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03-14-2019 VC WS-MMINUTES OF THE WORKSHOP SESSION VILLAGE COUNCIL OF NORTH PALM BEACH, FLORIDA March 14, 2019 Present: Darryl C. Aubrey, Sc.D., Mayor Mark Mullinix, Vice Mayor David B. Norris, President Pro Tem Susan Bickel, Councilmember Deborah Searcy, Councilmember Andrew D. Lukasik, Village Manager Leonard G. Rubin, P.A., Village Attorney Melissa Teal, Village Clerk ROLL CALL Mayor Aubrey called the meeting to order at 9:30 p.m. All members of Council were present. All members of staff were present. Mayor Aubrey explained the purpose of the Workshop was to discuss the Stormwater Management Study and potential implementation of a stormwater management revenue collection system. Mr. Lukasik explained there was a lot of discussion within the 2016 Systems Management Plan regarding management of stormwater and introduced Robert Taylor with Hazen and Sawyer to present the findings of the Stormwater Management Study authorized on July 12, 2018. STORMWATER MANAGEMENT STUDY Mr. Taylor shared a PowerPoint presentation reporting the findings of the Stormwater Management Study. Mr. Taylor outlined the infrastructure of the Village's Stormwater Management System as follows: • Over 47,000 linear feet of stormwater pipe, six (6) inches to 60 inches in diameter • Six (6) major outfalls • Approximately 42 miles of swales Mr. Taylor provided a brief summary of the Regulatory Review and collection of data for the study, which included a review of stormwater infrastructure and assets with capital cost estimation and maintenance cost estimation, as well as parcel data analysis. He reviewed the distribution of property use by parcel count and acreage and an estimation of the impervious area potentially impacting stormwater management. Mr. Taylor noted distribution of property use would be important in informing stormwater utility assessments. Discussion ensued regarding efforts to manage impervious area and credits for creating improvements on properties which were less impervious. Mr. Taylor explained the methodology used in developing the Equivalent Residential Unit (ERU), which is the billing unit commonly used by stormwater utilities to determine the fee customers pay for their share of stormwater services. Village Council Workshop Session held March 14, 2019 Page 2 of 3 Mr. Taylor provided the ERU estimate, as follows: • SF Average Impervious Area = 5,550 square feet • MF Average Impervious Area = 1,525 square feet • Weighted Average Impervious Area = 3,538 square feet (ERU) • Non -Residential ERU = 65 percent of total parcel area / 3,53 8 square feet (unique for each parcel) • Total estimated Village ERUs = 12,665 Mr. Taylor noted the non-residential properties would be measured manually when proceeding with utility development and ERU estimates excluded public schools. Mr. Taylor explained the two (2) most common billing collection methodologies, including collection via water/sewer utility bills and collection via non -ad valorem assessment tax bills. He broke down the advantages and disadvantages of each. Utility Billing (Seacoast Utility Authority): • Collected on monthly water/sewer bill • Collection enforcement via discontinued service • More flexible for rate/charge changes • Fee assignment may be less straightforward for some customers • Would require agreement with Seacoast Utility Authority • Likely to include additional administrative costs Non -ad Valorem Assessment: • Collected annually on County property tax bill • Assessment rolls simple to maintain • High rate of collection • Can only be updated annually • Require compliance with specific statutory process • Strong correlation of parcel data and tax bill database • Likely to include additional administrative costs • Some parcels may be exempt from non -ad valorem assessments Discussion ensued regarding utility billing in surrounding communities and managing tiers within residential classifications versus administrative simplicity. Mr. Taylor outlined four (4) conceptual scenarios: • Scenario 1: Stormwater program status quo with asset videoing and cleaning added • Scenario 2: Scenario 1 plus CIP with rehabilitation and maintenance program based on FY2018 budget • Scenario 3: Scenario 1 plus rehabilitation and maintenance program based on asset materials and age estimates • Scenario 4: Scenario 3 with added swale rehabilitation CIP Mr. Taylor broke down the costs of each scenario for Fiscal Years 2019-2023 and the associated stormwater fee per EU necessary over the five (5) year period for each and compared the numbers with the monthly stormwater fees among Florida stormwater jurisdictions. Village Council Workshop Session held March 14, 2019 Page 3 of 3 Mr. Taylor discussed approaches for dealing with issues which have happened over the years and explained assumptions. He noted Council could make decisions regarding putting together a program that fit with the Village's financial strategy. Discussion ensued regarding how much impact each level would have on the stormwater system and the option of billing through Seacoast or the County tax rolls. In response to a question from Mayor Aubrey, Mr. Taylor explained comparing municipalities would require an in-depth look at the nuance of each community's situation. Councilmember Searcy expressed concern about asking residents to spend almost $100 a year on two (2) miles of swale per year that might not be done to the standards they would apply in their own yards. Mr. Taylor stated it would likely be a matter of cherry picking the areas where there were resident complaints and addressing those which were a problem. He explained the process would be tailored to each individual area, not a one size fits all. Discussion ensued regarding addressing the swales and landscaping. Mr. Taylor explained the next steps were to move into a more detailed study phase and an implementation phase, and at that point the question regarding equitability could be addressed. Discussion ensued regarding the rates and prioritization of work. Council came to consensus to move into the detailed study phase. ADJOURNMENT With no further business to come before the Council, the meeting adjourned at 10:35 p.m. Compfet�d by Jessica Green, MMC, Village Clerk J