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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In master planning, there may be 15 projects at any given time, while in the Design, Construction, and Maintenance program, there can be about 150.

The program contracts out to firms such as CH2M Hill, but the volume of work dictates it be spread out among many consultants. Consultants are chosen for all programs, including master planning, capital construction, and maintenance.

The district uses RFQs in an effort to create a database of qualified consultants.

“The RFQ list is just to get them in the system so we have their name, address, and contact information,” says Hindman.

Depending on the size of the project, the district will, on larger projects, expand its efforts to a full RFP to 10 firms and then narrow that down to three firms to interview before selecting one.

“Through the RFP interview process, we pick a consultant based on their understanding of the project and qualifications,” says Hindman. “We try really hard to spread the work around within the Denver metro area. One of our requirements is that your firm must have an office within our boundaries.

“We wait for the firms to market us. When people call up to ask us what they need to do to get projects, I tell them they need to contact my engineers. Find out what projects they’ve got coming up and tell them you’re interested in ones you have the specific qualities to go after.”

The consulting firm may be chosen for a number of reasons: it has the expertise that fits the project, consultants know the location quite well, or the consulting firm may have an established positive working relationship with the local government—“Something that sets you a little bit above the next guy,” notes Hindman.

The district doesn’t rely on rotation lists as it once did some time ago. “When consultants come to you and say, ‘I want to do your work,’ what they mean is they want to do it that week,” says Hindman. “The consultants’ future planning is next month, whereas ours is five years. So we’d say, ‘Great,’ and call them up nine months later and tell them we’re ready—and they’d tell us they’re way too busy because they have 15 other projects.”

The district prefers instead to invite consultants to approach its staff when it has immediate human resources to do the work and an interest in doing it.

While the state of the economy may dictate the availability of a consulting firm, Hindman points out there are other influencing factors.

“What we have found is that consultants decide whether they want to do private or public work,” he says. “Say they’re designing a specific stormwater project—if they have a private client, they may be representing that client, and they may be in to the local government arguing for their private client then two days later, showing back up in the same room, but now on the other side.

Photo: City of El Paso Engineering Department
Doniphan Drive heavily flooded on the west side of El Paso

“We’d all like to be robots and not remember that they just yelled at me two days ago and thought I was an idiot, but I remember that—and now they’re supposed to represent me? That’s why typically local firms will make a marketing decision to go after private or public clients, and we obviously go for the ones who service public clients.”

One of the jobs which the district hires consultants is for doing the master plan for all of the district’s drainage basins. “We’ve pretty much done all of them, because we’ve been in existence since 1969, and now we’re going back and redoing them because things change. We hire consultants to update those master plans,” says Hindman.

“In the design, construction and maintenance side, everything we do is stormwater-related, so we hire them to rehabilitate long sections of drainage ways—creeks, rivers, and ditches. We also have them design in the capital construction side when we’re going to increase the capacity of a channel—long stretches of drainage ways or large regional detention ponds.”

Among the larger projects in which stormwater consultants have been involved is work along the South Platte River in Denver to get the downtown area out of the flood zone.

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Hindman notes that one of the critical areas affecting the stormwater consultant relationship is the construction process.

“The old way of doing things is the tried and true way of the design, bid, build process,” Hindman says. “There are a lot of new delivery methods of getting the project done. The design-build is one that has been thrown around a lot, but there are a lot of different types of design-build.

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