September-October 2007

Gulf Coast Comeback

Post-Katrina, Mississippi identifies the development of water and wastewater systems as critical to achieving the state’s housing and economic development goals.

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By Penelope B. Grenoble

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According to Barry Royals, director of planning and special programs for Waggoner Engineering Inc., the initial objective of the planning effort was to inventory existing facilities, develop projections for future population growth and then match these to critical water, wastewater, and stormwater needs region-wide. The next step was to prioritize projects as the basis for allocating the HUD funds—all of this in the context of the governor’s mandate that infrastructure improvements had to accommodate future growth, and promote economic development.

“The idea,” says Royals, “was to coordinate regional development, consolidate and centralize infrastructure, and support development of facilities in locations that were less vulnerable to hurricane impacts. Usually when you’re planning, you’re focused on one or two cities or maybe a county, but here we were looking at six counties. And we were not only looking at getting the immediate population back home but also what would be best for the area 10 to 20 years out.”  

Visual: provided by NOAA
Pre-Katrina wastewater management was at 7.3 million gallons per day.

Pre-Katrina, 185 individual service providers, including municipalities, utility service districts, non-profit rural water associations, and independent private entities supplied potable water to customers within the six-county region under the watchful eye of the Mississippi Department of Health. Pre-Katrina, 481 different facilities were permitted for wastewater discharge, and in addition, over 85,000 individual, onsite sewage systems were reported to be handling wastewater from approximately 195,000 housing units, accounting for a volume of approximately 7.3 million gallons per day.

The primary source of potable water region-wide continues to be groundwater pumped as needed. Post-Katrina potable water infrastructure challenges included building new wells and storage tanks as well as expanding the potable water distribution system. Although sufficient capacity appeared to exist for meeting projected demands for water supply and wastewater treatment within each of the coastal counties, the geographic location of some of the existing facilities meant that they weren’t able to accommodate new growth in the most cost-effective manner. Additionally, the location of a majority of these facilities near the coastline made them vulnerable to major storm events. Centralized wastewater treatment facilities in the region generally treat to tertiary levels, due in part to recreational use of receiving waters as well as fish and shellfish harvesting. Sludge from centralized sewage treatment goes into landfills. Stormwater management in the Gulf counties has typically been a matter of controlling floods.

Fundamental to Mississippi’s coastal recovery plan was the decision to use the HUD funds to provide the backbone water and wastewater infrastructure that locally financed water distribution and sewer collection networks could tie into as needed. Royals points out, however, that during the planning process, it became obvious that not all of the damaged communities would have the wherewithal to establish localized systems.

“Hancock County, which took the brunt of the storm, was so devastated and lost so many people that it didn’t have the customers to develop a local system. For them the backbone structure would have been useless because they didn’t have the funds to provide the complementary systems. We reported this to the governor, who added approximately $133 million to the HUD funds. This allowed us to add more projects in these municipalities and provide some of this complimentary infrastructure in Hancock County. In addition, we were able to add approximately $27 million in additional projects in unincorporated areas.”

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Teams from the Mississippi Engineering contractors and the MDEQ began moving south in April 2006 with the goal of submitting a finalized plan to HUD by the end of the year. The process began, says Royals, with “talking to folks,” the goal to identify local stakeholders who would eventually develop the projects needed to get the coastal counties back on their feet. “In some cases,” says Royals, “it was difficult to find the folks to communicate with because people’s lives had been so disrupted. So we began a public outreach campaign to explain why we were there and what we were doing.

“People would tell us they thought they would recover faster than what we were projecting, and we would work through with them why they thought this way. It was a process of matching this kind of information with whatever data we could get from planning and development agencies. Next Page >

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