►
Description
City of Charleston Committee on Public Works and Utilities 06/13/2023
B
B
B
We
got
a
lot
to
be
thankful
for
you
right.
Let's
entertain
a
motion
to
approve
the
minutes
from
the
mid
22nd
meeting.
B
E
Good
afternoon,
Mr
chairman,
the
first
item
is
just
a
notification
to
D.O.T
that
we're
going
to
accept
maintenance
for
that
forever,
with
sidewalk
and
the
Ada
ramp
for
the
project
at
1590,
Meeting
Street
the
standard
letter
we
send
them,
so
you
can
recommend
approval
of
that
all.
B
Baby,
please
say
any
discussion
all
in
favor,
please
say
aye
aye
aye
any
approved.
Thank
you.
E2
Mr
O'brien.
E
Yes,
sir,
this
is
a
portion
of
four
Drive
West
Ashley,
it's
it's
a
it's
a
small
portion
of
that
road
which
you're
adding
into
the
city
system.
So
we
would
it's
all
been
inspected
and
constructed
and
we
recommend
acceptance
into
the
city
roadway
system.
Okay,.
B
E
Mr
chairman
I
noticed
in
our
new
format
that
the
actually
what
the
encroachment
is,
did
not
show
up
on
this
copy,
but
these
are
fences
and
irrigation
in
one
sign
and
they've
all
been
vetted
and
recommended
for
approval,
and
we
offer
this
as
information
to
the
committee.
All.
B
Right
any
questions
on
that
down
to
G1
Public
Service
update
so.
E
We
have
usually
we
have
a
permanent
encroachment.
This
is
a
portion
of
a
building
at
four
Maple
Street,
which
is
a
kind
of
a
overhang
over
a
door
entry,
and
it's
a
small
portion
of
that
entry
hangs
about
a
foot
into
the
sidewalk
and
in
order
for
them
to
be
able
to
get
clear
title
to
their
building
at
a
future
date,
we
need
to
make
sure
this
encroachment
is
allowed.
So
we
would
recommend
the
approval
of
that.
E
E
Yes,
sir
Mr
altapa
had
some
surgery
yesterday
with
his
a
root
canal
and
some
science
cavities
he's
out
today,
so
I'm
going
to
give
the
update
okay
everything's
going
well
we're
collecting
on
time
the
thing
I'm
most
excited
about
in
the
last
two
days.
I've
also
signed
five
offer
approvals
for
our
employees
in
that
environmental
service
division,
both
garbage
and
trash.
So
that's
a
really
exciting
thing
for
us.
We
we're
getting
close
to
having
very
few
vacancies
up
there.
E
So
you
know
next
week
we'll
give
you
a
complete
rundown
on
how
many
people
we
fill
in
those
jobs
but,
like
I,
said,
we've
we've
offered
five
people
and
once
they
hopefully
accept
those
jobs,
they'll
be
five
more
new
employees
in
the
department,
yeah.
B
F
While
we're
on
that
topic,
I
think
the
last
time
we
had
talked
about
vacancies
there
was
there
was
a
portion
of
the
department
that
I,
don't
I,
can't
remember
off
top
of
my
head.
That
was
that
was
still
having
some
issues
is.
Is
that
still
the
case.
E
We're
having
a
little
bit
of
problem,
councilmember
Brown
on
hiring
some
mechanics.
We
only
have
two
positions
vacant,
but
we're
doing
some
things
and
some
rearrangement
we're
actually
in
the
budget
process
this
year
to
try
and
take
care
of
that.
But
overall
I
tell
you
what,
with
the
with
the
raises
that
the
council
and
the
mayor
approved
this
past
year
and
the
great
work
by
our
HR
department
we've.
We
we
in
our
department,
have
had
a
really
good
year
so
far
hiring
people.
So
we
are
we're
pretty
happy
with
it.
E
We'll
continue
to
work,
fill
those
few
vacancies
that
we
have
but,
like
I
said,
it's
pretty
exciting
the
number
we've
hired
Environmental
Services
since
the
first
of
the
year.
That's.
F
B
You
believe
me
any
other
input
or
comment.
Thank
you.
Mr
Brian,
each
one
don't
want
to
manager,
Congress
Street,
Pump,
Station
outfit
Mr
fountain
on
yep.
G
So
this
item
is
for
the
basically
it's
a
it's
a
change
order
to
our
construction
manager
at
risk
contract.
But
it's
that's
the
contractual
mechanism,
it's
the!
If
you
go
through
the
the
contract
documentation,
it's
for
an
early
procurement
package,
which
is
a
standard
contractor
management
contractor
manager
at
risk.
Construction
manager.
Excuse
me
methodology
for
ordering
equipment
with
long
lead
time.
So
basically,
what
we're
doing
here
is
we're
ordering
the
primary
pumps,
the
dewatering
pumps
and
the
heavy
electrical
equipment
for
that
pump
station
upfit.
G
So
that's
the
cost
you're
seeing
there
at
just
over
3.3
million
right.
Those
items
obviously
have
a
very
long
lead
time,
so
we're
trying
to
avoid
slowing
down
construction
activity
on
that
upfit.
We
also
have
the
major
manufacturer
for
the
pumps
we're
purchasing
increasing
their
kind
of
corporate
wide
pump
prices
on
July
1st.
So
it's
another
reason
to
do
an
early
procurement
happy
to
answer
any
questions
or
items
on
it.
B
Mr
Fountain
I
look
at
this.
It's
kind
of
like
you
know.
Years
ago
we
used
to
overhaul
car
engine.
You
know
it's.
B
To
get
a
ring
job
and
start
smoking,
then
yeah,
oh
haul,
it
you
know,
engines
law
lasts
a
lot
longer
today.
Well,
if
you
change
the
oil,
is
this
more
or
less
an
overhaul
and
after
all,
this
being
done?
What
kind
of
lifespan
going
forward
would
this
have.
G
Yeah,
that's
a
really
good
question.
Mr
chairman
I
agree
it's
similar
to
what
you'd
see
from
an
engine
replacement
or
even
in
in
modern
discussions
when
you
do
a
rebuild
on
heavy
equipment
and
you
basically
come
in
and
tear
out
major
components
of
the
heavy
equipment
and
basically
reconstruct
that
portion.
So.
H
G
We
would
expect
to
see
on
the
order
of
a
20
to
30
year
life
span,
the
current
stations
handled
about
20
years
of
lifespan,
with
with
relatively
minimal
maintenance,
and
we've
shifted
to
a
much
more
aggressive,
proactive
maintenance
approach,
so
we're
yeah
and
we're.
We
set
up
a
lot
of
our
specifications
on
this
round
to
emphasize
durability
and
reliability
over
sort
of
like
Peak
electrical
efficiency
or
something
that
would
be
much
more
important
at
a
water
or
wastewater
treatment.
Plant.
G
Not
important
in
a
storm
water
feature,
so
we
are.
We
are
anticipating
to
get
more
like
30
years
of
life
out
of
this,
but
it
could.
It
could
potentially
be
longer
if
things
go
really
well
or
it
could
be
a
little
bit
shorter.
If
we
see
you
know
excessive
hurricanes
and
hard
run
time
on
the
system.
Okay,.
B
And
obviously
enough
Peninsula
we
don't
have.
We
have
several
pump
systems
going
forward,
in
particular
with
September
Clark
spring
fishburg,
Pump
Station.
You
know
we
go
eagerly
a
week
whenever
those
pumps
come
in,
but
for
the
future
Council
30
years
from
now.
Have
you
seen
where
any
County
government
or
city
government
has.
E
B
A
capital
Improvement
fund,
if
you
will,
where
money,
goes
into
to
replace
the
eventual
overhaul
in
my
term
upfit
in
the
future,
because
we
don't
need
to
do
it.
This
city
is
going
to
need
to
do
it
at
a
lot
of
locations.
B
20
years
from
now
you
know
the
systems
we
actually
putting
into
the
you
know
very
soon
in
September,
clock,
hugee,
Street,
eventually,
eventually
this
one
that
we're
doing
20
years,
maybe
30
years
down,
the
line
that
have
to
be
done,
we
were
caught
I
would
say
somewhat
flat-footed
because
it
wasn't
any
maintenance
fund.
This
mayor,
you
could
chip
in,
but
there
wasn't
any
maintenance
fund
hanging
around
I.
Don't
think
when
you
came
in
office
to
to
fix
things
like
we're
doing
now
with
type
system,
would
you
recommend.
H
B
G
Yeah,
it's
a
very
good
question
for
Sherman,
so
we
one
of
the
items
we've
we've
put
into
all
of
these
Pump
Station
upfit
projects
and
construction
projects.
We're
working
on
now
are
including
a
deliverable
for
the
design
and
construction
firms
of
basically
operations
and
maintenance
plan.
So
what
you
would
get
I
mean
it's
a
much
more
complicated
version
of
what
you
would
get
for
your
car
right
where
it
says
here
are
the
major
pieces
of
Maintenance.
G
You
should
be
doing
at
different
intervals
of
runtime
and
different,
basically
service
periods
for
those
pieces
of
equipment.
It
gets
more
complicated
for
pump
stations
in
a
lot
of
ways,
because
many
things
depend
on
what
happens
and
how
it
runs
and
when
you
will
need
to
do
service
plus
replacement.
G
So
it's
it's
similar
to
like
what
you'd
see
in
in
very
large
heavy
equipment
when
you're
running
what
you
would
call
like:
yellow
iron
like
Rolling
Stock
equipment,
but
that
setup
it'll
lay
out
a
cash
flow
for
each
of
our
facilities
as
they
come
online.
We're
working
with
bfrc
to
build
that
into
the
operating
budget
for
the
department.
G
And
yes,
that's
one
of
the
things
we'll
have
to
be
setting
up
when
we
look
at
the
stormwater
utility
fee
is
how
do
we
cover
those
predicted
costs
out
over
that
20
to
30
year
period,
because
some
of
the
costs
are
very
minor
but
occur
every
year
in
things
like
oil
changes
and
work
on
the
pumps?
But
some
things
are
much
more
expensive
if
you
get
into
rebuilds
or
impeller,
Replacements
or
tunnel
inspections
and
need
to
be
budgeted
out
ahead
of
time.
So
you
can
smooth
that
cash
flow.
G
This
that
is
one
of
the
downsides
of
pump
stations,
is
that
they
are
expensive
to
maintain
to
eventually
replace
and
then
to
continue
to
operate.
So
we're
laying
we're
laying
that
out.
The
anticipation
at
this
point
is
to
try
to
do
that
with
the
stormwater
Utility
Fund,
because
that's
a
reliable
right.
B
G
These
stations
there
and
most
of
our
stations
are
in
you
know,
bar
jurisdiction
on
the
peninsula,
so
the
architectural
work
is
quite
expensive
to
repair
the
outside
of
the
building.
It
does
add
up.
B
Do
you
see
with
AI
coming
down
the
pipe
will
have
a
role
to
play
in
maintenance
going
forward,
I
mean
it's
a
little
IBM
commercial
AI,
where
I
think
it's
Microsoft
I.
Take
it
back
where
this
guy
caught
me
this
guy
come
to
this
kiosk
and
security
guy
wants
to
know
what
he
wants.
A
A
B
G
Yeah,
no,
that
is
absolutely
something
that
is
occurring.
The
current
the
current
work,
we're
implementing
is
less
AI,
though
I
think
there's
the
potential
for
that
to
eventually
get
leveraged
in
right.
Now,
a
lot
of
it
is
again
trying
to
use
a
car
analogy
for
for
something
that's
relatively
straightforward.
G
You
know
before
you
would
take
it
to
the
mechanic
and
they
might
sort
of
listen
to
the
engine
and
see
if
they
could
hear
some
misfiring
or
some
timing
issues,
and
now
they
might
plug
it
into
the
computer
and
see
what
are
the,
what
are
the
actual
timings
of
the
spark
plugs?
Are
they
getting
ignition
like
they'd
expect?
G
Ours
is
similar
in
that
we
basically
run
all
of
the
pumps
now
through
computerized
control
system,
so
that
control
system
can
start
to
see
where,
if
we
start
to
see
like
a
lower
flow
rate
than
we
would
expect
for
different
operating
conditions,
you
know
that
might
be
a
sign
that
we're
seeing
increasing,
impeller,
wear
or
there's
like
a
cavitation
issue,
so
it
does
start
to
trigger
it
doesn't
have
the
AI
yet
of
like
trying
to
diagnose
what
happened.
That's
still
the
human
part
of
trying
to
figure
out.
G
Why
are
these
symptoms
occurring,
but
we're
able
to
see
the
see
and
track
the
symptoms
now
much
easier
than
it
would
have
been
in
the
past
with,
like
a
you
know,
a
spiral
bound
notebook
and
people
taken
and
written
notes
as
they
tried
to
work
through
operating
the
station.
We
do
also.
We
are
also
finalizing
some
negotiations
from
a
selection
committee.
G
We
did
finding
a
a
maintenance
contractor
for
the
stations
trying
to
basically
hire
a
company
that
specializes
in
some
of
the
more
difficult
maintenance
items
we
do
a
lot
of
the
day-to-day
maintenance
and
regular
work
and
weekly
check-ins,
especially
like
the
spring
fish
burn
stations.
We've
talked
about,
has
some
very
large,
very
complex
items
that
are
somewhat
beyond
our
in-house
technical
support.
B
Okay,
thank
you,
Mr
O'brien,
any
expressing
some
committee
members.
C
Just
to
follow
up
on
your
fine
discussion
and
question
there
about
maintenance
and
and
Matt
I
might
be
wrong,
but
I
I
think
the
age
of
this
Concord
pump
station
is
about
25
years.
That's
right!
I
remember
it
was
in
in
the
90s
late
90s
when,
when
it
went
online
I'm
pretty
sure,
so
we
got
a
little
bit
of
life
out
of
these.
C
These
pumps
and
I'm
not
saying
that
we
didn't
do
any
maintenance
on
them
for
a
while,
but
you
know
we,
we've
talked
a
lot
about
deferred
maintenance,
more
than
any
other
kind
of
maintenance,
with
with
not
only
these
facilities,
but
some
of
our
fire
stations
and
other
facilities
that
we've
been
catching
up
on
over
the
last
eight
years
and
I
I
think
the
first.
C
The
first
stage
is
to
is
to
get
the
operating
in
the
maintenance
agreements,
as
Matt
described
in
place
that
maybe
we
hadn't
been
doing
such
a
great
job
at
in
decades
past
and
we're
rebuilding
this
station.
We're
rebuilding
the
station
over
at
MUSC
the
smaller
one,
with
the
help
of
the
federal
government
grant
that
we
got
three
million
dollars
recently
and,
of
course,
that
big
big
station
is
going
to
be
brand
new
a
year
from
now.
So
so
we
kind
of
at
a
good
place
to
set
the
stage
for
the
future.
C
Now
now
that
that
the
the
concept
that
would
be
above
and
beyond
that,
if
we
actually
started
reserving
some
funds
over
time
for
actual
replacement,
you
know
when,
if
you
foresee
the
life
of
something
to
be
even
30
or
40
or
50
years
out
and
start
at
some
point
in
time,
reserving
something
for
for
a
complete
replacement
like
we're
getting
ready
to
do
this
job,
Matt
I
think
he
said
it
could
be
as
much
as
10
million
dollars
for
the
for
the
whole
job.
C
Once
we
get
the
guaranteed
maximum
price
in,
and
you
know
we're
we're
just
having
to
come
up
with
that
money,
there
was
no
savings
account
that
we
put
anything
aside
for
this
replacement
and
and
I
do
think.
You
know
once
once
we
get
to
11
Level
Playing
Field,
with
this
replacement
done,
the
MUSC
replacement
and
the
big
one
online
next
next
year
or
two
that
we
ought
to
think
about
that
in
our
budgeting
for
the
Futures
set
setting
aside
some
some,
not
just
maintenance
funding,
but
replacement
funding
as
well.
B
B
Well,
let's
get
a
motion
on
Concord
Street
outfit;
second,
probably
moving.
Second,
any
discussion
all
in
favor,
please
say
aye
aye
any
opposed.
Thank
you.
Miscellaneous
I
won.
E
Best
friend,
Mr
chairman
in
the
construction
of
the
Barrister
Bridge
replacement,
we're
going
outside
a
little
bit
of
the
original
foot
Predator
bridge,
and
that
requires
us
to
purchase
some
mitigation
credits,
and
this
is
the
that
they
actually
person
from
irrigation
bank.
And
this
is
the
approval
of
request
to
purchase
up
to
three
credits.
So
we
can
have
the
construction
of
our
new
bridge
start
no.
B
Move
second,
any
more
discussion
on
it.
Hearing
none
all
in
favor,
please
say:
aye
aye
I,
just
have
it
we're
at
the
gym,
but
the
two
things
I
like
to
at
least
add
to
the
agenda
for
the
next
meeting.
B
One
of
them
is
a
person
in
and
Mr
Fountain
you
make,
can
touch
bases
on
this.
Just
slightly,
are
you
familiar
with
nail
pastel,
it's
a
councilman,
Shi
age,
District
she's
got
drainage
issues
I
understand
how
stormwater
people
have
been
out
to
look
at
some
of
the
erosion
of
something
that's
happened
on
their
backyard.
Are
you
familiar
with
the
councilman
Shane?
Are
you
familiar
with
I.
H
Followed
you
the
email,
oh
yeah,
we
have
I'm
very
familiar
with
the
issues
with
her
property.
H
H
Then
she
brought
up
something
recently
concerning
the
erosion
she's
in
a
her
house
is
backed
up
to
a
pond
and
it
used
to
be
if
I
understand
this
correctly,
when
Charlestown
Landing
was
under
construction,
they
dimmed
up
that
that
Creek,
and
so
it
has
a
more
of
a
lake
effect
than
anything
else
over
there.
H
So
I
haven't
been
back
to
her
property
in
some
time
to
see
exactly
what
she's
complaining
about
Mr
chairman,
but
I
think
it
was
worthwhile
that
maybe
I'm
making
an
appointment
with
her
to
see
with
Matt
exactly
what
the
the
issues
are.
That
she's
referring
to
well.
B
I'll
forward
the
emails
to
you
and
Mr
Felton,
it's
I
mean
she's
got
estimates
of
some.
You
know
pretty.
B
Of
damage
to
her
place,
but
I
fought
to
you
as
well
Mr
Mig.
She
says
that
I
think
Mr,
Ken
Swinton
has
been
out
Mr
Fountain,
but
anyway,
I'm
catching
a
flat
Phillip
with
this,
so
I
won't
be
leaving
that
anymore.
But
let
me
get
some
information.
Maybe
we
can
look.
H
H
May
have
yeah
a
role
to
play
as
well,
so.
B
But
right
now,
she's
I,
think
suffering
and
a
little
bit
of
silence
and
do
whether
we
can
bring
some
help.
So
I
want
to
have
that
on
the
agenda
next
week
and
and
I
actually
pulled
out
a
newspaper
article
from
August
25th
of
2021
and
I.
Don't
know
if
you
all
can
see
this,
but
the
title
of
the
article
was
Charleston
facing
a
wave
of
costly
flooding
fixes
City,
seeks
ways
to
pay
for
3
billion
in
projects,
including
the
Seawall.
Well,
the
article
goes
on
and
the
speakers
turned
yellow.
B
A
B
B
If
somebody
and
that's
what's
happening,
people
are
actually
looking
at
their
water
bill
each
month,
one
in
suitable
each
month
and
backing
out
the
stormwater
fee
and
then
setting
in
the
difference
for
water
and
sewage,
but
the
same
token,
when
those
people
have
stopped
up
ditches
or
need
flooding
work
done,
they
want
to
share
what
everybody
else
has
had
to
be.
One
of
one
thing
that
you
know:
North
Charleston
does
and
I
think
my
pleasure
does
it.
B
They
have
it
on
the
on
the
tax
bill
and
that's
what
we
need
to
move
away
from.
So
I
want
to
have
the
question
of
moving
from
there.
We
go
CPW
what
in
sewer
bill,
I'll,
Stillwater
feed
collection
to
move
to
the
tax,
but
have
a
discussion
at
one
more
discussion
here
and
then
have
it
on
our
city
council,
the
whole
Council
to
to
to
consider
and
the
second
thing
councilman
pill,
I
think
you
and
I
have
talked
about
it
briefly.
B
D
B
Businesses-
that's
doing
it,
I,
don't
know
so
the
it's
a
two-fold
approach:
move
it
from
the
water
bill
to
the
property
tax
bill
and
get
a
strategy
to
go
after
the
amount
and
arrears
because
we
do
need
to
look
under
every
Rock
and
that's
one
of
them
that
we've
known
about
everybody
in
this
Council.
Now
even
the
new
people
knows
about
it
and
we
need
action
step
to
get
those
funds
to
do
a
lot
more
towards
fixing
flooding
problems
across
the
city.
B
So
that
wasn't
on
the
agenda.
Wasn't
advertising
so
I'm
asking
for
it
to
be
on
the
next
agenda.
E
B
Then
you
all
can
think
of
better.
A
B
That
we
can
help
collect
the
marriages
and
and
get
these
dollars
forward,
so
we
can
help
more
people
with
their
flooding
problems.
You
know
we
all
have
people,
we
all
have
people
in
our
districts
that
when
three
inches
of
rain
comes
down
or
more
in
a
short
period
of
time,
they
literally
pray
water.
B
H
B
Just
don't
have
a
revenue,
we
need
more
Revenue.
Let
me
put
it
like
that.
That
said
any
input
any
last
comments
on
any
councilman
councilman
without
him.
F
Yeah
I,
just
I,
just
Matt
I,
want
to
thank.
You.
I
brought
an
issue
to
Matt's
attention
in
my
district
a
couple
weeks
ago
and
I've
been
during
this
meeting,
getting
a
flood
of
text
that
they
see
a
piece
of
equipment
out
there
and
a
load
of
dirt,
and
they
see
some
action
coming
and
and
they
are
just
beside
themselves
how
how
happy
they
are
to
get
a
quick
response.
I,
don't
know
exactly
what
the
plan
is.
F
Matt
I'll
get
with
you
about
that,
but
you
know
we
hear
a
lot
of
Doom
and
Gloom
about
you
know
the
city's
not
doing
this
City's
not
doing
that
and
this
this
kind
of
quick
response
is,
is
you
know,
I
think
it
was
a
long
way
to
changing
that
type
of
perception,
but
I'll
give
it
to
you
exactly
not
exactly.
What's
what's
going
on
out
there.
B
To
there's
the
fountain,
you
want
to
respond.
G
I
think
councilman,
Bob
and
I
can
discuss
I
think
I
think
he's
referring
to,
but
we
have
we.
We
do
certainly
go
through
a
lot
of
project
sites
and
a
lot
of
work
on
a
weekly
basis
and
certainly
appreciate
the
the
accolades
we
get.
Occasionally,
though,
we
mostly,
of
course,
all
of
us
right
in
all
of
government.
G
You
generally
hear
the
the
problems,
because
those
are
so
acute
and
high
impact
on
people
and
generally
the
successes
and
the
the
positive
stories
don't
get
get
told
as
frequently
we
used
to
joke
when
I
was
at
the
county.
A
lot
that
you
know
no
one's
ever
called
their
public
works
department
to
say
how
great
it
was.
It
didn't
hit
a
pothole
on
the
way
to
work
today,
but
they
will
sure
call
you
if
they
did
hit
a
pothole
on
the
way
to
work
and
damage
the
tire
or
a
rim
on
the
car.
D
Thank
you
Mr
chairman
yeah.
It
sounds
like
the
stormwater
Department's
sort
of
like
the
offensive
lineman
of
city
government.
You
know
it's.
You
only
hear
their
number
name
called
when
you
know
they
whiff
on
a
tackle
or
something
or
block
rather,
but
at
any
rate
chairman
Waring
I
I
just
want
to
endorse
what
you
said
about
the
stormwater
fees.
D
I
mean
if
people
are
not
paying
the
fees
that
that
we
can't
just
let
that
stand,
and
we
need
to
structure
the
billing
process
in
a
manner
that's
designed
to
best
capture
these
monies
on
the
front
end
and
provide
a
mechanism
for
enforcement
on
the
back
end,
because
it's
not
fair
to
the
businesses
and
residents
that
are
paying
the
fees
and
receiving
the
service.
D
It's
just
not.
You
know.
If
we're
going
to
have
a
fee,
everybody's
got
to
pay,
it
and
everybody's
got
to
be
on
board,
and
it's
not
that
crazy
of
a
fee,
as
we've
talked
about,
in
fact,
I
think
it's
probably
way
low,
but
so
I
I
want
to
throw
my
support
behind
that
and
I
think
we
may
want
to
have
some
of
that
discussion
behind.
You
know
closed
doors,
I
think
it
gets
into
some
legal
issues
and
things
of.
B
Yeah
I
mean
thank
you
for
that.
Listen
I
want
to
thank
God,
that's
doing
my
department.
Anybody
been
been
down,
Playground
Road,
lately
detour,
it's
got
a
big
eight
foot
by
five
foot,
cullman's
being
put
in
underneath
I
actually
went
up
to
the
I'm,
so
excited
I
got
a
video
who
would
have
thought
any
time
in
our
lifetime.
We
would
be
going
out
taking
pictures
and.
B
Improvements
going
in
a
big
digital
Ravine,
but
we
all
get
so
excited
about
doing
so.
Thank
you
for
that.
That's
the
first
part,
I
think
what
phase
two
going
in
and
making
great
progress
with
it,
though
so.
B
It's
not
because
listen,
listen,
I,
listen!
I!
You
mean
we
did
sites
Mr
Mia
of
Frank
Fishburn.
You
know
when
they
were
at
that.
C
B
G
Mr
chairman
I
should
have
mentioned
when
you
brought
up
the
the
stormwater
Utility
Billing
I
should
have
updated.
You
too.
We
we
do
currently
have
the
RFQ
out
for
advertisement
for
firms
to
propose
their.
You
know
provide
a
statement
to
their
qualifications
to
put
together
a
city,
updated
account
management
system
for
the
stormwater
Utility
Billing,
okay,
those
are
due
in
the
next
few
days
actually
and
then
we'll
have
the
selection
committee
meet
and
select
select
a
firm
and
the
idea
there
is
to
have
a
modern
account
management
system.
G
That
would
give
us
more
flexibility
on
how
we
do
both
billing,
as
well
as
accounting
for
accounts
that
are
in
a
rares
or
that
are
challenged
with
payment.
Okay,
so
we
are.
We
are
progressing
that
that
action
at
this
point.
Thank.
B
You,
sir,
very
good,
all
right
with
that.
Listen
I,
hope
everybody
by
acclimation
We,
Stand
adjourned
and
look
forward
to
seeing
you
all
have
a
good
weekend
see.