Sanitary Surveys, DWSRF, and Capacity Building in Wisconsin · Wisconsin basics •More than 11,500...
Transcript of Sanitary Surveys, DWSRF, and Capacity Building in Wisconsin · Wisconsin basics •More than 11,500...
Sanitary Surveys, DWSRF, and Capacity Building in Wisconsin
Beth Goldowitz, Capacity Development Coordinator Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
DWSRF AND CAPACITY BUILDING IN ACTION WEBINAR SERIES — July 28, 2016
Overview
• Wisconsin’s public water system universe
• Using set-asides for sanitary surveys
• Sanitary survey prep
• Conducting surveys
• Findings and follow-up
2
Wisconsin basics • More than 11,500 public water systems
• More than 10,400 non-community systems
3
4 system types:
• Primacy: WI Department of Natural Resources, Bureau of Drinking Water & Groundwater
• WI Public Service Commission also regulates 578 MC systems
DWSRF set-asides & sanitary surveys
• Inspection staff
• Drinking Water System (DWS) database
• County contract program (TN)
• Technical assistance program (OC, NN)
• Set-asides o program management
o local assistance
o technical assistance
4
Sanitary survey prep
5
• Program management set-aside supports data system
• System inventory information
• Sample history
• Past violations
• Operator certification
• Previous surveys
• Pre-survey report
• Public Service Commission annual reports (MC) – financial capacity, water loss
Available in DWS
DWS for sanitary survey prep
6
Sampling history
Violations
Conducting sanitary surveys
• DNR field inspectors
o program management set-aside
• County contract program (TN)
o local assistance set-aside
o capacity development strategy, at-risk systems
o county/local health departments act as agents
o single inspector promotes efficiency
7
Contracts for TN sanitary surveys
8
• Program scope: o 51 counties o 6,800+ systems o scope is limited
• Program basics: o annual site visit o sampling o public notice o sanitary survey o Level 2 assessments o seasonal start-up tracking
Conducting sanitary surveys
9
Sanitary surveys in 2015
10
• Community — 3 year cycle
• Non-community — 5 year cycle
Sanitary survey findings/tracking in DWS
11
• Report generated by data system
• Deficiencies • Corrective action
plans • Violations
Follow-up analyses using DWS
12
• Data system used to analyze performance
• Identify priority needs
• Target training o operators o DNR staff
Top deficiencies
Sanitary survey follow-up
• DWS & milestones — system follow-up, compliance deadlines
• Technical assistance program (OC, NN)
o technical assistance set-aside
• SRF loan program (MC)
o significant deficiencies (scoring)
o capacity assessment (scoring + eligibility)
13
Review
• WI = many small non-comm’s
• DNR relies heavily on:
o data system
o technical assistance contractors
• “Everything we do in this program is capacity development.”
14
Beth Goldowitz, Wisconsin DNR [email protected] 608-266-3484 http://dnr.wi.gov, search “drinking water”
Thanks to: Adam DeWeese, sanitary survey coordinator Beth Finzer, county contract coordinator Jim McLimans, administrative policy coordinator
15