to specific program tasks, says Rosie Truelove, Austin’s contract procurement division manager.

Additionally, the city uses rotation lists; consultants are hired for a broad scope of services and then get specific assignments as work comes up.

“It depends on the workload and what we’ve got going on,” says Truelove. “Here, in Public Works, we have in-house design teams that will do the design and engineering work for many of our projects, and if they’re not available, we’ll look to an outside consultant.”

Austin’s Watershed Protection and Development Review Department is charged with overseeing flood control, erosion control, and water-quality benefits, says Vigil.

“We hire consultants who have expertise on their team for those three missions that we have in the department,” she says. “The work includes fixing a channel that is being eroded, building a retention pond, fixing dams, building water-quality ponds, and also doing preliminary engineering or feasibility [studies] to see what kind of projects we need to do within our watershed.”

Austin uses a request for qualifications (RFQ) process to select consultants and has utilized the services of such firms as PBS&J.

“The way it works in Austin is we issue a solicitation for interested consultants who acquire the solicitation package, come to a pre-response meeting, learn more about the project, and then submit a statement of qualifications that outlines their experience and the experience of their sub-consultants,” says Truelove.

Photo: City of El Paso Engineering Department
Water coming over the banks of the Rio Grande due to heavy flooding

Austin uses an evaluation matrix that lists criteria, which is published with the solicitation. The city uses standardized criteria for all solicitations.

“It’s not as though, if you don’t have five years of experience, you can’t work for the city of Austin,” Truelove points out. “We look to hire the most qualified consultant and anyone who’s interested in performing the work.”

Truelove notes the process from the time the solicitation is issued until the city council approves a contract can take up to six months to complete.

While the in-house professional expertise sets the ball rolling, the elected officials make the final decision on expenditures over $50,000. Most of the RFQs for consultants are above that threshold.

To help ensure that consultants stay within Austin’s budgets for work, the city sets up a series of estimates.

“We have a ballpark estimate of what we generally think the work is going to entail, and we have that in mind as we go forward with the solicitation,” says Truelove. “Through our contract documents, we have a requirement to narrow down and refine that estimate in working with the consultant. It still comes out as communication between the consultant, the project manager, and the staff working here with the city to make sure that we’re not allowing it to get so divergent that we think it’s costing one thing and the consultant thinks it’s costing something else. It takes going back and forth and constant communication about where we’re going for the design.”

To address emergencies, Austin relies on its rotation list.

“We have some flexibility with our rotation list, because those people are already on contract with the city. If we have a flood event, we might look to use someone from our rotation list so we wouldn’t have to go through the RFQ process,” Truelove says.

The rotation list is also used when there are small tasks that need attention, adds Vigil. “We save the time it takes the city to go through the RFQ process.”

It’s important for a municipality in choosing a stormwater consultant to define the areas in which expertise is needed, says Vigil.

“Because of the areas for which we’re responsible, it becomes a little bit more complicated for our stormwater consultants,” she says. “But we are putting very good teams together now.”

As in Austin, officials in Denver, CO, are heavily dependent upon stormwater consultants to execute projects.

Consultants are used for every stormwater-related task except project management for the Design, Construction, and Maintenance Program for the Urban Drainage and Flood Control District in Denver.

“We have a fairly large area that we service—there are 40 local governments under our jurisdiction—and we have a lot of work we’ve got to get done,” says manager Paul Hindman. “Our board determined early on that the best way to do that is to have everyone here at our district be managers, and then we can manage several different projects.

“If you’re doing everything in-house, usually you can handle three, four, or five projects, whereas each one of our managers handles many—50 projects or so—but to do that, we have to rely a lot upon consultants.”

Another reason the district hires consultants is for personnel reasons, notes Hindman.

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“If you don’t like a consultant, you make it through that project and then you just don’t hire them again. As the workload goes up and down, you don’t have to worry about keeping people busy. You don’t have to lay people off, and you don’t have to staff-back up. You can do it per project,” he points out.

Contracting the work out also saves on labor costs such as benefits, he adds. The district’s annual budget is about $20 million.

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