July-August 2007

Meter Interface

As water conservation becomes an increasingly important concern, many districts are turning to AMR and data capturing technology to help ensure accurate meter reading.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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With the FIREFLY system, Hesperia has been able to pinpoint areas where customers are experiencing water leaks and thus is able to resolve billing issues.

“In the past, we sent someone out to check the meter, and if we couldn’t find a leak, we had to rely on the customer’s honesty, and at that point in time, we would generally make an adjustment in the customer’s favor,” Knight says. “Since we started using this system, if the customer’s meter has a FIREFLY installed, I can pinpoint the day they fixed the leak. It’s worked out well.”

If the city identifies a leak in a customer’s system, the customer is notified about it so it can be fixed. “If we have a FIREFLY attached to the meter, we pull a profile and can show the customer where the problem may be,” says Knight. “It could be the sprinklers are on too long or that they in fact have a leak somewhere. It’s a detailed system.”

Hesperia has cut about $1,500 in processing and researching costs as a result of installing the FIREFLY system. The city also offers a value-added service to its large users by sending them hour-by-hour data on their water usage.

“We have a few users who require information and pay a fee for it,” Knight says. “We pull a profile for them each month and send it to them, and then they utilize the information for their business.”

For residential users, Hesperia will pull one profile at no charge.

“Then, depending on the problem, we may pull an additional one to verify the situation has been corrected,” explains Knight.

Hesperia’s engineers are using the FIREFLY data for the city’s master water plan. The city tracked 100 profiles in four points throughout the city for a year to use the information in profiling the city’s master plan for water usage.

“We attached it to lot size and also whether it was commercial, industrial, or residential,” Knight says.

The system provides all of the information Hesperia’s water utility department needs, Knight says. "It clearly is a good product,” he says of FIREFLY. “Their customer service is the very best.”

Hesperia is deploying the FIREFLY system through an ongoing meter rotation program.

“We have a lot of old meters that are in excess of 15 years old throughout our system,” Knight says, adding the city is rotating its older water meters with new ones.

Knight says there’s a very small learning curve involved in using the FIREFLY systems, crediting Datamatic with “excellent” training seminars, a viewpoint shared by other municipal officials.

AMR in Suburban Michigan
Auburn Hills, MI, 30 miles north of Detroit, has more than 20,000 residents and the number nearly doubles during the workday with the city’s companies supporting area automotive production, “so you have a lot of people coming in and using more water,” notes Ron Melchert, director of public services for Auburn Hills.

With a projected increase in development, Auburn Hills is poised to become one of the largest suburban cities in southeastern Michigan, making water monitoring a vital issue. Next Page >

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