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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Whether it’s for managing stormwater programs, setting up a stormwater utility, inventorying the stormwater infrastructure, or performing hydrological and hydraulic analyses, municipalities often rely on stormwater consultants to provide services in areas not feasible for in-house staff.The city of El Paso, TX, hired a stormwater consultant for the first time after a major storm event during summer 2006 caused hundreds of millions of dollars of damage and highlighted deficiencies in the city’s stormwater infrastructure system.

The city council, stormwater utility personnel, and city manager decided to hire a consultant to look at the stormwater situation and make recommendations how best to handle it.

Photo: City of El Paso Engineering Department
El Paso's major storm in 2006 caused hundreds of millions of dollars of damage and highlighted the city's stormwater infrastructure deficiencies.
Photo: City of El Paso Engineering Department
The aftermath of the storm in one of El Paso's parking lots

Previously, the city had utilized the services of Malcolm Pirnie’s Red Oak Consulting in its water and sewer rate infrastructure design, cost-of-service studies, and organizational studies.

“Malcolm Pirnie came in, did an assessment of the situation and of the multi-jurisdictional responsibilities, the cross-city departments, cross-functional duties, sharing of resources, and so forth,” explains Nick Costanzo, vice president of business operations for El Paso Water Utilities. “They then put together recommendations for the city council and the public service board, which runs the El Paso utilities, to look at all of the options jointly to see what was the best way to address it. 

“In the end, the city council asked the public service board if they would be willing to take on this responsibility along with the water and sewer utility. The board agreed, and the city of El Paso created an ordinance creating a stormwater utility compliant with state law, putting it under the auspices of the public service board.”

El Paso chose Malcolm Pirnie as the stormwater consultant “because we wanted to use a consultant that was familiar with the utilities’ organizational structure, how we do our capital improvement program planning, and how we do our cost of service. One component of the stormwater utility was developing stormwater fees in lieu of property taxes, so that was a very critical component of the process,” says Costanzo.

Many municipalities are at a fork in the road where a decision has to be made as to whether to handle stormwater functions with in-house staff or contract with a consulting firm. At times, budgetary concerns come into play.

“We have a good core group of people who handle a lot of the baseload work,” says Costanzo. “But when we want to draw upon best management practices, that’s where we tend to bring in consultants to look nationally and internationally at what works.”

As such, stormwater consultants have a wealth of experience from which to share.

“We use Malcolm Pirnie to do that research for us, to look at the way different cities handled stormwater issues,” he says. “Some do it through city departments, some through cross-organizational or inter-governmental agreements, and others through stormwater utilities. They put all of that together for us and let us look at it from a macro perspective and also a micro perspective.”

While some municipalities may use a request for proposal (RFP) to hire stormwater consultants, when El Paso brought Malcolm Pirnie in to help address an emergency situation, it chose the firm based on previous positive experiences.

“We had a stormwater emergency where we had major damage that needed to be fixed right away,” Costanzo points out. “The city wanted to act quickly and hire the consultant off any existing contracts we happened to have. Malcolm Pirnie was already working on cost-of-service, rate structures, and organizational components of the utility and developing the new organizational structure.

“So, since we had a contract, we just added on a task order for them, and we felt they had the resources necessary to do the job.”

Costanzo’s advice to other municipalities choosing a stormwater consultant is that, absent of a good existing relationship with a consulting firm, checking references is critical.

“Especially get references using cities within your region and size that have your type of problems,” he says. “Get references on consultants they’ve used for specific issues. That’s always a good place to start. And there are a lot of good national engineering firms you can tap into.” Next Page >

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