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From YouTube: UTILITIES ADVISORY COMMITTEE 051922
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UTILITIES ADVISORY COMMITTEE 051922
A
I
propose
means
order:
404
world
cup.
A
Thank
is
item
number
three
approve
a
minute.
Thank
you
for
emailing
them
early.
I
hope
everybody
read
it
don't
need
to
know
no.
A
Did
you
buy
a
reader
because
I
did
in
the
emotions
that
said,
that's
red
I'll
make
a
motion
need
a
second
all
right
motion
in
the
second
approved
minutes
is
ready,
all
of
them
care
to
say,
aye
aye
aye
over
the
full
same
sign,
motion
public
comments
before.
B
For
me,
if
we
had
had
our
meeting
last
week,
that's
regularly
scheduled
you
couldn't,
you
would
couldn't
have
come,
but
hopefully
I'm
hoping
you'll
feel
proud
to
be
here
today
anyway,
I
guess
I
would
fall
into
public
comment
if
he
shows
up
lives
right.
A
Right:
okay,
I
have
five
water
mastermind
update.
Okay,.
C
Do
you
know
what
it
is
on
behalf
of
lan
for
the
record?
We
are
submitting
our
initial
draft
to
the
master
plan
to
june
1st
to
staff,
and
then
the
that
draft
will
go
back
to
back
and
forth
between
the
consultants
and
then,
ultimately,
within
the
next
that
30
days,
the
city
council
will
see
the
first
drought.
C
Potentially
we
would
have
that
draft
available
for
the
advisory
board
somewhere
in
that
month
before
council
gets
it.
You
all
have
enough
opportunity
to
look
at
it
in
draft
form,
and
that's
where
we
are.
We've
completed
the
model,
some
of
the
vip
we're
still
kind
of
working
keeping
the
numbers
with
the
financial
consultant,
the
city
of
laredo
and
wildan,
which
is
our
financial
consultant
for
the
for
the
rates.
C
We
are
updating
some
secondary
water
items
that
were
still
pending,
but
ultimately,
by
june
1st,
we
should
have
all
of
those
recommendations
in
draft
for
for
the
city
staff
to
review.
D
A
D
What
I'll
do
I'll
make
some
get
some
flash
drives
so
that
way
I'll
have
them
delivered
or
use
that,
because
I
know
you
want
a
big
documentation.
Yes,
sir
yeah,
no
it
would
we
could
do
that.
C
A
C
B
B
A
D
C
Sure,
if
I
made
to
to
a
little
the
point
we,
the
consultants
had
always
intended
to
to
do
the
draft.
Take
it
out
to
the
public,
including
the
advisory
committees,
have
them
weigh
in
give
us
their
input.
There
are
some
impact
feed
recommendations
that
need
to
be
made
that'll
be
in
that
in
that
study.
So
yes,
having
a
workshop
with
this
committee,
maybe
a
few
others
would
be
in
order
and
then
ultimately
we
would
take
that
draft
after
the
council
looks
at
and
says:
okay,
let's
take
it
out
to
the
public.
A
Okay:
okay,
thank
you
item
six
water
quality
assessment
and
optimization
update.
F
As
far
as
the
water
quality
update,
we
are
on
the
tail
land
of
the
supplemental
studies
that
have
well
engages
in
design
longer
longer
term
improvements.
One
of
the
things
the
biggest
thing
that
is
coming
down.
The
pipe
is
chlorine
dioxide,
disinfection
at
your
water
treatment
plants,
which
helps
chloramine
stability,
which
is
the
disinfectant
that
we
use
for
for
our
water
system
right.
F
We're
we're
wrapping
up
that
technical
memo
we
presented
to
the
city
last
week,
there's
some
additional
information
that
they're
requested
references
and
and
other
or
other
water
treatment
plants
that
use
it
around
the
state
and
perhaps
in
along
the
rio
grande,
that
have
the
same
profile,
waterproof
water
source
that
we
have
right.
So
the
more
immediate
things
that
we're
doing
right
now
is
we're
staying
very
vigilant
with
water
distribution
and
water
treatment.
F
We
are
in
the
summer
months,
and
this
is
typically
where
we
see
we're
hired
for
nitrification
right
now.
Total
corn
levels
are
great
we've
again.
F
D
That's
when
we
have
to
convert
from
fluorines
to
chlorine,
to
all
chlorine,
and
it
may
depend
on
how
the
residuals
react,
how
much
ammonia
we're
getting
up
there,
and
once
we
analyze
that,
then
that'll
tell
us
if
we
need
to
go
into
chlorine
conversion,
that's
when
we
get
that
notice
out
and
more
than
likely
it
will
be
for
30
days,
and
that's
where
I
know
the
public
doesn't
like
the
smell
of
chlorine
in
the
water.
But
it's
something
that
we
need
to
do
because
of
our
system
and
to
you
know,
eliminate
the
problem.
F
F
As
far
as
free
current
conversions,
those
are
seen
as
maintenance,
you
know
preventive
maintenance
every
year
in
other
water
systems,
and
it's
ultimately
used
to
prevent
waterfalls.
We
don't
believe
we're
there,
but
you
know
if,
if
we
do
get
to
that
situation,
we
would
definitely
use
our
pr
consultant
legacy
here
to
start
pushing
out
this.
You
know
advisory,
you
know
that
just
say
hey.
We
made
we're
going
to
go
into
a
free
chlorine
conversion
within
a
month,
like
I
said
we're
not
there
total
chlorine
levels
are
great.
F
We're
controlling
ammonia
levels
through
the
amount
of
water
that
we
have
in
our
system,
your
flushing
through
sampling
and
monitoring.
So
like
I
said,
but
it
is
something
that
you
guys
gotta
be
aware
of
that.
Perhaps.
F
Next
year
we
would
do
free
flooring,
conversion
say
around
february
march
to
get
a
clean
slate
for
the
summer
months,
which
traditionally
or
historically
here
in
laredo
we've
had
issues
with
nitrification
but,
like
I
said,
we're
not
there.
C
Mr
chairman,
to
your
point:
well
because
the
community
does
have
that
that
fear
of
water
notices
and
that
the
city's
always
being
reactive
and
then
proactive
staff
has
instructed
us
to
prepare
certain
communications
pieces
that
we'll
have
ready
well
in
advance
to
get
out
ahead
of
this.
And
let
the
community
know
that
this
is
not
only
a
maintenance
issue,
but
an
issue
that
staff
is
acutely
aware
of
because
of
the
change
of
the
temperatures
coming
so
early
this
year.
B
G
F
Yeah,
so
chlorine
is
your
disinfectant
right,
but
what
happens
with
the
heat?
Is
chlorine
decays
a
lot
faster
with
heat
right
and
then
it
releases,
ammonia
and
then
ammonia
is
what
causes
nitrification.
It
feeds
the
the
the
microorganisms
and
then
that
creates
nitrification
right,
so
the
algae.
I
wouldn't
I
wouldn't
be
concerned
and
that's
the
disinfectant
takes
care
of
that.
There's
not
stagnant
water.
In
in
your
system.
There's
active
mixers
in
your
tanks.
F
E
C
F
G
F
H
Of
pouring
yeah,
so
that's
why
one
of
the
there's
some
people
had
who
had
clear
glass
filters
outside
in
the
sun
and
those
filters
had
carbon
in
them,
carbon
absorbs
chlorine,
so
the
filters
were
taking
out
the
chlorine.
The
sunlight
was
seeing
the
water,
that's
how
you
make
algae.
I
B
Have
muddy
water,
another
groove?
The
reason
I
I
mentioned
it
is
because
I
was
in
san
antonio
recently
and
one
of
the
news
stations
had
a
a
little
segment
on
that
very
issue
on
the
alligator.
That
is
more
likely
to
show
up
in
hot.
You
know,
summer
months,
yeah,
but.
E
F
Historically,
there
was
no
there's,
no
there's
not
a
lot:
there's
lack
of
water
profiling
right
so
raw
water
and
also
inside
the
plant.
We're
working
with
that
jefferson
as
a
kind
of
clean
slate.
The
one
that
has
a
little
bit
of
issues
with
that
is
is
a
beacon
which
the
water
that
the
sludge
we
throw
back
and
that's
causing
issues
with
our
influent
water
but
anyways.
It
was
kind
of
a
process
thing
with
the
original
design,
but
I
don't
want
to
get
into
it
on
that,
but
the.
E
F
Is
doing
great,
they
are,
they
are
operators
now
and
we
said
it
before.
It's
a
culture
change
for
the
positive
and
they
react
to
stuff
and
then
they're
making
decisions
based
on
the
knowledge
they
have
and
and
their
their
licenses
right
there,
their
their
license
for
this
they're
certified
to
be
operators,
and
they
weren't
allowed
to
be
operators
in
the
past.
F
D
I
know
the
last
time
you
mentioned.
I,
I
didn't
receive
any
goals,
so
I
just
wanted
to
know
if
there's
anything
maybe
at
the
next.
I
think
the
only
goal
right
now
that
I
have
is
the
master
plan,
description
of
the
master
plan
right,
get
into
that
try
to
analyze
that
provide
input
and
just
see
what
the
committee
sees
in
the
master
plan.
B
There's
a
lot
of
water
issues
out
there
and
I
I
don't
have
the
technical
expertise.
I
know
that
we
have
experts
in
the
room,
but
I'm
certainly
not
one
of
them
and
I
would
not
be
able
to
address
a
lot
of
or
think
in
a
fashion
to
be
able
to
contribute
to
discussion
on
some
of
the
things
that
the
concern
of
water
issues.
So
I
guess
what
I'm
asking
is.
You
know
a
little
more
direction
from
for
us
committee.
Members.
A
As
part
of
this
committee,
I
think
we
discussed
the
last
meeting
where
we're
talking
about
why
we
were
formed.
What
we
end
up
ended
up
being.
We
were
secondary
water
source
committee
and
now
we're
the
utilities
committee,
but
I
don't
see
any
meat
to
the
potatoes
on
this
thing.
A
I
don't
know
if
we're
going
to
be
championed
with
recommending
or
supporting
or
coming
out
in
public
or
whatnot
I
mean
I
don't
mind
visiting
here
is
good,
but
we
really
don't
have
much
to
take
back
to
the
public.
I
mean
I
saw
a
demonstration
on
tv
at
the
city
hall
about
water
pressure
and
everything
else,
not
that
I
want
to
be
notified
every
time
the
water
line
breaks.
That's
not
what
I'm
doing,
but
issues
that
that
eventually
tv
is
gonna
reach.
One
of
us
and
we're
gonna
be
going.
A
I
have
no
comments,
you
know
not
that
I
want
to
come.
I've
been
through
that
on
the
phone,
but
it's
I
don't
know
how
we
can
support
you
or
people
right.
E
D
Coming
up
is
our
cip.
I
want
you
all
to
be
familiar
with
the
cip
yeah,
so
that
that
way,
the
public
asks
questions.
What
is
the
city
doing,
and
then
we
give
you,
the
cip,
and
you
know
the
priorities
that
we've
set
as
a
department,
and
that
way
you
can
communicate
that
to
the
public
and
communicate
it
to
your
council
members.
A
A
A
Somebody
tried
to
make
it
sound
like
they
didn't,
have
permanent,
select
like
cut
the
waterline
now
these
guys,
they
don't
know
they're
doing
the
company
they're
working
for-
and
I
know
you
should
fire
a
company
like
that
they
didn't
get
friends.
They
try
to
circumvent
the
situation,
maybe
not
being
located
properly
or
something
else,
but
there's
a
lot
of
gears
to
this
mechanism
and
lane
fiber
cabling
of
subdivision.
A
That's
been
there
for
60
years.
You
know
so,
but
I
I
don't
you
know
I
I
toiled
with
that
and
I
think
we've
talked
well.
I've
talked
about
it
enough
to
realize
that
it's
more
than
just
a
luncheon
right.
D
J
J
B
And
I
brought
up
the
subject
of
this
committee,
as
our
chairman
just
mentioned
right
before
you
walked
in,
we
had
a
previous
goal
in
mind
that
being
a
discussion
of
the
secondary
water
source
in
previous
meetings
or
whatnot,
but
I
you
know
I
I
I'm
wondering
if
we
can
narrow
and
focus
on
what
this
utility
utilities
advisory
committee
should
be
doing.
Maybe
secondary
water
sources
go
on.
Maybe,
as
mr
garcia
mentioned,
you
know
we
should
be
familiar
with
the
water
master
plan.
B
J
Of
course,
you
know
staff
knows
very
well
for
management.
The
city
council
stands
on
these
issues.
We've
been
having
issues,
as
you
know,
so,
we've
been,
you
know,
we've
been
addressing
them.
You
know
through
the
health
of
mr
and
just
these
people,
especially
so
we
do
have
that
water
master
plan
we've
embarked
in
a
group.
Last
remedy
course
that
that
we
really
had
no
choice
at
that
point
and
we
take
responsibility
and
other
councils
should
take
this
possibility
as
well.
J
You
know
they
kept
down
just
kicking
that
can
down
the
road
down
the
road.
You
know
in
spite
of
staff
and
management
telling
us,
but
politically
it
wasn't
a
good
thing
to
do,
but
in
retrospect
it
was
a
horrible
thing
to
do.
I
know
when
I
came
in
I
visited
with
vsu
mia
the
director
at
the
time
and
he
quickly
informed
me
that
we
had
some
serious
problems
and,
of
course
I
was
working
with
council
to
try
to.
J
You
know
bring
these
things
to
that
ahead
and
it
took
me
really
about
three
years
into
it
to
try
to
get
some
consensus
and
barely
we
finally
got
five
votes
and
that's
a
three
three
and
a
half
years
ago,
or
so
we
finally
passed
a
bond
amount
or
at
least
like
you
know,
authorized
city
standards
for
management
to
go
out
on
bonds
about
200
million
dollars,
of
which
I
think
about
100
million
or
so
have
been
expended,
and
it
takes
time
to
to
develop
these
plans
engineering.
All
of
that.
J
But
by
that
point
it
was
a
tsunami,
although
you
know
it
was
way
too
late,
as
we
know
so.
We're
addressing
we're
pumping
in
a
lot
of
money,
hopefully
we'll
get
multiple
contractors
at
the
same
time
trying
to
get
this.
These
water
lines
replaced
within
a
five-year
period,
but
within
that
and
the
goal
of
council
at
least
my
goal
has
been
another
before
this
is
a
secondary
water
system.
You
know
we
truly
need
an
independent
source,
that's
expensive,
very
expensive.
J
J
You
know
just
this
time.
You
know
itself,
but
you
know
it
tells
you
that
there'll
be
an
accident.
There'll
be
a
drought,
and
so
you
know,
at
least
from
my
end,
encourage
this
committee
to
to
continue
when
I'm
gone,
even
though
there's
still
five
six
months
left
that
I
hope
that
we
can
do
something
on
this
one,
a
secondary
water
source,
to
to
continue
bringing
that
that
issue,
because
it's
a
must.
J
That
it
can
be
financed,
they
heard
50
cents
or
something
like
that
and
and
and
how
long
I've
been
hearing
it's
it's
a
multiple
of
that.
You
know
it's
going
to
be
at
least
two
three
four
five
dollars
more
than
what
we're
obtaining
now
and-
and
I
know
you
know,
the
party
is
to
at
least
fix
what
we
have
to
begin
with,
and
then
you
know
add
to
that
and
that's
going
to
take.
J
J
Well,
yeah
yeah,
just
emergencies
in
the
future.
I
think-
and
I
hear
this
too-
that
no
we
have
enough
water
to
to
take
us
to
2040
or
somewhere
in
there,
because
we
purchased
these
water
rights,
but
we
all
understand
that
water
rights
only
good
if
there's
water.
J
It's
like
yeah,
I've
got
the
water
right
here,
but
there's
really.
No
water
and
communities
are
competing
now
on
both
sides
and
we're
growing
and
our
agricultural
needs
are
growing
as
well.
J
So
no
it's
it's
truly
a
challenge
you
know,
and
but
it,
but
the
key
is
money
here
and
if
we
get
grants
to
finance
some
of
these
things
and
we
we
have
applied
to
the
intensive
water
development
board
that
progress,
and
I
think
we
may
you
know,
there's
a
good
strong
likelihood
that
we'll
get
it,
but
it
takes
a
year
or
two
to
get
a
program,
but
but
that's
one
source
and
the
other
source,
of
course,
is
us.
J
J
J
Came
in
and
asked
we,
you
know
I
figured
you
know
by
now:
we
should
have
a
national
plan,
or
at
least
a
city
which
we
didn't,
or
at
least
it
wasn't
updated.
J
You
know
in
my
mind,
I
thought
you
know:
we've
laid
the
last
line
if
in
the
life
of
the
line,
let's
say
40
50
years
and
within
40
50
years,
we
should
be
at
that
point
replacing
that
line,
and
I
asked
you
know
how
are
we
in
terms
of
the
you
know
the
cyclical
process
that
we
had
for
replacing
lines
and
basically
we
were
looking
for.
We
weren't,
even
closing
when
I,
when
I
heard
that
I
said
man,
we
truly
have.
J
I
mean
it's
going
to
be
a
immense,
but
it,
but
it
takes
council
to
take
five
votes
to
to
get
things
done
and,
and
it
takes
money
and
people
don't
necessarily
want
to
pay
more
for
the
water
run.
But
water
is
is
truly
an
expensive
quantity.
Nowadays
they
go
to
the
store
and
people
don't
hesitate,
paying
a
dollar
or
so
for,
for
you
know,
a
small
bottle
of
water
or
something
this
country
that
that
important
animals
and
we
have
to
change
that
mindset.
J
But-
and
this
is
where
you
all
come
into-
to
help
advise
council
and
the
public.
You
know
the
people
that
you
that
you
visit
with
your
neighbors.
J
B
J
We
have
some
experts
and
and
yeah
they.
They
brought.
D
Some
and
I
think,
they're
coming
back,
the
reports
are
being
updated.
There's
the
groundwater
in
webb
county
itself
and
there's
other
counties
that
debit
county
other
counties
that
have
resources
available
as
far
as
groundwater.
But
again
the
further
you
are
the
higher
the
cost
to
convey
that
water
to
us.
Yeah
you're,
gonna
need
a
type
a
system
and
then,
if
you're
gonna
have
it
guaranteed?
D
J
J
Yeah
this
product
for
the
best
price,
but
they
keep
on
insisting
that
it's
it's
very
affordable
that
you
know
we
can
do
it
within
the
the
current
rate
structure
in
a
bond
rate
structure
that
we
have
so
it
may
merit-
and
I
know
council
decided
last
time
and
jimmy
were
there-
that
we
should
go
out
for
foreign.
J
And
I
would
suggest
you
know
president
arturo
and
I
know
he's
doing
that,
but
you
know
hears
it
from
you
all
on
a
frequent
basis.
Then
hopefully
you
know
we
can
get
it
out.
You
know.
A
Soon
so
get
it
pre-pandemic
we
were
at
the
precipice
of
where
we
could
have
chosen
a
secondary
water
source
at
that
time,
and
they,
just
I
mean
code,
killed
a
lot
of
stuff,
not
just
people
but
movements,
and
I'm
talking
about
god.
A
A
That
means
that
we're
not
getting
water
down
downstream
and
when
they
release
that
word
downstream,
because
the
water
authority
controls
that
for
irrigation
in
the
valley.
So
it's
not
necessarily
for
us
right.
So
to
me,
we
need
to
find
a
factor
here.
The
factor
is,
how
do
we
utilize
it?
What
are
we
going
to
bring
here?
We
need
to
incorporate
it
with
what
we
have
existing.
That
to
me
should
be
in
the
master
plan
to
say
I've
got
a
five
foot
pipe
coming
from
denver
county
order.
A
I
hook
up
so
I
can
supplement
these
other
spaces,
so
we
can
use
the
source
but
to
yeah.
That's
the
the
thought
at
that
time
was
you
want
to
bring
it
to
edge
of
town,
it's
going
to
be
there
forever
needed
to
hook
up
and
that
that
was
not
viable
because
we're
paying
for
that
water,
whether
we
use
it
or
not,
you
know-
and
so
I
think
they
suggested,
set
it
to
the
adjoining
cities
to
the
east
and
to
the
south
and
everything
else,
because
they
have
bad
water.
A
But
we
never
went
beyond
that
point,
and
I
think
we
were
that's
when
we
got
changed
from
one
of
those
secondary
water
source
to
the
utility
that
we
had
a
member
that
went
to
the
console
and
said
you
know,
anyways
politics,
but
to
me
that's
always
been
the
solution
and
just
to
bring
that
pipe
incorporated.
A
Even
though
we've
got
some
fantastic
plants
in
the
river,
but
my
biggest
fear
is,
if
somebody
malicious
blows
up
a
vehicle
on
the
bridges
with
chemicals,
and
it
goes
downstream.
All
our
plants
are
downstream
from
that
columbia
phase.
What
are
we
going
to
do
for
water?
There's
not
enough
bottled
water
at
any
of
the
time
and
to
me
that
in
itself
should
be
the
catalyst
to
do
the
secondary
worship,
whether
we
park
it
or
not.
If
they
rather
because
you
don't
react
to
the
fire
until
the
house
is
burned
right,
yep.
J
E
E
Use
it
as
a
marketing
tool
that
we
have
a.
J
A
More
than
just
trucking
industry
we
can
manufacturing,
but
I've
talked
to
some.
I
have
a
cousin
in
illinois
and
master
foreign
and
I
said,
come
on
down
here:
man,
the
wages
and
everything
else
we
work
all
year
long.
We
don't
work
only
nine
months
out
of
the
year
because
of
blizzard
and
all
that
he
said
yeah
I
said,
but
you
all
don't
have
the
water
that
I
need.
A
I
said
we'll
get
it
for
you
not
knowing
whether
we
could
or
not
just
trying
to
encourage
it,
because
you
know
they
build
tools
and
everything
other
than
a
lot
of
water
to
cool
the
metals.
And
so
we
ourselves,
we
ourselves
hobble
ourselves
in
industry
and
we
just
can't
have
trucking
just
be
the
only
one,
not
if
you're
a
manufacturer
and
you're
in
a
trucking
hub.
It's
going
to
be
easier
for
you
to
transport
your
wares,
so
we
have
to
incorporate
it.
So
the
water
comes
into
play
again.
There's
a
basic
element.
A
J
Extrapolate
that
or
yeah
you
know
draw
it
further
and
then
place
it
everywhere.
You
know
I've
been
talking,
you
know,
there's
some.
You
know
some
discussions
that
I've
been
having
with
other
mayors
are
on
the
border.
Sometime
back
the
the
desalination,
the
process
of
you
know,
brownsville.
E
E
J
B
That
better
yeah
on
the
subject
of
of
you
know
other
areas
around
us.
You
know
that
that
could
be
affected
by
our
water
or
vice
versa.
Nick
do
you
still
say
it
on
the
region,
the
empire
planning,
board,
yeah
and
that's
something
critical.
E
B
I
I
think
we
should
have
some
contact
with
them
or
they
should
know
about
us
or
we
should
know
about
them,
because
would
you
kind
of
like
explain
what
reaching
them
is
yeah?
What
region
him.
E
B
K
Issues
from
ego
pass
all
the
way
to
brownsville
and
we
look
at
all
the
communities
and
we
look
at
water
usage.
Water
needs,
you
know
future.
We
look
at
anything.
Any
municipality,
I'll,
be
honest
with
the
valley
is
probably
20
30
years
ahead
of
us.
They
have
all
those
you
go
to
little
rural
communities
that
already
have
their
own
water
source
over
there.
You
have
multiple
water
sources.
It's
very
well
developed
they're,
really
sharp
on
water,
but
I
really
think
like
for
laredo.
E
J
E
K
K
It
over
the
last
30
years
so
they're
way
way
ahead
of
us.
I
mean
they're
way.
I
mean
we
don't
need
to
go
too
far
and
it's
a
small
body
of
water,
but
look
at
casablanca.
I
mean
we
need
to
go
out
there
get
some
footage
of
that.
Now
casablanca
is
going
to
go
dry.
I
mean
it's
at
the
lowest
level.
It's
been
in
probably
30
years.
You
know,
and
people
need
a
real.
It's
a
good
time
to
shoot.
K
Some
good
we've
got
to
sell
it
to
the
public
that
the
need
is
today
and
we
can
go
to
the
water
development
board
and
we
can
find
the
monies
there
the
money's
available
to
do
these
projects.
You
know
we
get
the
updated
water
master
plan
and
you
know
we've
got
to
go
for
look
it's
something
that
we're
not
going
to
need
baby
in
our
lifetime,
but
we're
going
to
need
that
sooner
than
later,
if
you
look
at
climate
change,
if
you
look.
E
K
B
Yeah,
but
you
said
something
I
think
you
indicated,
and
I
know
when
I
was
on
that
board
that
you
know
the
lower
valley.
They
really
called
the
shot.
They
did
it's
a
region
and
you
know
area
and
it
includes
laredo
and
include
webb
county.
K
Well,
it's
basically
like
from
different
areas
you
have
like
eagle
pass,
will
have
two
representatives,
webb
county,
you
have
agriculture,
the
business
and
municipality
and
it
goes
down
there,
but
you
have
in
the
valley
you
get
down
there.
You
have
every
community
representative,
you
know
you
have
mcallen
harlingen
edinburgh,
you
know
you
have
all
those
communities,
so
they
we're
outnumbered
on
that
network.
D
D
A
A
Expensive,
you
know
the
lakes
to
the
west
of
of
del
rio.
I
mean
all
they're
finding
old
cars
with
you
know,
back
in
the
30s
somebody
dumped
them
bodies
and
they're,
finding
all
kinds
of
stuff.
That's
how
low
these
lakes
are.
I
mean
when
the
lake
drops
60
feet,
you've
got
all
those
engine
drawings
and
the
caves
and
everything
else
that
are
swallowed
up
by
the
lake
I
mean
those
places
in
the
lake
is
210
feet,
deep,
yeah
and
so,
but
they're
all
dropping
they're
like.
K
The
last
drought,
the
last
bad
drop,
because
we
get
the
reports
on
it,
which
was
was
about
10
years
ago.
We
had
over
five
six
years
ago,
and
I
don't
know
if
you
were
still
on
the
board
memo,
but
we
get
the
reports
as
far
as
during
that
drought,
there
was
like
some
small
communities
that
had
they
got
down
to
like
just
a
two
three
week:
water
supply.
A
G
There's
a
simple
way
to
like
the
river
water
converted
to
bottom
of
water
and
what
you
do
is
and-
and
I
was
going
to
do,
the
experiment-
you
get
the
river
water,
you
boil
it
and
you
steam
it.
You
take
this
thing,
pass
it
through
ice
and
you
end
up
with
pure
drinking
water.
G
G
A
E
G
You
could
you
could
do
it
like,
say,
cold
store
it
pass
through
through
there
on
one
side,
you
steam
it.
In
the
other
side,
you're
gonna
have
drinking
water.
Viewers
for
drinking
water.
Do.
K
A
A
D
We're
giving
over
doing
the
the
we've
allotted,
and
even
in
this
in
the
cip
that
we
developed
or
in
the
master
plan,
we
identified
the
sources
for
the
groundwater
and
studying
the
options
that
we
can
investigate.
So
we'll
come
back
with
recommendations
and
that's
why,
in
getting
the
committee
involved
with
the
master
plan,
you
will
be
able
to
guide
us
through
that.
And
then
we
can
communicate
that
through
the
council
and
to.
A
A
We've
got
to
do
structures
dsa's
got
to
market,
it
psas
put
it
out
there.
This
is
what
you
want.
This
is
we're
going
to
get
you
it's
going
to
cost
you
a
little
bit
because
the
the
the
money
factor
and
everybody
goes
wow.
They
can't
afford
the
water
anymore,
and
then
you
hear
there's
a
program
here
to
pay
for
water
bill.
A
F
The
master
plan
is
going
to
be
adopted
when
it's
going
to
be
adopted.
They're
going
to
ask,
we
have
a
committee
that
was
looking
at
this,
so
I
may
suggest
is:
there's
there's
sections
of
the
master
plan
right,
maybe
dive
into
each
section
just
that
you
guys
are
knowledgeable
on
on
each
of
those
and
then,
when
it's
being
adopted
that
at
least
you
know
he
said,
hey
yeah.
We
took
a
look
into
that
section
and
what
this
is.
F
A
South
east
of
montevideo
close
to
300
theaters
in
the
world
yeah.
I
know
I
fished
it,
and
but
what
I'm
saying
is
that
you
don't
you
can't
visualize
what
we're
talking
about
unless
you
put
video
on
it
and
if
you
look
at
powell
and
mead
and
all
those
lakes
up
there
kind
of
nobody
ever
thought
that
they
would
be
that
low
today,
because
it
didn't
take
overnight
now
I'll
take
this
back.
I
only
start
back
in
the
70s
when
they
filled
it
up.
A
We
were
there
one
night,
one
day,
fish
on
friday
or
saturday,
and
it
came,
I
mean
it
was
like
a
war
that
night
lightning
and
everything
else.
In
the
morning
we
go
to
the
boat
ramp
and
the
diablo
boat
ramp
was
swallowed
up.
There
was
a
floating
pier
with
a
fish
house
on
it,
soil,
stuff
and
everything
else.
It
was
actually
under
water.
A
That's
how
fast
it
come
up,
but
I
mean
the
lake
was
probably
half
full
of
what
it
was
and
then
one
night
from
because
of
all
those
rivers
that
converge
on
these
guys.
But
it
doesn't
happen.
K
A
K
J
Close
know
exactly
how
they
operate.
Who
who
wants
it?
If
you
all
have
anything,
that's
like
it's
politics.
H
F
C
To
clarify
that
it
is
two
phases:
one
is
the
emergency
water
course.
We
talked
about
having
an
incident
on
one
of
the
bridges.
How
long
could
we
sustain
the
community
without
actually
drawing
water
from
the
redundant
we're
trying
to
address
that
in
two
ways,
one
finding
a
secondary
source,
but
also
taking
the
excess
capacity
that
we
have
now,
because
you
only
the
similarity
consumes
approximately
40
million
gallons
a
day
your
plants.
J
C
You
have
about
two
days
right
now
we're
trying
to
get
that
to
at
least
the
third
day
by
adding
additional.
G
H
The
orange
county
water
district
just
did
not
shut
down
a
desal
plant,
they
said
no
voted
no
and
they
are
in
a
major
drought.
They
said
it's
too
expensive,
so
keep
reading
something
they're,
gonna
they're,
not
gonna,
do
without
water.
They're
gonna
find
out
where
they.
What
are
they
gonna?
Look
for
that's
less
expensive
and
see.
That's
my.
A
A
J
C
Just
because
we
had
this
discussion
this
morning
amongst
the
consultants
that
I'm
engaged
with
the
lockwood
anderson,
even
as
we're
preparing
in
the
draft
document,
we
began
to
look
at
secondary
water
in
earth
in
terms
of
how
we're
going
to
present
it
to
to
the
council
and
to
the
community.
C
J
C
Yeah
from
burleson
is
where
the
oil
field
goes,
and
they
are
they've
got
a
54-inch
pipeline
coming
to
san
antonio,
that's
already
delivering
water,
but
the
rates
went
from
40
to
70
71
dollars
and
are
scheduled
to
go
up
an
additional
77
percent.
This
year,
san
antonio,
so
they've
gone
from
one
of
the
lowest
rates
to
exceeding
the
state's
average,
and
they
are
far
ahead
of
their.
I
mean
they're
closer
to
what
corpus
is
right.
Now
purpose
is
79
for
about.
J
C
C
C
But
from
from
a
public
perspective,
let
me
caution
you
on
what
I
see
here
as
a
republican
outreach
and
stakeholder
engagement
guy,
the
public
doesn't
feel
like
they're
getting
any
value
for
their
water
too
many
water
line
breaks
to
make
water
notices
all
these
issues.
So
if
you're
going
to
go
to
them
the
next
six
months
and
say,
I
need
to
raise
rates
three
four
dollars
a
month,
even
though
that's
nothing
right.
Three
bucks
is
nothing
compared
to
san
antonio
raised
in
thirty
dollars.
C
They
don't
want
to
accept
that,
because
the
quality
of
the
water
isn't
there.
That's
why
their
team
at
adora
is
working
on
this
optimization
this
this
water
quality
program
to
get
us
to
a
superior
water
rating
so
that
when
you
get
there,
then
you
can
tell
the
community
yeah.
It's
worth
you
paying
this
money
for
autonomy
and
that's
what
you're
working
you're
already
working
on
that
you've
already
directed.
E
F
Years,
maybe
yeah
the
supply
chain
is
not
helping
but
everything's
in
motion.
C
They
have
a
ton
of
stuff
to
have
to
put
out
there,
but
you've
not
managed
to
communicate
to
the
community.
How
much
you
really
are
doing
how
much
your
staff
is
really
doing
with
80
vacancies
in
the
staff
and
you're
still
managing
to
get
to
have
only
a
bowl
water
dose,
and
when
I
say
only,
there
are
two
other
levels:
there's
a
do
not
drink
and
then
there's
a
do
not
use
you're
getting
the
lowest
warning.
The
tceq
could
give
you
that's,
and
it's
usually
done
as
a
precautionary
measure,
not
as
a
punitive
measure.
E
C
E
F
The
council
perspective
matter
in
our
socioeconomics
I
mean
the
reality
of
things
is
that
thirty
to
forty
percent
of
our
population
lives
in
the
poverty
level,
whether
they
report
it
to
the
irs
or
not.
That's
how
it's
in
our
that's
right.
So
how
do
you?
How
do
you
balance
the
needs
that
you
have
for
increasing
your
rates
and
sustaining
your
water
system,
but
then
tell
your
tell
the
people
that
are
below
that
poverty
level
and
say.
J
B
J
For
example,
this
master
plan-
you
know
those
are
the
judges
absolutely,
but
we
can
bring
it.
You
know
whatever
you
all
recommend
too.
D
There's
good
news
right
now:
we're
maintaining.
In
fact,
we
discussed
the
the
residual.
Our
total
flurry
residual
is
good,
even
with
the
temperatures
that
are
high.
We've
had
little
hiccups
with
ammonia,
increasing,
but
again
that's
the
character
of
our
raw
water
and
then
the
age
of
our
system,
the
temperatures
but
we're
managing
it.
We're
flushing
it
out
of
the
system,
but
one
thing
I
did
advise
the
committee
here
was
that
we
need
to
be
prepared
for
doing
a
chlorine
conversion,
but
we
have
to
switch
to
chlorine.
F
I
G
F
Monitoring
system
so
we're
not
concerned
it.
F
Step
as
part
of
your
nitrification
action
plan,
that's
the
last
step
in
case
you
know
we,
we
took
all
the
measures
we
did
took
all
field
measures,
all
our
administrative
measures
and
we
just
didn't
fix
it-
we're
going
to
frequent
conversion,
but
we're
not
there.
Yet
it
may
and
then
again
it
may
be
used
next
year
as
a
preventative
maintenance,
not
even
as
not
not
even
as
an
action
to
your
natural
action,
packed
right.
F
That's
your
ultimate
before,
instead
of
issuing
a
bore
water
notice,
you
you
convert
we're
not
there
yet
right
so
and
and
through
the
things
that
we're
doing
we're,
not
gonna.
We
hope
that
right
now,
okay,
well.
F
They're
gonna
keep
on
searching
because
it's
it's,
it
was
two
boil
water
notices,
third,
one
this
one
and
it
and
when
they're
after
you
they're
after
you,
but
it
is
our
job
as
your
kids
as
consultants
and
as
a
team
right
everybody
we're
doing
it
we're
doing
everything
that
we
need
to
do.
They
can
look
everywhere.
F
A
We
have
a
good
communication
department,
get
some
psas
out
there.
I
mean
I
was
thinking
about
years
back,
you
don't
see
it
as
much
anymore
on
tv,
where
there's
going
to
be
a
barbecue
here
and
you
know,
and
the
felix
was
informed
and
it's
kind
of
because
social
media
you
either
have
to
barnbar
through
facebook
or
snapchat
or
twitter,
or
whatever
space
of
media
junk
you
use,
but
tv
people
listen
to
the
news
and
we
we're
supposed
to
get
about
five
to
ten
second
spot
in
there.
I
know
they
could
work
with
it.
J
E
F
A
Which
is
hard
to
do
this
is
this
is
people's
attitude
and
I
refer
back
to
my
previous
life
with
one
company,
so
we're
repairing
the
cable
and
lady
pulls
up
says
my
phone's
not
working,
I
said
yeah,
they
cut
the
cable
right.
They.
Let
us
know
that
we're
going
to
cut
the
cables
we're
going
to
make
a
couple
calls
before
they
cut
it
and
that's
the
with.
A
Hit
the
line
I
didn't
know
they
were
going
to
be
working
in
the
middle
of
the
night
or
I
can't
turn
around,
because
I
got
to
strip
my
dog,
you
know
and
that's
what
I'm
getting
at.
It's
always
a
nature
reaction
and
we
as
a
city
and
the
committee
and
the
council
anything
else
respond
emergency
wise.
We
don't
preempt
that
we
are
doing
something
to
improve
the
status
quo
and
let
them
know
it's
going
to
cost
a
little
more
down
the
road
not
today.
So
because,
when
we
go
up
on
rates,
everybody
explodes.
A
John,
I
mean
john
john
used
what
a
million.
A
Discussion
of
communication,
I
think
we
did
the
communications
items
for
next
meeting.
If
anybody's
got
anything,
please.
E
C
Chair,
if
I
can
add
one
for
you
all
for
you
all,
as
well
as
for
us,
mike's
team
has
put
together
an
exceptional
new
website
for
the
utilities
department.
It
is
currently
on
a
visible
public
site
just
for
the
now
greater
water,
redwaterworks.com.
E
C
It's
an
active
site
right
now.
Eventually
it
will
have
the
correct
domain
name
on
it,
but
it
is
an
opportunity
for
for
some
of
our
folks,
some
of
our
peers,
to
look
at
the
at
the
site
and
begin
to
give
us
some
feedback
on
it.
C
H
B
Mr
all,
right
because
one
last
thing,
if
I
may
I
I
think
I
was
the
one
that
suggested
that
each
one
of
us
you
know
that's
on
this
committee,
asked
the
person
to
put
us
on
here
to
show
up,
and
you
know
I
I
think
I
got
the
ball
rolling
with
with
the
mayor
and
my
friend's
campaign.