1
How to Overcome Public Perception Issues on Potable Reuse Projects
Michael R. Markus, P.E., Orange County Water District, Fountain Valley, CA
Eleanor Torres, Orange County Water District, Fountain Valley, CA
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of how the Orange County Water District
(the District; OCWD) was able to insulate itself from public opposition to its potable reuse
project, the Groundwater Replenishment System (GWRS).
To understand what challenges the District would be facing it is important to first understand
what was happening with other projects that were being developed at the same time in
Southern California. Second, it is important to understand the process by which the outreach
program was developed and how it was executed. That program was ongoing and changed
with the project to help anticipate and react to various issues that developed. Finally, it will be
shown how important it is to continue the outreach efforts and outline the various steps the
District has taken to educate people on the benefits of reuse.
Introduction
The Orange County Water District manages a very large groundwater basin (basin) in central
and north Orange County in the state of California, U.S.A. It was created by the State
Legislature in 1933 for that purpose and is governed by a 10-member Board of Directors that
sets policy, establishes the amount of pumping out of the basin and sets tariffs. The District
currently has set the amount of groundwater that can be pumped out of the basin at 77% of the
total water demands for its 19 retail agencies which serve 2.5 million people. The remaining
23% of its water supply is dependent on water that is imported into the region.
The Southern California region has a semi-arid climate, which receives approximately 355 mm
of rainfall per year. Most of its water is imported from two primary outside sources, the
Colorado River and the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (the Delta) in Northern California. The
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (MWD) built a 320 km aqueduct in the
1930’s bringing water from the Colorado River into Southern California and then participated in
the building of a 640 km aqueduct in the 1960’s from Northern California to bring water from
the Delta to Southern California. These supplies are enough to meet the water demands in
most years, but they are variable and the amount of water through these systems is dependent
on hydrology and certainly in the future, climate change.
Groundwater basins provide an important source of supplemental supply to the imported water
provided by MWD. A sustainably managed basin can provide a reliable source of low-cost
water, with groundwater costing half as much as imported water. The Orange County Water
District relies on rainfall, stormwater capture, Santa Ana River flows, untreated imported water
and recycled water for refilling its basin. This amount of water ...
This document discusses water supply challenges in Southern California and the programs and projects of the West Basin Municipal Water District to ensure reliable water supplies. It notes that the region relies heavily on imported water from Northern California and the Colorado River but is pursuing more local and drought-proof supplies like recycled water, ocean desalination, and groundwater replenishment. It provides information on the district's water recycling facility, conservation programs, and efforts to expand the use of recycled water for irrigation and industrial customers.
Organic Growth -- In a Manner of SpeakingDon Talend
Large-scale wastewater purification systems supplement natural water supplies, Water Efficiency magazine, by Don Talend, brand storytelling, content management and demand generation expert. Water engineering industry
This document investigates co-locating a desalination plant with the Joslin Steam Electric Station in Point Comfort, Texas to provide a drought-proof water supply for regions L and N. A reverse osmosis desalination plant is proposed that would treat 180 million gallons per day of seawater to produce 90 million gallons per day of drinking water and reject hypersaline water. Reject water and solids from pretreatment would be returned through the existing plant discharge. Environmental impacts were found to be minimal. The estimated cost of the desalinated water is $1.75 per 1000 gallons. Combining this supply with 100,000 acre-feet of existing surface water supply would provide 200,000 acre-feet
Rockland County faces increasing water demand that exceeds its sustainable supply. United Water NY proposes a desalination plant on the Hudson River in Haverstraw to produce 1.5 million gallons per day initially. Desalination is expensive and energy intensive, and the plant's waste may increase river contamination. Alternative options like developing other sources or implementing further conservation measures deserve further consideration given the plant's high costs and environmental impacts. Local governments and citizen groups have opposed the plant due to these concerns.
The document discusses challenges facing Los Angeles's water infrastructure including an increasing population, aging systems, and dependency on imported water. It outlines Los Angeles's approach through an Integrated Resources Plan to address these challenges through a regional, watershed-based approach involving stakeholder collaboration. Key aspects of the implementation discussed include expanding water conservation, stormwater management through projects like creek and park restoration, and increasing recycled water with a goal of 59,000 acre-feet per year by 2035 through projects like groundwater recharge. The plan has helped build partnerships and launch numerous sustainability programs.
California is experiencing a severe drought that has impacted water access for both urban and rural communities. Governor Brown has proposed a $25 billion plan to construct underground tunnels to divert fresh water from the Sacramento River to provide more reliable water sources for some areas. However, the plan has been criticized for not addressing the needs of all communities or ensuring the environmental protection of the San Francisco Bay Delta ecosystem that relies on the Sacramento River water. The long-term impacts and viability of the tunnel plan remain uncertain, as it may not equitably or sustainably manage California's water resources.
The document discusses plans for the Doheny Ocean Desalination Project in South Coast Water District. It proposes building a 4-5 million gallon per day desalination plant by 2020 to provide a reliable local water supply that is drought-proof. The plant would use subsurface slant well intake technology and an existing wastewater outfall to minimize environmental impacts. It estimates the total project cost at $90 million and discusses alternatives for funding, addressing common concerns about desalination projects.
This document discusses water supply challenges in Southern California and the programs and projects of the West Basin Municipal Water District to ensure reliable water supplies. It notes that the region relies heavily on imported water from Northern California and the Colorado River but is pursuing more local and drought-proof supplies like recycled water, ocean desalination, and groundwater replenishment. It provides information on the district's water recycling facility, conservation programs, and efforts to expand the use of recycled water for irrigation and industrial customers.
Organic Growth -- In a Manner of SpeakingDon Talend
Large-scale wastewater purification systems supplement natural water supplies, Water Efficiency magazine, by Don Talend, brand storytelling, content management and demand generation expert. Water engineering industry
This document investigates co-locating a desalination plant with the Joslin Steam Electric Station in Point Comfort, Texas to provide a drought-proof water supply for regions L and N. A reverse osmosis desalination plant is proposed that would treat 180 million gallons per day of seawater to produce 90 million gallons per day of drinking water and reject hypersaline water. Reject water and solids from pretreatment would be returned through the existing plant discharge. Environmental impacts were found to be minimal. The estimated cost of the desalinated water is $1.75 per 1000 gallons. Combining this supply with 100,000 acre-feet of existing surface water supply would provide 200,000 acre-feet
Rockland County faces increasing water demand that exceeds its sustainable supply. United Water NY proposes a desalination plant on the Hudson River in Haverstraw to produce 1.5 million gallons per day initially. Desalination is expensive and energy intensive, and the plant's waste may increase river contamination. Alternative options like developing other sources or implementing further conservation measures deserve further consideration given the plant's high costs and environmental impacts. Local governments and citizen groups have opposed the plant due to these concerns.
The document discusses challenges facing Los Angeles's water infrastructure including an increasing population, aging systems, and dependency on imported water. It outlines Los Angeles's approach through an Integrated Resources Plan to address these challenges through a regional, watershed-based approach involving stakeholder collaboration. Key aspects of the implementation discussed include expanding water conservation, stormwater management through projects like creek and park restoration, and increasing recycled water with a goal of 59,000 acre-feet per year by 2035 through projects like groundwater recharge. The plan has helped build partnerships and launch numerous sustainability programs.
California is experiencing a severe drought that has impacted water access for both urban and rural communities. Governor Brown has proposed a $25 billion plan to construct underground tunnels to divert fresh water from the Sacramento River to provide more reliable water sources for some areas. However, the plan has been criticized for not addressing the needs of all communities or ensuring the environmental protection of the San Francisco Bay Delta ecosystem that relies on the Sacramento River water. The long-term impacts and viability of the tunnel plan remain uncertain, as it may not equitably or sustainably manage California's water resources.
The document discusses plans for the Doheny Ocean Desalination Project in South Coast Water District. It proposes building a 4-5 million gallon per day desalination plant by 2020 to provide a reliable local water supply that is drought-proof. The plant would use subsurface slant well intake technology and an existing wastewater outfall to minimize environmental impacts. It estimates the total project cost at $90 million and discusses alternatives for funding, addressing common concerns about desalination projects.
The document discusses green-blue infrastructure initiatives in Los Angeles to manage stormwater runoff. It outlines watershed planning efforts and the use of green infrastructure like rainwater harvesting, green streets, and low impact development to improve water quality, increase supply, and provide other benefits. Examples of existing and planned projects are provided, like the South LA Wetlands Park and various stormwater capture facilities, demonstrating how stormwater can be utilized as a resource.
The document discusses potential solutions to California's growing water crisis over the next decade as the state's population increases substantially. It outlines customer requirements for a new water system, including that it must be environmentally friendly, economically viable, energy efficient, positively received, and produce high quality water. Engineering specifications are proposed that correspond to the customer requirements, such as the system using renewable energy for 80% of its power and producing at least 35,500 acre-feet of water per day. Key factors in selecting a design are identified as the energy source, water storage capacity, and system location based on their influence on important customer needs.
This document discusses drought conditions and management strategies in several western U.S. states including California, Nevada, New Mexico, and Colorado. It defines drought and notes that definitions vary in different locations. Several impacts of drought are outlined, such as mandatory water use reductions, increased groundwater pumping, economic impacts to agriculture, and increased fire danger. The document also discusses various approaches for addressing drought conditions, including water transfers, conservation efforts, water recycling, conjunctive use of groundwater and surface water, and raising water prices.
The Colorado River is over 2,300 km long and drains parts of several western U.S. states and Mexico. It provides water for over 24 million people and extensive agriculture but faces challenges from climate change, overuse, and rising salinity levels. Water management efforts include dams for hydroelectricity and irrigation and a desalination plant, while agreements divide the river's water between the upper and lower basins. Recent strategies aim to share drought risks between the river's large reservoirs and encourage conservation.
Paso Robles Stormwater Improvements Discussion Questions
(Turn in after discussion on Tuesday, June 23)
1. Briefly describe the design on 21st Street. Is this the best solution? What are some other
solutions (you will need to do a little research to answer this question)?
2. What improvements were made beyond stormwater conveyance and treatment? Do
you think including these other improvements were justifiable? Why or why not?
3. What design storm is contained in the median channel? Is this sufficient? Why or why
not?
4. What was the cost of the project? Is this cost justifiable? Why or why not?
s California enters its fourth year of drought
and faces mandatory compliance with the 25 per-
cent overall cutback in water usage ordered in
March by Governor Edmund G. Brown, Jr., mu-
nicipalities throughout the state are scrambling
to ensure that they will have enough water to
meet current and future demands. For Paso Ro-
bles, which is located in central California’s San
Luis Obispo County, the situation demands careful atten-
tion to the local groundwater basin, which supplies rough-
ly a third of the city’s drinking water. As part of a recently
completed project, Paso Robles combined drainage im-
provements with storm-water treatment and groundwater
recharge. The effort, the 21st Street Improvement Project, is
the first of its kind for the city, and it included bioretention,
pervious pavers, landscaped open-channel drainage, and an
[ 7 2 ] C i v i l E n g i n e e r i n g m a y 2 0 1 5 0 8 8 5 - 7 0 2 4 / 1 5 - 0 0 0 5 - 0 0 7 2 / $ 3 0 . 0 0 P E R A RT I C L E
C
A
N
N
O
N
,
A
L
L
In making improvements to a key roadway, the City of Paso Robles, California, implemented measures to
retain and treat storm-water runoff and enable it to infiltrate into the ground. The infiltration will recharge
groundwater supplies and reduce flooding. By incorporating features for traffic calming, urban development,
water quality, and water supply, the 21st Street Improvement Project offers a model for other cities looking to
achieve similar objectives. . . . . . By Andy Rowe, p.e., leed ap, env sp, and Larry Kraemer, p.e.
21st Street 21st Century for the
A
infiltration trench to cleanse and capture runoff
while minimizing flooding during storms and
preserving the pavement. The newly designed
streetscape also improves the overall experience
of using the street in that it added trees, traffic-
calming features, and bicycle lanes and made
the pedestrian walkways more accessible. In a
region that is currently experiencing a historic
water shortage, the 21st Street design provides
a model for flood control, runoff treatment, and
groundwater recharge.
Astute storm-water engineering can im-
prove drainage while achieving advanced lev-
els of sustainable urban runoff treatment and
groundwater recharge. Recent enhancements to
21st Street in Paso Robles exemplify the poten-
tial to co.
Water – Energy Nexus Slideshow for the Santa Cruz Water Advisory SubmissionRobert Singleton
Candace Brown's submission slideshow to the Santa Cruz Water Supply Committee. Entitled "Energy Nexus and Sustainable Water through Ocean Energy, this idea will be presented at the Ideas Convention to be held on October 16th, 2014 at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium.
The document summarizes the history, current state, and future plans of the Hanover Water Works Company. It describes how the original gravity flow water system was established in 1892 in response to fires. It also discusses how the system has expanded over time to meet increasing demand, with improvements like new reservoirs, raising dams, and adding chlorination and fluoridation in the 1950s. Currently, the aging pipes contribute to water quality issues. The Company plans to address this by implementing a $7 million capital improvement plan, including installing a membrane filtration system to improve water quality for customers.
Colorado Springs has a long history of planning for its water needs dating back to the 1870s. As the city grew further from water sources like Fountain Creek, it developed an extensive water collection and delivery system involving numerous reservoirs, pipelines, and transmountain diversion projects. The Southern Delivery System (SDS) was identified in Colorado Springs' 1996 Water Resource Plan as the major new delivery system needed to meet 55% of the city's future water demands, as existing systems were nearing capacity. SDS will be a regional project to transport water from Pueblo Reservoir through 62 miles of pipeline to Colorado Springs and partner communities. Phase I is currently under construction at an estimated cost of $880 million to be completed by 2016.
LIDDLE - Project-Related Work ExperienceGeorge Liddle
George Lee Liddle, III has experience with a variety of projects related to water quality, stormwater, and environmental site assessments. Some of his major projects include a TMDL diagnostic and restoration project in Upper San Marcos Creek Watershed in California, monitoring and sampling at a former oil refinery and metals recycling facility in National City, California, and municipal stormwater detention basin sampling in Poway, California. He has also conducted Phase I environmental site assessments for various sites in Mexico and projects involving brownfield redevelopment, aquatic pesticide application, and hazardous waste assessment.
Water – Energy Nexus, revised PDF by Candace BrownRobert Singleton
An updated presentation by Candace Brown for the Water Supply Advisory Committee Ideas Convention.
Proposal Summary:
I propose sustainable clean water through a reliable clean energy source--ocean energy.
Ensuring a Safe, Sustainable Future Water Supply--Case StudyTeresa Long
By 2060, water usage in Texas is projected to exceed available supply due to population growth. An additional 8.5 million acre-feet of new water sources per year will be needed. The document examines strategies proposed by the Texas Water Development Board to meet future demand, including increasing conventional sources by 60%, conservation by 24%, and developing alternative sources like desalination, brackish groundwater desalination, rainwater harvesting, aquifer storage and recovery, reuse, and emerging technologies to supply the remaining 16%. A diverse combination of solutions must be implemented to ensure a sustainable water supply for the state.
Administrative Tools for Protecting River Flow Regimes - Robert Wigington, Th...rshimoda2014
Senior Water Policy Counsel, Colorado River Program, The Nature Conservancy
This presentation followed the panel titled: Great Rivers, Got Water, which discussed state law, federal law and administrative mechanisms for legally protecting river flow regimes.
This presents three administrative mechanisms that are being applied in the Upper Colorado River Basin: 1) programmatic biological opinions on water development and operations, 2) alternatives to determinations of wild & scenic suitability and to consequent wild & and scenic designation, and 3) interstate agreements for shepherding forgone water use to forestall compact curtailment.
This document summarizes information about California's water supply systems and the Bay Delta Conservation Plan (BDCP). It discusses the State Water Project and Central Valley Project, which provide water to agencies throughout California from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. However, environmental regulations have reduced water exports due to impacts on endangered species. The BDCP aims to develop a habitat conservation plan and new water conveyance system to improve supply reliability and restore the Delta ecosystem. Stakeholders disagree on the best approach, with some supporting an alternative "portfolio" of smaller projects proposed by the Natural Resources Defense Council.
This project proposes developing an artificial wave park and desalination facility at Pier 76 in San Francisco. The wave park would include two surfing pools fed by seawater from the bay, while the desalination facility would transform seawater into fresh water to supply the city. An artificial landscape park would connect these areas and the surrounding communities while circulating water throughout. The project aims to activate formerly industrial land and address California's drought by providing a new water source and recreational opportunity embracing the state's surf culture.
eScholarship provides open access, scholarly publishingservi.docxYASHU40
eScholarship provides open access, scholarly publishing
services to the University of California and delivers a dynamic
research platform to scholars worldwide.
Water Resources Center Archives
University of California
Title:
Sustainability in Water Resources Management: Changes in Meaning and Perception
Author:
Hermanowicz, S W
Publication Date:
12-01-2005
Series:
Working Papers
Publication Info:
Working Papers, Water Resources Center Archives, University of California Water Resources
Center, UC Berkeley
Permalink:
http://escholarship.org/uc/item/9h48p02k
Additional Info:
Sustainability in Water Resources Vol. 3
Keywords:
water resources, water quality, water demand, physical sustainability, water reuse, entropy,
energy
Abstract:
The meaning of sustainability in the context of water resources management has changed
through the time. Initially meeting water demand was the dominant concern. While later quality
issues became more important followed by wider water reuse, today sustainability must include
a whole range of aspects (e.g., energy, pollution, persistent chemicals), spatial and time scales.
New approaches to define sustainability metrics are needed. A possible approach is to use
fundamentallybased entropy and energy flows.
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1
Sustainability in Water Resources Management
Changes in Meaning and Perception
Slawomir W. Hermanowicz
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
University of California
Berkeley, CA 94720-1710
March 2005
Abstract:
The meaning of sustainability in the context of water resources management has changed through
the time. Initially meeting water demand was the dominant concern. While later quality issues
became more important followed by wider water reuse, today sustainability must include a whole
range of aspects (e.g., energy, pollution, persistent chemicals), spatial and time scales. New
approaches to define sustainability metrics are needed. A possible approach is to use fundamentally-
based entropy and energy flows.
Keywords: water resources, water quality, water demand, physical sustainability, water reuse,
entropy, energy
The Beginnings
Through the human history, the meaning of sustainability in the context of water resources
management has been changing slowly but quite perceptibly. Originally, sustainability simply meant
meeting human demands by natural supplies. For this reason, all human settlements arose in a
proximity of sufficient water sources where even peak demands were smaller than the available
“base” flow in a river or groundwater supply. As the demand for human consumption, agriculture,
and later industry grew, the most easily reachable resources became insufficient. T ...
Cadiz Inc. is a California renewable resources company that owns 45,000 acres of land and water rights in the Cadiz Valley. It has permits to develop agricultural and water supply projects using innovative irrigation practices. The company aims to capture and deliver up to 2.5 million acre-feet of conserved water over 50 years via a pipeline to water providers in Southern California. If approved, the project would provide a reliable water supply for 100,000 families while having no adverse environmental impacts.
California; Harvesting Rain: Addressing Water Needs of the Monterey Peninsu...D7Z
This capstone project examines the feasibility of harvesting rainwater from rooftops in the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District (MPWMD) service area to help address the area's water needs. The author analyzed GIS data to determine there is 1.84 square miles of rooftop area available for capture. Statistical analysis of 58 years of rainfall data showed average annual rainfall in the area is 15.9 inches, yielding between 1434 and 1700 acre-feet of harvestable rainwater. However, this does not meet the need to replace the 9626 acre-feet currently being overdrafted from the Carmel River aquifer. While rainwater harvesting alone cannot solve the problem, the author concludes it could provide
Diversifying California's Water Supply By Vardan KajberuniVardan Kajberuni
California is facing increasing water scarcity due to droughts exacerbated by climate change and a growing population. Desalination of seawater and brackish water, combined with current water sources, could help mitigate the effects while being more environmentally safe and secure compared to existing water projects. The largest desalination plant in the Western Hemisphere is under construction in Carlsbad, California and will provide 50 million gallons per day when complete. Israel overcame drought issues through heavy investment in desalination and water recycling after a seven-year drought. Diversifying California's water supply through desalination and other technologies is necessary to ensure a reliable supply for the future in a sustainable way.
M3 ch12 discussionConnecting Eligible Immigrant Families to Heal.docxjeremylockett77
M3 ch12 discussion
Connecting Eligible Immigrant Families to Health Coverage
Instructions:
Read the report
Connecting Eligible Immigrant Families to Health Coverage and Care
.
Write a one page post offering solutions to the problem from the nurse's standpoint.
.
Loudres eats powdered doughnuts for breakfast and chocolate that sh.docxjeremylockett77
Loudres eats powdered doughnuts for breakfast and chocolate that she can get out of the vending machines before class. Between classes , she grabs some chips and a caffine drink for lunch. By the end of the day, she is exhauted and cannot study very long before she falls asleep for a few hours. Then, she stays up untils 2.A.M to finish her work and take care of things she could not do during the day. She feels that she has to eat sugary foods and caffeinated drinks to keep her schedule going and to fit in all her activities. What advice would you give her?
.
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The document discusses green-blue infrastructure initiatives in Los Angeles to manage stormwater runoff. It outlines watershed planning efforts and the use of green infrastructure like rainwater harvesting, green streets, and low impact development to improve water quality, increase supply, and provide other benefits. Examples of existing and planned projects are provided, like the South LA Wetlands Park and various stormwater capture facilities, demonstrating how stormwater can be utilized as a resource.
The document discusses potential solutions to California's growing water crisis over the next decade as the state's population increases substantially. It outlines customer requirements for a new water system, including that it must be environmentally friendly, economically viable, energy efficient, positively received, and produce high quality water. Engineering specifications are proposed that correspond to the customer requirements, such as the system using renewable energy for 80% of its power and producing at least 35,500 acre-feet of water per day. Key factors in selecting a design are identified as the energy source, water storage capacity, and system location based on their influence on important customer needs.
This document discusses drought conditions and management strategies in several western U.S. states including California, Nevada, New Mexico, and Colorado. It defines drought and notes that definitions vary in different locations. Several impacts of drought are outlined, such as mandatory water use reductions, increased groundwater pumping, economic impacts to agriculture, and increased fire danger. The document also discusses various approaches for addressing drought conditions, including water transfers, conservation efforts, water recycling, conjunctive use of groundwater and surface water, and raising water prices.
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Paso Robles Stormwater Improvements Discussion Questions
(Turn in after discussion on Tuesday, June 23)
1. Briefly describe the design on 21st Street. Is this the best solution? What are some other
solutions (you will need to do a little research to answer this question)?
2. What improvements were made beyond stormwater conveyance and treatment? Do
you think including these other improvements were justifiable? Why or why not?
3. What design storm is contained in the median channel? Is this sufficient? Why or why
not?
4. What was the cost of the project? Is this cost justifiable? Why or why not?
s California enters its fourth year of drought
and faces mandatory compliance with the 25 per-
cent overall cutback in water usage ordered in
March by Governor Edmund G. Brown, Jr., mu-
nicipalities throughout the state are scrambling
to ensure that they will have enough water to
meet current and future demands. For Paso Ro-
bles, which is located in central California’s San
Luis Obispo County, the situation demands careful atten-
tion to the local groundwater basin, which supplies rough-
ly a third of the city’s drinking water. As part of a recently
completed project, Paso Robles combined drainage im-
provements with storm-water treatment and groundwater
recharge. The effort, the 21st Street Improvement Project, is
the first of its kind for the city, and it included bioretention,
pervious pavers, landscaped open-channel drainage, and an
[ 7 2 ] C i v i l E n g i n e e r i n g m a y 2 0 1 5 0 8 8 5 - 7 0 2 4 / 1 5 - 0 0 0 5 - 0 0 7 2 / $ 3 0 . 0 0 P E R A RT I C L E
C
A
N
N
O
N
,
A
L
L
In making improvements to a key roadway, the City of Paso Robles, California, implemented measures to
retain and treat storm-water runoff and enable it to infiltrate into the ground. The infiltration will recharge
groundwater supplies and reduce flooding. By incorporating features for traffic calming, urban development,
water quality, and water supply, the 21st Street Improvement Project offers a model for other cities looking to
achieve similar objectives. . . . . . By Andy Rowe, p.e., leed ap, env sp, and Larry Kraemer, p.e.
21st Street 21st Century for the
A
infiltration trench to cleanse and capture runoff
while minimizing flooding during storms and
preserving the pavement. The newly designed
streetscape also improves the overall experience
of using the street in that it added trees, traffic-
calming features, and bicycle lanes and made
the pedestrian walkways more accessible. In a
region that is currently experiencing a historic
water shortage, the 21st Street design provides
a model for flood control, runoff treatment, and
groundwater recharge.
Astute storm-water engineering can im-
prove drainage while achieving advanced lev-
els of sustainable urban runoff treatment and
groundwater recharge. Recent enhancements to
21st Street in Paso Robles exemplify the poten-
tial to co.
Water – Energy Nexus Slideshow for the Santa Cruz Water Advisory SubmissionRobert Singleton
Candace Brown's submission slideshow to the Santa Cruz Water Supply Committee. Entitled "Energy Nexus and Sustainable Water through Ocean Energy, this idea will be presented at the Ideas Convention to be held on October 16th, 2014 at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium.
The document summarizes the history, current state, and future plans of the Hanover Water Works Company. It describes how the original gravity flow water system was established in 1892 in response to fires. It also discusses how the system has expanded over time to meet increasing demand, with improvements like new reservoirs, raising dams, and adding chlorination and fluoridation in the 1950s. Currently, the aging pipes contribute to water quality issues. The Company plans to address this by implementing a $7 million capital improvement plan, including installing a membrane filtration system to improve water quality for customers.
Colorado Springs has a long history of planning for its water needs dating back to the 1870s. As the city grew further from water sources like Fountain Creek, it developed an extensive water collection and delivery system involving numerous reservoirs, pipelines, and transmountain diversion projects. The Southern Delivery System (SDS) was identified in Colorado Springs' 1996 Water Resource Plan as the major new delivery system needed to meet 55% of the city's future water demands, as existing systems were nearing capacity. SDS will be a regional project to transport water from Pueblo Reservoir through 62 miles of pipeline to Colorado Springs and partner communities. Phase I is currently under construction at an estimated cost of $880 million to be completed by 2016.
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George Lee Liddle, III has experience with a variety of projects related to water quality, stormwater, and environmental site assessments. Some of his major projects include a TMDL diagnostic and restoration project in Upper San Marcos Creek Watershed in California, monitoring and sampling at a former oil refinery and metals recycling facility in National City, California, and municipal stormwater detention basin sampling in Poway, California. He has also conducted Phase I environmental site assessments for various sites in Mexico and projects involving brownfield redevelopment, aquatic pesticide application, and hazardous waste assessment.
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An updated presentation by Candace Brown for the Water Supply Advisory Committee Ideas Convention.
Proposal Summary:
I propose sustainable clean water through a reliable clean energy source--ocean energy.
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By 2060, water usage in Texas is projected to exceed available supply due to population growth. An additional 8.5 million acre-feet of new water sources per year will be needed. The document examines strategies proposed by the Texas Water Development Board to meet future demand, including increasing conventional sources by 60%, conservation by 24%, and developing alternative sources like desalination, brackish groundwater desalination, rainwater harvesting, aquifer storage and recovery, reuse, and emerging technologies to supply the remaining 16%. A diverse combination of solutions must be implemented to ensure a sustainable water supply for the state.
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This presentation followed the panel titled: Great Rivers, Got Water, which discussed state law, federal law and administrative mechanisms for legally protecting river flow regimes.
This presents three administrative mechanisms that are being applied in the Upper Colorado River Basin: 1) programmatic biological opinions on water development and operations, 2) alternatives to determinations of wild & scenic suitability and to consequent wild & and scenic designation, and 3) interstate agreements for shepherding forgone water use to forestall compact curtailment.
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This project proposes developing an artificial wave park and desalination facility at Pier 76 in San Francisco. The wave park would include two surfing pools fed by seawater from the bay, while the desalination facility would transform seawater into fresh water to supply the city. An artificial landscape park would connect these areas and the surrounding communities while circulating water throughout. The project aims to activate formerly industrial land and address California's drought by providing a new water source and recreational opportunity embracing the state's surf culture.
eScholarship provides open access, scholarly publishingservi.docxYASHU40
eScholarship provides open access, scholarly publishing
services to the University of California and delivers a dynamic
research platform to scholars worldwide.
Water Resources Center Archives
University of California
Title:
Sustainability in Water Resources Management: Changes in Meaning and Perception
Author:
Hermanowicz, S W
Publication Date:
12-01-2005
Series:
Working Papers
Publication Info:
Working Papers, Water Resources Center Archives, University of California Water Resources
Center, UC Berkeley
Permalink:
http://escholarship.org/uc/item/9h48p02k
Additional Info:
Sustainability in Water Resources Vol. 3
Keywords:
water resources, water quality, water demand, physical sustainability, water reuse, entropy,
energy
Abstract:
The meaning of sustainability in the context of water resources management has changed
through the time. Initially meeting water demand was the dominant concern. While later quality
issues became more important followed by wider water reuse, today sustainability must include
a whole range of aspects (e.g., energy, pollution, persistent chemicals), spatial and time scales.
New approaches to define sustainability metrics are needed. A possible approach is to use
fundamentallybased entropy and energy flows.
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1
Sustainability in Water Resources Management
Changes in Meaning and Perception
Slawomir W. Hermanowicz
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
University of California
Berkeley, CA 94720-1710
March 2005
Abstract:
The meaning of sustainability in the context of water resources management has changed through
the time. Initially meeting water demand was the dominant concern. While later quality issues
became more important followed by wider water reuse, today sustainability must include a whole
range of aspects (e.g., energy, pollution, persistent chemicals), spatial and time scales. New
approaches to define sustainability metrics are needed. A possible approach is to use fundamentally-
based entropy and energy flows.
Keywords: water resources, water quality, water demand, physical sustainability, water reuse,
entropy, energy
The Beginnings
Through the human history, the meaning of sustainability in the context of water resources
management has been changing slowly but quite perceptibly. Originally, sustainability simply meant
meeting human demands by natural supplies. For this reason, all human settlements arose in a
proximity of sufficient water sources where even peak demands were smaller than the available
“base” flow in a river or groundwater supply. As the demand for human consumption, agriculture,
and later industry grew, the most easily reachable resources became insufficient. T ...
Cadiz Inc. is a California renewable resources company that owns 45,000 acres of land and water rights in the Cadiz Valley. It has permits to develop agricultural and water supply projects using innovative irrigation practices. The company aims to capture and deliver up to 2.5 million acre-feet of conserved water over 50 years via a pipeline to water providers in Southern California. If approved, the project would provide a reliable water supply for 100,000 families while having no adverse environmental impacts.
California; Harvesting Rain: Addressing Water Needs of the Monterey Peninsu...D7Z
This capstone project examines the feasibility of harvesting rainwater from rooftops in the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District (MPWMD) service area to help address the area's water needs. The author analyzed GIS data to determine there is 1.84 square miles of rooftop area available for capture. Statistical analysis of 58 years of rainfall data showed average annual rainfall in the area is 15.9 inches, yielding between 1434 and 1700 acre-feet of harvestable rainwater. However, this does not meet the need to replace the 9626 acre-feet currently being overdrafted from the Carmel River aquifer. While rainwater harvesting alone cannot solve the problem, the author concludes it could provide
Diversifying California's Water Supply By Vardan KajberuniVardan Kajberuni
California is facing increasing water scarcity due to droughts exacerbated by climate change and a growing population. Desalination of seawater and brackish water, combined with current water sources, could help mitigate the effects while being more environmentally safe and secure compared to existing water projects. The largest desalination plant in the Western Hemisphere is under construction in Carlsbad, California and will provide 50 million gallons per day when complete. Israel overcame drought issues through heavy investment in desalination and water recycling after a seven-year drought. Diversifying California's water supply through desalination and other technologies is necessary to ensure a reliable supply for the future in a sustainable way.
M3 ch12 discussionConnecting Eligible Immigrant Families to Heal.docxjeremylockett77
M3 ch12 discussion
Connecting Eligible Immigrant Families to Health Coverage
Instructions:
Read the report
Connecting Eligible Immigrant Families to Health Coverage and Care
.
Write a one page post offering solutions to the problem from the nurse's standpoint.
.
Loudres eats powdered doughnuts for breakfast and chocolate that sh.docxjeremylockett77
Loudres eats powdered doughnuts for breakfast and chocolate that she can get out of the vending machines before class. Between classes , she grabs some chips and a caffine drink for lunch. By the end of the day, she is exhauted and cannot study very long before she falls asleep for a few hours. Then, she stays up untils 2.A.M to finish her work and take care of things she could not do during the day. She feels that she has to eat sugary foods and caffeinated drinks to keep her schedule going and to fit in all her activities. What advice would you give her?
.
Lori Goler is the head of People at Facebook. Janelle Gal.docxjeremylockett77
Lori Goler is the head
of People at Facebook.
Janelle Gale is the head
of HR Business Partners
at Facebook. Adam Grant
is a professor at Wharton,
a Facebook consultant,
and the author of Originals
and Give and Take.
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HBR.ORG
Let’s Not Kill
Performance
Evaluations Yet
Facebook’s experience shows
why they can still be valuable.
BY LORI GOLER, JANELLE GALE, AND ADAM GRANT
November 2016 Harvard Business Review 91
LET’S NOT KILL PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS YET
tThe reality is, even when companies get rid of performance evaluations, ratings still exist. Employees just can’t see them. Ratings are done sub-jectively, behind the scenes, and without input from the people being evaluated.
Performance is the value of employees’ contribu-
tions to the organization over time. And that value
needs to be assessed in some way. Decisions about
pay and promotions have to be made. As research-
ers pointed out in a recent debate in Industrial and
Organizational Psychology, “Performance is always
rated in some manner.” If you don’t have formal
evaluations, the ratings will be hidden in a black box.
At Facebook we analyzed our performance man-
agement system a few years ago. We conducted fo-
cus groups and a follow-up survey with more than
300 people. The feedback was clear: 87% of people
wanted to keep performance ratings.
Yes, performance evaluations have costs—but
they have benefits, too. We decided to hang on
to them for three reasons: fairness, transparency,
and development.
Making Things Fair
We all want performance evaluations to be fair. That
isn’t always the outcome, but as more than 9,000
managers and employees reported in a global sur-
vey by CEB, not having evaluations is worse. Every
organization has people who are unhappy with their
bonuses or disappointed that they weren’t pro-
moted. But research has long shown that when the
process is fair, employees are more willing to accept
undesirable outcomes. A fair process exists when
evaluators are credible and motivated to get it right,
and employees have a voice. Without evaluations,
people are left in the dark about who is gauging their
contributions and how.
At Facebook, to mitigate bias and do things sys-
tematically, we start by having peers write evalua-
tions. They share them not just with managers but
also, in most cases, with one another—which reflects
the company’s core values of openness and transpar-
ency. Then decisions are made about performance:
Managers sit together and discuss their reports
face-to-face, defending and championing, debating
and deliberating, and incorporating peer feedback.
Here the goal is to minimize the “idiosyncratic rater
effect”—also known as personal opinion. People
aren’t unduly punished when individual managers
are hard graders or unfairly rewarded when they’re
easy graders.
Next managers write the performance reviews.
We have a team of analysts who examine evalua-
tions f.
Looking for someone to take these two documents- annotated bibliogra.docxjeremylockett77
Looking for someone to take these two documents- annotated bibliography and an issue review(outline)
to conduct an argumentative paper about WHY PEOPLE SHOULD GET THE COVID-19 VACCINE
Requirements:
Length: 4-6 pages (not including title page or references page)
1-inch margins
Double spaced
12-point Times New Roman font
Title page
References page
.
Lorryn Tardy – critique to my persuasive essayFor this assignm.docxjeremylockett77
Lorryn Tardy – critique to my persuasive essay
For this assignment I’ll be workshopping the work of Lisa Oll-Adikankwu. Lisa has chosen the topic of Assisted Suicide; she is against the practice and argues that it should be considered unethical and universally illegal.
Lisa appears to have a good understanding of the topic. Her sources are well researched and discuss a variety of key points from seemingly unbiased sources. Her sources are current, peer reviewed and based on statistical data.
Lisa’s summaries are well written, clear and concise. One thing I noticed is that the majority of her writing plan is summarized and cited at the end of each paragraph. I might suggest that she integrate more synthesis of the different sources, by combining evidence from more than one source per paragraph and using more in text citations or direct quotes to reinforce her key points.
I think that basic credentialing information could be provided for Lisa’s sources, this is something that looking back, I need to add as well. I think this could easily be done with just a simple “(Authors name, and their title, i.e. author, statistician, physician etc.…)”, when the source is introduced into the paper might provide a reinforced credibility of the source.
As far as connection of sources, as previously mentioned, I think that in order to illustrate a stronger argument, using multiple sources to reinforce a single key point would solidify Lisa’s argument. I feel that more evidence provided from a variety of different sources, will provide the reader with a stronger sense of credibility and less room for bias that could be argued if the point is only credited to one source.
One area that stuck out to me for counter argument, being that my paper is in favor of this issue, is in paragraph two where Lisa states that “physicians are not supposed to kill patients or help them kill themselves, and terminally ill patients are not in a position of making rational decisions about their lives.” I’d like to offer my argument for this particular statement. In states where assisted suicide (or as I prefer to refer to it, assisted dying) is legal, there are several criteria that a patient has to meet in order to be considered a candidate. These criteria include second, even third opinions to determine that death is imminent, as well psychological evaluation(s) and an extensive informed consent process that is a collaborative effort between the patient, the patient’s family, physicians, psychologists and nurses. It is a process that takes weeks to months. Patients that wish to be a candidate, should initiate the process as soon as they have been diagnosed by seeking a second opinion. As an emergency room nurse, I have been present for a substantial amount of diagnoses that are ‘likely’ terminal. Many of these patients presented to the emergency for a common ailment and have no indication that they don’t have the capacity to make such a decision. Receiving a terminal diagnos.
M450 Mission Command SystemGeneral forum instructions Answ.docxjeremylockett77
M450 Mission Command: System
General forum instructions: Answer the questions below and provide evidence to support your claims (See attached slides). Your answers should be derived primarily from course content. When citing sources, use APA style. Your initial posts should be approximately 150-500 words.
1. Describe and explain two of the Warfighting Functions.
2. How do commanders exercise the Command and Control System?
.
Lymphedema following breast cancer The importance of surgic.docxjeremylockett77
Lymphedema following breast cancer: The importance of
surgical methods and obesity
Rebecca J. Tsai, PhDa,*, Leslie K. Dennis, PhDa,b, Charles F. Lynch, MD, PhDa, Linda G.
Snetselaar, RD, PhD, LDa, Gideon K.D. Zamba, PhDc, and Carol Scott-Conner, MD, PhD,
MBAd
aDepartment of Epidemiology, College of Public Health, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.
bDivision of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, College of Public Health, University of Arizona,
Tucson, AZ, USA.
cDepartment of Biostatistics, College of Public Health, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.
dDepartment of Surgery, College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Abstract
Background: Breast cancer-related arm lymphedema is a serious complication that can
adversely affect quality of life. Identifying risk factors that contribute to the development of
lymphedema is vital for identifying avenues for prevention. The aim of this study was to examine
the association between the development of arm lymphedema and both treatment and personal
(e.g., obesity) risk factors.
Methods: Women diagnosed with breast cancer in Iowa during 2004 and followed through 2010,
who met eligibility criteria, were asked to complete a short computer assisted telephone interview
about chronic conditions, arm activities, demographics, and lymphedema status. Lymphedema was
characterized by a reported physician-diagnosis, a difference between arms in the circumference
(> 2cm), or the presence of multiple self-reported arm symptoms (at least two of five major arm
symptoms, and at least four total arm symptoms). Relative risks (RR) were estimated using
logistic regression.
Results: Arm lymphedema was identified in 102 of 522 participants (19.5%). Participants treated
by both axillary dissection and radiation therapy were more likely to have arm lymphedema than
treated by either alone. Women with advanced cancer stage, positive nodes, and larger tumors
along with a body mass index > 40 were also more likely to develop lymphedema. Arm activity
level was not associated with lymphedema.
*Correspondence and Reprints to: Rebecca Tsai, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, 4676 Columbia Parkway,
R-17, Cincinnati, OH 45226. [email protected] Phone: (513)841-4398. Fax: (513) 841-4489.
Authorship contribution
All authors contributed to the conception, design, drafting, revision, and the final review of this manuscript.
Competing interest
Conflicts of Interest and Source of Funding: This study was funded by the National Cancer Institute Grant Number: 5R03CA130031.
All authors do not declare any conflict of interest.
All authors do not declare any conflict of interest.
HHS Public Access
Author manuscript
Front Womens Health. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2018 December 14.
Published in final edited form as:
Front Womens Health. 2018 June ; 3(2): .
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Love Beyond Wallshttpswww.lovebeyondwalls.orgProvid.docxjeremylockett77
Love Beyond Walls
https://www.
lovebeyondwalls
.org
Provide a brief background of your chosen nonprofit entity using evidence from their publications or any other published materials. Then evaluate the factors, which may include economic, political, historic, cultural, institutional conditions, and changes that contributed to the creation and growth (decline) of the nonprofit organization. Justify your response.
.
Longevity PresentationThe purpose of this assignment is to exami.docxjeremylockett77
Longevity Presentation
The purpose of this assignment is to examine societal norms regarding aging and to integrate the concepts of aging well and living well into an active aging framework that promotes longevity.
Using concepts from the Hooyman and Kiyak (2011) text and the Buettner (2012) book, consider the various perspectives on aging.
Identify the underlying values or assumptions that serve as the basis for longevity, including cultural, religious, and philosophical ideas.
Present an overview of three holistic aging theories.
Integrate the values, assumptions, and theories to indicate what is necessary for an active aging framework where individuals both live well and age well.
Presentations should be 10-15 minutes in length, use visual aids, and incorporate references from the course texts and 5 additional scholarly journal articles.
.
Look again at the CDCs Web page about ADHD.In 150-200 w.docxjeremylockett77
The CDC's page on ADHD aims to educate the general public about Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder by providing facts and information on symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment. It presents ADHD as a real disorder with neurological causes in order to increase understanding and help those affected. As the nation's leading health protection agency, the CDC's role is to inform the public about health issues like ADHD.
M8-22 ANALYTICS o TEAMS • ORGANIZATIONS • SKILLS .fÿy.docxjeremylockett77
M8-22 ANALYTICS o TEAMS • ORGANIZATIONS • SKILLS .fÿy' ÿ,oÿ ()V)g
The Strategy That Wouldn't Travel
by Michael C. Beer
It was 6:45 P.M. Karen Jimenez was reviewing the
notes on her team-based productMty project tbr
what seemed like the hundredth time. I31 two days,
she was scheduled to present a report to the senior
management group on the project's progress. She
wasn't at all sure what she was going to say.
The project was designed to improve productiv-
it3, and morale at each plant owned and operated by
Acme Minerals Extraction Company. Phase one--
implemented in early 1995 at the site in Wichita,
I(amsas--looked like a stunning, success by the mid-
dle of 1996. Productivity and mo[ÿale soared, and
operating and maintenance costs decreased signifi-
cantly. But four months ago, Jimenez tried to
duplicate the results at the project's second
target--the plant in Lubbock, Texas--and some-
thing went wrong. The techniques that had worked
so well in Wichita met with only moderate success
in Lubbock. ProductMty improved marginally and
costs went down a bit, but morale actually seemed
to deteriorate slightl): Jimenez was stumped,
approach to teamwork and change. As it turned
out, he had proved a good choice. Daniels was a
hands-on, high-energy, charismatic businessman
who seemed to enjoy media attention. Within his
first year as CEO, he had pretty much righted the
floundering company by selling oft:some unrelated
lines of business. He had also created the share-
services deparnnent--an internal consulting organ-
ization providing change management, reengineer-
ing, total quailB, management, and other
services--and had rapped Jimenez to head the
group. Her first priority Daniels told her, would be
to improve productiviB, and morale at the com-
pany's five extraction sites. None of them were
meeting their projections. And although Wichita
was the only site at which the labor-management
conflict was painfiflly apparent, Daniels and Jimenez
both thought that morale needed an all-around
boost. Hence the team-based productivity project.
She tried to "helicopter up" and think about
the problem in the broad context of the com-
pany's history. A few ),ears ago, Acme had been in
bad financial shape, but what had really brought
things to a head--and had led to her current
dilemma--was a labor relations problem. Acme
had a wide variety of labor requirements For its
operations. The company used highly sophisti-
cated technologB employing geologists, geophysi-
cists, and engineers on what was referred to as the
"brains" side of the business, as well as skilled and
semi-skilled labor on the "brawn" side to run the
extraction operations. And in the summer of
1994, brains and brawn clashed in an embarrass-
ingly public way. A number of engineers at the
Wichita plant locked several union workers out of
the offices in 100-degree heat. Although most
Acme employees now felt that the incident had
been blown out of propo,'tion by the press, .
Lombosoro theory.In week 4, you learned about the importance.docxjeremylockett77
Lombosoro theory.
In week 4, you learned about the importance of theory, the various theoretical perspectives and the ways in which theory help guide research in regards to crime and criminal behavior.
To put this assignment into context, I want you to think about how Lombroso thought one could identify a criminal. He said that criminals had similar facial features. If that was the case you would be able to look at someone and know if they were a criminal! Social theories infer that perhaps it is the social structures around us that encourage criminality. Look around your city- what structures do you think may match up to something you have learned about this week in terms of theory? These are just two small examples to put this assignment into context for you. The idea is to learn about the theories, then critically think about how can one "show" the theory without providing written explanation for their chosen image.
Directions: With the readings week 4 in mind, please do the following:
1. Choose a theoretical perspective (I.e., biological, psychological sociological)
2. Look through media images (this can be cartoons, magazines, newspapers, internet stories, etc...) and select 10 images that you think depict your chosen theory without written explanation.
3. Provide a one paragraph statement of your theory, what kinds of behavior it explains and how it is depicted through images. Be sure to use resources to support your answer.
4. You will copy and paste your images into a word document, along with your paragraph. You do not need to cite where you got your images, but you do need to cite any information you have in number 3.
Format Directions:
Typed, 12 point font, double spaced
APA format style (Cover page, in text citations and references)
.
Looking over the initial material on the definitions of philosophy i.docxjeremylockett77
Looking over the initial material on the definitions of philosophy in
the course content section, which definition (Aristotle, Novalis,
Wittgenstein) would you say gives you the best feel for philosophy? What
is it about the definition that interests you? do you find there to be any problems with the definition? what other questions do you have regarding the meaning of philosophy?
ARISTOTLE :
Definition 1: Philosophy begins with wonder. (Aristotle)
Our study of philosophy will begin with the ancient Greeks. This is not because the Greeks were necessarily the first to philosophize. They were the first to address philosophical questions in a systematic manner. Also, the bodies of works which survive from the Greeks is quite substantial so in studying philosophy we have a lot to go on if we start with the Greeks.
Philosophy is, in fact, a Greek word. Philo is one of the Greek words for love: in this case the friendship type of love. (What other words can you think of that have "philo" as a part?) Sophia, has a few different uses in Greek. Capitalized it is the name of a woman or a Goddess: wisdom. Philosophy, then, etymologically, (that is from its roots) means love of wisdom.
But what exactly is wisdom? Is it merely knowledge? Intelligence? If I know how to perform a given skill does this necessarily imply that I also have wisdom or am wise?
The word "wise" is not in fact a Greek word. Remember for the Greeks that's "Sophia". Wise is Indo-European and is related to words like "vision", "video", "Veda" (the Indian Holy scriptures). The root has something to do with seeing. Wisdom then has to do with applying our knowledge in a meaningful and practically beneficial way. Perhaps this is the reason why philosophy is associated with the aged. Aristotle believes that philosophy in fact is more suitably studied by the old rather than the young who are inclined to be controlled by the emotions. Do you think this is correct? Nevertheless, whether Aristotle is correct or not, typically the elderly are more likely to be wise as they have more experience of life: they have seen more and hopefully know how to respond correctly to various situations.
Philosophy is not merely confined to the old. Aristotle also says that philosophy begins with wonder and that all people desire to know. Children often are paradigm cases of wondering. Think about how children (perhaps a young sibling or a son or daughter, niece or nephew of your acquaintance) inquistively ask their parents "why" certain things are the case? If the child receives a satisfying answer, one that fits, she is satisfied. If not there is dissatisfaction and frustration. Children assume that their elders know more than they do and thus rely on them for the answers. Though there is a familiar cliche that ignorance is bliss, (perhaps what is meant by this is that ignorance of evil is bliss), Aristotle sees ignorance as painful, a wonder that I would rather fill with knowledge. After all wha.
Lucky Iron Fish
By: Ashley Snook
Professor Phillips
MGMT 350
Spring 2018
Table of Contents
Executive Summary
Introduction
Human Relations Theory
Communications Issues
Intercultural Relations
Ethics Issues
Conclusion
Works Cited
Executive Summary
The B-certified organization that I chose is Lucky Iron Fish Enterprise which is located in Guelph, Ontario Canada. The company distributes iron fish that are designed to solve iron deficiency and anemia for the two billion people who are affected worldwide.
The human relations model is comprised of McGregor’s Theory X and Theory Y, Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, and theories from Peters and Waterman. These factors focus on the organizational structure of the company as it relates to the executives, the staff, and the customers. The executives provide meaningful jobs for the staff which gives them high levels of job satisfaction. Together, they are able to provide a product that satisfies the thousands of customers they have already reached.
Communication in this company flows smoothly. They implement open communication, encourage participation, and have high levels of trust among employees. Each of their departments are interconnected through teamwork.
Their intercultural relations, although successful, require a significant amount of time. They need to emphasize to the high context cultures that they are willing to understand their culture and possibly adopt some aspects of it. Additionally, they face barriers such as language dissimilarity and lack of physical store locations.
Ethics remains a top priority for this organization. They have high ethical standards that are integrated into their operations. They make decisions that do the most good for the most people, they do not take into consideration financial or political influence, and they strive to protect the environment through their sustainability measures.
Every employee is dedicated to improving the lives of those who suffer from iron deficiency
and anemia. As their organization grows, they continue to impact thousands of lives around the world. They are on a mission to put “a fish in every pot” (Lucky Iron Fish).
Introduction
Lucky Iron Fish, located in Guelph Canada, is a company that is dedicated to ending worldwide iron deficiency and anemia. They do this by providing families with iron fish that release iron when heated in food or water. They sell this product in developed countries in order to support their business model of buy one give one. Each time an iron fish is purchased, one is donated to a family in a developing country. They designed their product to resemble the kantrop fish of Cambodia; in their culture this fish is a symbol of luck. Another focus of theirs is to remain sustainable, scalable, and impactful (Lucky Iron Fish). Each of their products is made from recycled material and their packaging is biodegradable. Their organization has a horizontal stru.
Lucky Iron FishBy Ashley SnookMGMT 350Spring 2018ht.docxjeremylockett77
Lucky Iron Fish
By: Ashley Snook
MGMT 350
Spring 2018
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G6Rx3wDqTuI
Table of Contents
Case Overview
Introduction
Human Relations
Communications
Intercultural Relations
Ethics
Conclusion
Works Cited
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iY0D-PIcgB4
Video ends at 1:45
2
Case Overview
Company located in Guleph, Ontario Canada
Mission is to end iron deficiency and anemia
A fish in every pot
Gavin Armstrong, Founder/CEO
Introduction
Idea originated in Cambodia
Distribute fish through buy one give one model
Sustainable, scalable, impactful
Human Relations
McGregor’s Theory X and Y
-X: employees focused solely on financial gain
-Y: strive to improve worldwide health
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
-Affiliation: desire to be part of a unit, motivated by connections
-Self-esteem: recognition for positive impact
Peters and Waterman
-Close relations to the customer
-Simple form & lean staff
Communications
Time and Distance
-Make product easily and quickly accessible
Communication Culture
-Encourages active participation
Teamwork
-Each role complements the overall mission
Gavin Armstrong Kate Mercer Mark Halpren Melissa Saunders Ashley Leone
Founder & CEO VP Marketing Chief Financial Officer Logistics Specialist Dietician
Intercultural Relations
High/Low Context
-Targets high context cultures
Barriers
-Language dissimilarity
Overcoming Barriers
-Hire a translator
Ethics
Utilitarianism
-Targets countries where majority of people will benefit
Veil of Ignorance
-Not concerned with financial influence
Categorical Imperative
-Accept projects only if environmentally friendly
Conclusion
Buy one give one model
Expansion
Sustainability
Works Cited
Guffey, Mary. “Essentials of Business Communication.” Ohio: Erin Joyner. 2008. Print.
“Lucky Iron Fish.” Lucky Iron Fish. Accessed 30 May 2018. https://luckyironfish.com/
“Lucky Iron Fish Enterprise.” B Corporation.net. Accessed 30 May 2018. https://www.bcorporation.net/community/lucky-iron-fish-enterprise
Lucky Iron Fish. “Lucky Iron Fish: A Simple
Solution
for a global problem.” Youtube. 28 October 2014. Accessed 4 June 2018. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iY0D-PIcgB4
“Lucky little fish to fight iron deficiency among women in Cambodia.” Grand Challenges Canada. Accessed 6 June 2018. http://www.grandchallenges.ca/grantee-stars/0355-05-30/
Podder, Api. “Lucky Iron Fish Wins 2016 Big Innovation Award.” SocialNews.com. 5 February 2016. Accessed 4 June 2018. http://mysocialgoodnews.com/lucky-iron-fish-wins-2016-big-innovation-award/
Zaremba, Alan. “Organizational Communication.” New York: Oxford University Press Inc. 2010. Print.
Lucky Iron Fish
By: Ashley Snook
Professor Phillips
MGMT 350.
look for a article that talks about some type of police activity a.docxjeremylockett77
look for a article that talks about some type of police activity and create PowerPoint and base on the history describe
-What is the role of a police officer in society? (general statement )
-how are they viewed by society?
what is the role of the police in this case?
how it is seems by society?
Article
An unbelievable History of Rape
An 18-year-old said she was attacked at knifepoint. Then she said she made it up. That’s where our story begins.
by T. Christian Miller, ProPublica and Ken Armstrong, The Marshall Project December 16, 2015
https://www.propublica.org/article/false-rape-accusations-an-unbelievable-story
.
Look at the Code of Ethics for at least two professional agencies, .docxjeremylockett77
Look at the Code of Ethics for at least two professional agencies, federal agencies, or laws that would apply to Health IT professionals. In two pages (not including the reference list), compare and contrast these standards. How much overlap did you find? Is one reference more specific than the other? Does one likely fit a broader audience, etc... Would you add anything to either of these documents?
.
Locate an example for 5 of the 12 following types of communica.docxjeremylockett77
Locate
an example for 5 of the 12 following types of communication genres:
Business card
Resume/CV
Rules and regulations
Policy handbook
Policy manual
Policy guide
Policy or departmental memorandum
Public policy report
Government grant
Government proposal
Departmental brochure or recruitment materials
Governmental agency social media (Twitter, Facebook, etc...)
Write
a 1,050- to 1,400-word paper in which you refer to your examples for each of the above listed communication genres. Be sure to address the following in your paper:
How does the purpose of the communication relate to the particular communication genre? In what ways does the genre help readers grasp information quickly and effectively? In what way is the genre similar or different than the other genres you chose?
What role has technology played in the development of the genre? How is it similar or different than the other genres you chose?
How does the use of these conventions promote understanding for the intended audience of the communication? How is it similar or different than the other genres you chose?
Is the communication intended for external or internal distribution? Describe ethical and privacy considerations used for determining an appropriate method of distribution. How is it similar or different than the other genres you chose?
Cite
at least three academic sources in your paper.
Format
your paper consistent with APA guidelines.
.
Locate and read the other teams’ group project reports (located .docxjeremylockett77
Locate and read the other teams’ group project reports (located in Doc Sharing).
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In addition, read the comments that other students made about your team’s report and respond to at least one of them.
Review ATTACHMENTS!!!!
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This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
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Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
1 How to Overcome Public Perception Issues on Potable R.docx
1. 1
How to Overcome Public Perception Issues on Potable Reuse
Projects
Michael R. Markus, P.E., Orange County Water District,
Fountain Valley, CA
Eleanor Torres, Orange County Water District, Fountain Valley,
CA
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of how the
Orange County Water District
(the District; OCWD) was able to insulate itself from public
opposition to its potable reuse
project, the Groundwater Replenishment System (GWRS).
To understand what challenges the District would be facing it is
important to first understand
what was happening with other projects that were being
developed at the same time in
Southern California. Second, it is important to understand the
process by which the outreach
program was developed and how it was executed. That program
was ongoing and changed
with the project to help anticipate and react to various issues
that developed. Finally, it will be
shown how important it is to continue the outreach efforts and
outline the various steps the
2. District has taken to educate people on the benefits of reuse.
Introduction
The Orange County Water District manages a very large
groundwater basin (basin) in central
and north Orange County in the state of California, U.S.A. It
was created by the State
Legislature in 1933 for that purpose and is governed by a 10-
member Board of Directors that
sets policy, establishes the amount of pumping out of the basin
and sets tariffs. The District
currently has set the amount of groundwater that can be pumped
out of the basin at 77% of the
total water demands for its 19 retail agencies which serve 2.5
million people. The remaining
23% of its water supply is dependent on water that is imported
into the region.
The Southern California region has a semi-arid climate, which
receives approximately 355 mm
of rainfall per year. Most of its water is imported from two
primary outside sources, the
Colorado River and the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (the
Delta) in Northern California. The
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (MWD)
built a 320 km aqueduct in the
1930’s bringing water from the Colorado River into Southern
California and then participated in
the building of a 640 km aqueduct in the 1960’s from Northern
California to bring water from
the Delta to Southern California. These supplies are enough to
meet the water demands in
most years, but they are variable and the amount of water
through these systems is dependent
on hydrology and certainly in the future, climate change.
3. Groundwater basins provide an important source of
supplemental supply to the imported water
provided by MWD. A sustainably managed basin can provide a
reliable source of low-cost
water, with groundwater costing half as much as imported
water. The Orange County Water
District relies on rainfall, stormwater capture, Santa Ana River
flows, untreated imported water
and recycled water for refilling its basin. This amount of water
can vary tremendously for year-
to-year which means in some years the retail agencies may be
pumping more water out of the
2
basin than is being put back into it. If the basin is over
pumped, it could lead to long-term
problems such as seawater intrusion or land subsidence. During
a long-term drought, the only
way to mitigate these problems would be to reduce pumping.
This would cause the District’s
retail agencies to have to purchase more imported water, which
would increase their overall
cost of water. Another solution would be for the District to find
additional sources of water to
refill the basin even in times of drought. The District has found
this additional source in
recycled water.
The Orange County Water District and the Orange County
Sanitation District (OCSD) began
4. development of a recycled water project in the mid-1990s called
the Groundwater
Replenishment System (GWRS). This project currently
produces 127 million m3 of water
annually that is recharged into the basin and ultimately pumped
out by the retail water agencies
and put directly into their distribution system. This amount of
water currently provides about
35% of the supply into the basin and allows OCWD to set the
amount of pumping out of the
basin at a very high level. The development of this project was
challenging and perhaps the
biggest challenge was to address public perception issues about
drinking water that originated
as wastewater or sewage. This paper will explain the
background and development of the
GWRS project, how a very robust and well thought out public
outreach program contributed to
its success and what is being done today to assure that its
success continues.
Background
The Orange County Groundwater Basin is a coastal basin, which
is connected to the ocean.
In the 1960s it was observed that seawater was starting to
contaminate coastal drinking water
wells and moving inland thereby potentially threatening the
main part of the basin’s aquifers.
In response to this threat the District built a series of coastal
injection wells and a 57,000 m3/d
treatment facility called Water Factory 21 (WF-21), which
provided highly treated wastewater
as a source of supply to the injection wells. This facility
successfully stopped the advancing
5. seawater, but in the 1980s the District determined that this
facility should be expanded from
57,000 m3/d to 132,500 m3/d. In the early 1990s the District
began to pilot test different
advanced treatment technologies that could replace the
processes that were being used in
WF-21. During this time OCSD was looking to build an
additional 8 km ocean outfall into the
Pacific Ocean to be able to handle its projected peak wet
weather events. The District and
OCSD got together and discussed the idea of expanding the
District’s WF-21 facility such that
it could handle OCSD’s peak wet weather events, which would
eliminate the need for OCSD to
build its new additional outfall. It was agreed that the District
could increase the size of its
facility to 265,000 m3/d, with a maximum output of 378,500
m3/d for a 12-hour period, and then
build a pipeline to its recharge facilities to take any flows
greater than what the seawater
barrier required. The ultimate size of the District’s facility
would be 492,000 m3/d and OCSD
agreed to pay for half the cost of the original 265,000 m3/d
treatment facility and pipeline if the
District guaranteed, when needed, it would treat and safely
discharge to the Santa Ana River
up to 378,500 m3/d for a 12-hour period. With those
assurances, OCSD did not need to build
its proposed new additional ocean outfall.
3
6. The size and scope of the project was extraordinary and the
total investment of nearly $500
million by both agencies was substantial. There had never been
a potable reuse project built
at this size (265,000 m3/d) anywhere in the world.
Outside Influences
During this time, there were several other potable reuse projects
that were in various
development phases and each one had severe challenges that
could potentially impact the
proposed project in a detrimental manner.
San Gabriel Valley Project
In mid-1992 the Upper San Gabriel Water District (USGWD)
was proposing to build a 94,600
m3/d indirect potable reuse (IPR) project that would recharge
its groundwater basin in the San
Gabriel Valley in Southern California. The proposed project
would take tertiary treated
wastewater and spread it into surface basins to recharge the
groundwater basin, in compliance
with California regulations. The recharge basin they planned on
spreading the recycled water
was upstream of a major brewery that pumped the groundwater
to produce its beer. During
mid-1993, the USGWD was trying to approve its environmental
impact report, but the brewery
inundated it with questions about the projects impact on the
environment and the public. The
brewery accused the proposed treatment process as being
potentially dangerous and wanted
reverse osmosis included. Then, in July 1994, the USGWD
7. Board of Directors approved the
environmental impact report, which opened the way for it to
implement its project, but in
November 1994 the brewery filed a lawsuit to stop the project
claiming it had serious doubts
about the water’s purity. A local chamber of commerce
opposed the project and the brewery
contributed money to two candidates who were running for the
board of directors of USGWD
and opposed the project. Finally, in February 1996, the brewery
agreed to drop its lawsuit
when USGWD agreed to reduce the size of the project to a
47,000 m3/d facility and recharge
the water into a basin, which was downstream of the brewery1.
Though an agreement was
reached, USGWD never constructed the facility.
East Valley Water Project
In October 1995, the Los Angeles Department of Water and
Power (LADWP) was proposing to
build a 38,000 m3/d indirect potable reuse (IPR) project that
would recharge its groundwater
basin in the San Fernando Valley in Southern California. Like
the San Gabriel Valley project,
the LADWP project would take tertiary treated wastewater and
spread it into surface basins to
recharge the groundwater basin, in compliance with California
regulations. The project was
supported by some environmental groups but opposed by others
who asserted that recycled
water posed health risks. One of the primary opponents was a
brewery who was also trying to
stop another project in the San Gabriel Valley. The LADWP
project overcame those initial
obstacles and the treatment facilities and pipeline to the
8. recharge basin were built. Just before
the project went online in mid-2000 a local Los Angeles city
councilman, who was running for
re-election, questioned the project and accused LADWP of
failing to adequately disclose the
impact of the project on the Los Angeles water supply. The
councilman demanded that a
supplemental environmental impact report be prepared and
criticized LADWP for not informing
4
the public about the project2. Eventually LADWP decided not
to implement the IPR project, but
instead built an extensive pipeline system to deliver the
recycled water for irrigation (parks, golf
courses, greenbelt areas) and industrial uses as a non-potable
recycled water supply.
San Diego Water Repurification Project
In June 1993, the San Diego Water Authority agreed to serve as
the lead agency to determine
the feasibility of the San Diego Water Repurification Project.
This project was planned to be a
76,000 m3/d advanced treatment plant that would utilize
microfiltration/ultrafiltration, reverse
osmosis, ozonation, and chlorination and then pump the water to
a surface reservoir where it
would spend about 28 months in the reservoir before finally
going through conventional water
treatment. The feasibility study was completed in May 1994
and reviewed by an independent
9. expert panel, regulatory agencies and a citizens’ advisory panel
that had been put together by
the Water Authority. In early 1995, the city of San Diego’s
water utility department took over as
the lead agency and began pilot testing of the different
treatment processes. At the same
time, the city hired consultants to provide a 10% design and
prepare a required environmental
impact report. In early 1996 the control of the project was
transferred to the city’s wastewater
department because under the city structure this department was
better suited to fund and
complete the construction. The project still had wide support,
but another water project was
being developed whereby the city could purchase about 50% of
its water supply from
agricultural interests at a lower price than its imported water
supply, which shifted the need for
the reuse project. During the 1998 political campaign season,
the project became an issue in
several closely contested races at the local, state and federal
levels. The issues that
opponents to the project used included inciting public fears
about “drinking sewage” and
opponents using the term “toilet to tap” to reinforce this notion.
Opponents also claimed that
the water would be served primarily to African American
communities and was using them as
test subjects. Finally, the opponents raised concerns about
“unknown” contaminants that
might be present and pass through the treatment process. Two
scientific panels reviewed the
project in 1998, one, which consisted of national experts put
together by the National Water
Research Institute (NWRI), and the other consisting of local
scientists assembled by the San
10. Diego County Board of Supervisors. The NWRI panel
recommended moving forward with the
project, but the local panel did not. Because of those
recommendations, in January 1999 the
Board of Supervisors voted to stop the project3.
It is important to understand this background because just as the
GWRS project was beginning
these three projects were in various stages of development and
the fate of all three was
determined before the District acted in 2002 to complete design
and move forward with
construction.
All the issues these projects encountered had to be considered
as the District executed its
outreach strategy with the knowledge that even the best laid
plans can be derailed at any time.
This certainly was the case with the San Diego project where it
had done early outreach and
stakeholder involvement and it was proposing to use advanced
treatment that was well over
and above what was being proposed for the San Gabriel and Los
Angeles water reuse
projects. It pilot tested the technology and received approval
from the regulators. San Diego
5
had an expert and citizens’ advisory panel engaged all along the
way and yet, in the end, the
project was stopped because of politics.
11. Phase 1
The Orange County Water District first met with OCSD on
January 20, 1997 to discuss if
OCSD was interested in building a joint project. After
agreeing to pursue his, the boards of
directors for both agencies agreed to call the project the Orange
County Regional Water
Reclamation (OCR) Project. The two agencies then decided that
they would form the Joint
CSDOC OCSD/OCWD Ad Hoc Committee (the Committee)
consisting of three members and
three alternates from each agency. For any item to be approved,
two directors from each
agency had to vote for approval. All project matters would be
voted on by the Committee and
if the matter included any type of expenditure, moved on to
each agency’s board of directors
for final approval.
The first Committee meeting was held on March 6, 1997. The
Committee discussed
preparation of required environmental impact studies,
governance issues and, most
importantly, public relations or outreach. It was both visionary
and strategic that the directors
identified public outreach as a key component to assuring
success for the project.
Early Outreach Planning
After this first Committee meeting, a request for proposals
(RFP) was prepared by staff which
identified that the work that was being requested would be the
first phase of the outreach,
which would last for approximately 18 months and coincide
12. with the development and approval
of the project environmental impact report. The first phase
work would include:
1. Research – Reviewing case studies of other projects being
developed and identification
of target audiences
2. Plan Strategy – Development of a public relations strategy
and action plan. The action
plan would look at a statement of potential issues, development
of messaging specific
to issues identified during the research phase, development of a
project identity possibly
including a new project name and logo, formulation of
objectives and strategies for each
public or important segment and a program administration plan
3. Implementation – Preparation of support literature,
presentations, press releases and
various board and public meeting attendance
4. Evaluation – Collection and codification of results.
The RFP was sent to 24 public affairs firms in early May 1997
and 13 firms attended a pre-
proposal meeting. The District ultimately received proposals
from six firms and planned on
interviewing all 6 teams. Staff proceeded to interview and rank
the six firms that submitted
proposals and put forward a recommendation to hire Morrison &
Associates for the Phase 1
work to the Joint Cooperative Committee (the Committee). The
Committee did not agree with
the staff recommendation and chose to interview the consultants
13. themselves. A special
Committee meeting was held in late July 1997 with five firms
being interviewed (one declined
to interview) and the Committee selected Adler Public Affairs
to perform the Phase 1 outreach.
6
During the selection process, the staff had prepared an
extensive report to the Committee
recommending what it felt was the most qualified firm and tried
to strongly persuade the
Committee to approve its recommendation. In the end, it was
the Committee members who
chose who they felt was the best qualified firm.
Staff had felt that they had put together a very logical basis for
its recommendation and chose
to defend it against the Committee, but the Committee felt it
had more expertise in the field of
public affairs and exercised its authority to select the
consultant. The important lesson for staff
was that it had to be more aware of deferring to the Committee
on the non-technical project
related issues and focus on the technical issues, where the
Committee fully trusted its
expertise and judgement.
Early Work
Over the next several months the team identified the project
need and surveyed 500 area
14. residents to test commonly used water industry terminology,
supply vs. safety issues, project
description, name identification, arguments for and against the
project and cost issues. Four
focus groups were conducted, during which time, the issue of
water supply was found to be of
great concern and there was virtually unanimous understanding
of and support for reverse
osmosis technology.
The survey that was performed laid the groundwork for the
development of the messaging that
would be relied upon to communicate with the public regarding
the project. Some of the major
findings that came out of the survey from respondents were:
1. When asked what their main concern about water in Orange
County was, 40% said
safety/health
2. When asked what they think about the quality of drinking
water, 37% worried about the
safety of the drinking water
3. When asked about Orange County water supplies and
anticipated population growth,
59% said that Orange County does not have enough water unless
new supplies are
found
4. When asked what term relating to water was most favorable,
83% favored the term
purified water
5. When given the choice between recycled water, reclaimed
15. water, repurified water,
reprocessed water and purified water, 71% chose purified water
as the best choice
6. When asked if they were aware of a new water project in
Orange County that would
reclaim and purify wastewater, 25% were aware.
Because of the information gained by these efforts, in mid-1997
the Committee changed the
name of the project from the “Orange County Regional Water
Reclamation Project (OCR)” to
the “Groundwater Replenishment System (GWRS)”. The survey
also pointed out that an
extremely large percentage of people were not aware of the
project, which heightened the
need for a robust outreach program if the project was to be
successful. By the end of the year,
7
the outreach consultant had developed the following material to
be help with the initial
outreach campaign:
1. Press release – The press release was created to inform the
public of the scoping
sessions that were being held to review the proposed
environmental impact report that
was being developed for the project. It was determined that we
needed to be fully
16. transparent with the public as to what we were proposing to do.
The press release
highlighted the need for the project, the advanced treatment
process that was being
proposed, how the water would be used, the regulatory
oversight, the cost of the project
and the quality.
2. Fact sheet – The fact sheet simply defined different terms
that were frequently used, but
not commonly known by the public.
3. Project question and answer sheet – The questions that were
developed for this piece
of collateral material was based on the results of the most
common questions that came
out of the survey and focus groups and what were considered
the most important
questions that needed to be addressed. The questions were:
What is the Groundwater
Replenishment System that is being explored?; Why is it being
considered?; Where
would the system be located if it is built?; How much would the
system cost?; Would it
be safe?; What advanced treatment process would be used?;
Who would ensure it was
safe?; What schedule is under consideration?; How would the
Groundwater
Replenishment System help in a drought?; What effect might
the project have on water
rates?; How will the public be consulted on this decision? and
Who can be contacted for
more information?.
4. Briefing paper – The briefing paper attempted to explain
where Orange County
17. residents’ water comes from and the importance of a safe and
adequate alternative
source of water supply. It then referenced five other projects
that were considering
similar projects and a groundwater recharge project in
California that had been
operating for decades without any ill effect. The paper
attempted to show what was
being proposed was becoming common place.
5. Media messages – The media messages were developed
mainly as statements that
could be used with the media to help answer any questions
posed. The messaging
focused on the quality of the water, the advanced treatment that
was being proposed,
how it helps the county’s water supply reliability, how past
recycled water projects have
had no ill effect on any users of the water, how Orange
County’s water supply already
includes recycled water in it and that the project would have the
close scrutiny of the
regulatory community.
Phase 2
In early 1998, almost all the activities that had been a part of
the Phase 1 program had been
completed. The foundation had been laid in that through
polling and focus groups the
messaging and talking points had been developed. The
environmental impact report had not
been completed and was scheduled for adoption towards the end
of the year. Staff believed
18. that it was important to develop a speaker’s bureau and begin an
aggressive outreach program
as a part of the Phase 2 work, which would cover the next 12
months and target the following
groups:
8
1. Business Outreach – Target a list of top businesses in Orange
County and provide one-
on-one presentations. It was also proposed to have a business
luncheon to present the
project to a wider group of businesses. It was felt that support
from this group would
help provide the community at large to support the project once
they understood the
relevance of this project to the future economic stability in
Orange County.
2. Government Outreach – This would be a continuation and
expansion of the ongoing
program focusing on city council presentations and continued
visits with state and
federal legislators and their staffs.
3. Community Outreach – Develop a Citizens Advisory
Committee of 20 to 30 individuals
and hold quarterly luncheons to brief and update the Committee
on the project and
seek its input on the various issues being discussed.
19. 4. Friends of the Groundwater Replenishment System – This
was an ongoing campaign
of obtaining support letters and resolutions for the project. This
support provided
project credibility and helped support grant opportunities.
5. Other Target Audiences – This group included the
technological and scientific
community and retail water agencies. It also included service
organizations such as
chambers of commerce, Kiwanis clubs and religious groups.
It was determined that most of the speaking engagements would
be given by the staff of the
two agencies with limited support from the consultant. It was
extremely important to build this
base of support at this critical stage of the project and over 125
presentations were given
during the year. The public hearing on the EIR had just taken
place and in the next few
months the EIR would be approved and the preliminary design
of the project would be starting.
Very large amounts of money were about to be spent and
important decisions made, and so
assurances had to be made that we did not have unknown groups
that would attempt to derail
the project.
Phase 3
The staff reviewed what had been done the previous two years
and came to the unanimous
agreement that it should continue to educate the service area
20. about water reuse and the
GWRS through various mediums such as newsletters, mailings
and presentations. It was also
agreed that there needed to be an increase in public information
efforts in Phase 3 to achieve
the following goals, strategies and tactics:
1. Goals - Obtain support from target audiences for the project,
move forward with project
development without any negative movements from target
audiences and to build a
coalition of supporters and technical experts in various areas
including science,
medicine, environment, business, education, and government.
2. Strategy – Update and create a public awareness campaign
team to continually conduct
community, government and media outreach to keep the flow of
communication regular
and predictable. Also, use straightforward and up-front
layperson’s language when
educating target audiences about the project (avoid jargon and
abbreviated language).
3. Tactics – For community relations: (1) Continue public
speaking engagements; (2)
Continue newsletter on a quarterly or bi-annual basis; (3) Lobby
business and
9
community leaders; (4) Offer community copies of the project
21. video; (5) Develop a
GWRS website; (6) Consider forming an expert panel. For
governmental relations: (1)
Send a quarterly update letter to city, state and federal
representatives; (2) Send
quarterly update letters to other water agency board members;
(3) Offer presentations
to city council members in the service area to give them
updates. For media relations:
(1) Continue proactive media relations on a regular basis; (2)
Conduct media training;
(3) Offer video to local cable stations for airing; (4) Develop a
crisis communication plan.
The Committee asked staff to solicit proposals through the RFP
process for the Phase 3 work.
Staff sent RFPs to 16 firms and received five proposals. Staff
then evaluated the proposals
and narrowed it down to three firms that were invited to
participate in interviews. The interview
panel consisted of members of the Committee and staff. The
Committee awarded the Phase 3
public outreach to the firm of Nelson Communications Group in
early May 1999.
Over the next 9 months, the project’s preliminary design was
nearing completion and the
issues of cost, financing and governance were all being
addressed. At the same time, the
public outreach was moving forward and had received support
letters from 16 of 23 cities and
12 chambers of commerce within the District’s service area.
In 1999, a potentially volatile problem arose when the
California Department of Health
22. Services (DHS) set a health-protective interim action level of 20
parts per trillion (ppt) for N-
Nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA), a cancer-causing carcinogen.
The action level was a lower
threshold than was allowed in food products. Normally, an
approved testing method would be
instituted before an interim action level for a contaminant were
to be set, but that was not the
case with NDMA. In May of 2000, staff was alerted to a
possible problem of NDMA being
found in potable reuse.
In fall 1999, OCWD began developing new testing method to
detect levels of 1 to 2 ppt. In
2000, OCWD began using the new testing method on wells near
seawater intrusion barrier.
NDMA was found in Water Factory 21 injection water and
ranged from less than 2 ppt to 150
ppt.
This information could have been a deal breaker for the
proposed GWRS project and could
have impacted WF-21, which was still in operation at the time,
and OCWD’s reputation.
From the project onset, the agencies were adamant that
transparency be the cornerstone of all
communications. They believed it was important to be the first
to communicate any problems,
be factual and not hold back bad news to maintain the public’s
trust. This potential problem
put that directive to the test.
In May 2000, results of the new testing method were verified by
an outside lab and confirmed
OCWD’s findings. In addition, all active drinking water wells
operated by local water retail
23. agencies tested for NDMA, but only two were detected above 20
ppt. At OCWD’s
recommendation, the impacted retail agency took those two
wells out of service.
Staff quickly began preparing a communications plan, issued a
press release, set-up a toll-free
hotline, and invited members of the local media to meet and
discuss the findings. This
proactive approach included the disclosure of the test results
and the actions OCWD and
10
OCSD were currently taking to reduce NDMA in WF-21 water
and the proposed GWRS
project. The solution included a three-pronged effort to prevent
precursor compounds that
form NDMA from entering OCSD, optimizing both agencies’
treatment processes to remove
NDMA and evaluating a DHS-approved UV treatment process
for the proposed GWRS project.
OCWD effectively communicated how concentrations in
drinking water wells is reduced by
dilution and, that based on data, Orange County’s groundwater
was safe. Changes were
made to the WF-21 process and OCSD’s wastewater flows to
reduce NDMA to 20 ppt or less
and UV with hydrogen peroxide was ultimately implemented at
the GWRS to combat NDMA
concentrations that occur when chlorine is used in the potable
reuse process. This information
was actively shared with local retail agencies, city councils,
service organizations, regulatory
24. agencies, and media. This outreach effort resulted in balanced
stories in key newspapers and
online publications and no public or political outrage; only one
misguided quote from a person
that had been turned down to do a joint study earlier that year.
A few months later, in July of 2000, there was concern that the
outreach program needed to be
increased because the boards of directors of both the District
and OCSD would be taking a
vote within six months as to whether to proceed with the final
design and move forward with
the project. It is also interesting to note that during this time,
the LADWP East Valley Water
Project was drawing political and local opposition, which added
to the need to increase GWRS
outreach efforts and make sure that the project succeeded.
The one thing that had been learned through the focus groups
was that the more information
the public received about the GWRS and the need to ensure a
safe, reliable water supply, the
stronger the support from the public. At this point in time, staff
recommended holding two
additional public workshops, cable television and radio
advertising, additional media relations,
an expert spokesperson and direct mail to targeted audiences.
The proposed budget for this
work was between $525,000 - $600,000. The Committee
ultimately decided to conduct
additional public opinion research (polling), two to four public
workshops, direct mail outreach
and media relations with a budget of $110,000 for this
additional effort. The Committee did not
see the need for a major media effort using cable television or
radio advertising.
25. The polling was done by the same firm that was hired three
years earlier and some of the
major findings from the polling were:
1. When asked about Orange County water supplies and
anticipated population growth,
78% said that Orange County does not have enough water unless
new supplies are
found, which was a 19% increase over the prior survey
2. When asked if they were aware of a new water project in
Orange County that would
reclaim and purify wastewater, 53% were aware, which was a
28% increase
3. When asked if they favor the project, 36% were in favor,
which was a 17% increase
4. When given the statement that “The trouble with trying to
repurify sewer water is that
even our best technology can’t get out all the impurities and
germs”, 60% agreed, which
was an 11% decrease.
What this information indicated was that the outreach campaign
was working in that more
people were aware of OCWD’s messaging and the project, but
also that more work had to be
11
26. done to convince people that the technology proposed for the
project was proven to remove
harmful constituents. This finding led to increased efforts in
funding additional
medical/scientific community outreach.
All the outreach efforts had helped bring the project to the end
of the preliminary design. Four
years since the inception of the project, the Boards of Directors
of OCWD and OCSD were
ready to vote as to whether to move forward with the project, or
not. In those four years, the
following was learned:
1. Key messaging: (1) The health and safety of the water was
proven; (2) The cost was
lower than alternative supplies; (3) The technology that was
being used (microfiltration
and reverse osmosis) was proven and used in other industries;
(4) The project provides
the highest quality water, which is near distilled; (5) The
project provides a drought-
proof water supply that also improves the overall groundwater
quality; (6) The need for
the project is based on future population growth and future
challenges to imported water
sources.
2. Planning efforts: (1) The project is a public education
challenge; (2) Once the project is
explained it is accepted; (3) The strategy is to first educate
business, political,
community and media leaders and then move on to the general
public; (4) The objective
27. was to build a foundation of project support for decision makers
in Orange County; (5)
Outreach must continue up to and through project approval; (6)
The public will focus
more and more on the project as approval approaches.
3. Execution: (1) Had given over 400 presentations; (2) Briefed
elected officials, business,
media, community and key environmental groups; (3) Continued
a program that
included brochures, facility tours, quarterly newsletters, project
website, direct mailing,
consistent media coverage, videos to groups, development of a
crisis response team,
microfiltration and reverse osmosis models, and information
booths at special events.
Because of these efforts, the project had no active opposition
and on March 28, 2001, the
boards of directors of OCWD and OCSD voted to move forward
with the project.
Phase 4
Shortly after the approval to move forward with the project, the
Committee decided to form a
subcommittee to specifically deal with the outreach efforts for
the project. The Groundwater
Replenishment System Public Information and Education
Subcommittee (the PIE) was
subsequently formed and consisted of two Directors from each
agency, who reviewed all
outreach efforts before taking it to the Committee for approval.
28. The PIE determined that the
outreach should continue through the end of the first phase of
construction and that outreach
efforts should be increased.
The PIE determined that the next phase of outreach must use
different, more costly methods
such as direct mail, radio and television advertisements and
other means to reach, educate
and gain the support of a greater number of the population.
With that in mind, the Committee
asked staff to solicit proposals through the RFP process for the
Phase 4 work. The firms
submitting on the work were to develop a proposed public
education work plan that would
12
involve research, planning, design, implementation, and
evaluation. The elements of the plan
were to include:
1. A comprehensive public education and outreach plan for each
of the four years of the
program (two years of the contract and two years of the follow-
on contract)
2. A comprehensive media plan, including media advocacy,
media tours, editorial boards,
special events, and press releases
3. A creative, comprehensive and innovative mix of advertising
29. and marketing plans for
targeted audiences which would include: (1) A comprehensive
justification for the
proposed marketing mixes as appropriate for each target
audience, including leverage
and added value opportunities with media buy proposals; (2)
Production of television
and/or radio spots, direct mail pieces, newspaper advertisements
over the 4-year
period; (3) Development and production of all collateral
materials; (4) Plan to involve
community-based organizations and direct community outreach:
(5) Translation to
language-specific needs; (6) A children’s educational program;
(7) A 90-day plan
providing a foundation for future efforts as well as a fast start;
(8) Development and
maintenance of a master calendar; (9) Development and
maintenance of a community
and business outreach database.
Staff sent RFPs to 22 firms and received six proposals. Staff
then evaluated the proposals
and narrowed it down to three firms that were invited to
participate in interviews. The
Committee awarded the Phase 4 public outreach to the firm of
NCG Porter Novelli in early
October 2001.
Over the next two-year period, the team executed the plan as
several construction contracts,
amounting to over $40 million, were awarded and various
components of the GWRS project
were being implemented. By the time that the District was ready
to award the $292 million
30. Advanced Water Purification Facility element of the GWRS, the
outreach efforts had continued
on a successful track. There continued to be no significant
organized or active opposition to
the project and the following initiatives had contributed to that
success:
1. More than 700 presentations had been given to various
stakeholder groups.
2. The integration of a minority outreach component had
resulted in the endorsements
from 15 prominent minority leaders and minority organizations.
Previously there had
been no organized minority outreach or cultivation of minority
endorsements, which was
a major oversight. Minority outreach was a very important
factor since 43% of the
population at the time was minority with a very large Hispanic
and Vietnamese
communities. What was discovered very early is that many
people in these
communities had a basic mistrust of water systems because the
systems in their home
countries were very poor and many brought that mistrust with
them when they came to
the United States.
3. Community groups and businesses continued to actively
support the program as
evidenced by securing more than 200 letters of support.
4. Working with neighborhoods potentially impacted by
construction through distribution of
flyers, direct mail postcards and personal door-to-door contact.
31. 13
5. Sustained communication with elected officials through
regular meetings and e-mail
blasts.
6. A robust media program, which resulted in more than 40
media reports which were
primarily balanced or positive. Articles appeared in The Wall
Street Journal and on
ABC World News Tonight.
7. The establishment of the Community Leadership Advisory
Council (the CLAC)
composed of business, minority, environmental, and scientific
leaders. The CLAC
consisted of 20 members who assisted in outreach efforts and
third-party media
relations activities.
8. New and revamped communications tools including
brochures, redesigned website and
white papers.
Some additional polling had been done to test the results of the
outreach efforts attempting to
measure the success of the messaging. The findings of the
polling indicated that the total
project awareness was flat indicating a need to find messaging
that was penetrating,
explaining both the current and the future need for the water.
32. The public was recalling that the
project used advanced purification technologies, that it blended
with existing groundwater and
was as safe as bottled water. The most important messages
were that the water quality was
monitored around the clock, that the water exceeded drinking
water standards and the state-
of-the-art treatment processes that were being used. The
toughest messaging was that it was
drought-proof and people were skeptical about the cost
messaging.
Because construction projects were beginning, it was decided to
incorporate construction
outreach activities into the overall project outreach efforts. The
focus of this outreach was to
go into affected neighborhoods and explain the project to the
residents that would be most
impacted by construction activities. By listening to the
resident’s concerns and acting on those
concerns, it diffused any potential problems that could have
arisen.
In September 2003, the Committee awarded Porter Novelli a
one-year extension to its public
outreach contract. The outreach continued to focus outreach on
the following groups: health &
medical; local, state and federal elected officials; minority;
business; media; and, building
industry.
Over the course of the following year, staff achieved the
following:
1. Health and Medical Outreach – (1) Received six additional
33. national public health and
medical endorsements; (2) Received seven local public health
and medical
endorsements; (3) Received a total of 36 public health and
medical endorsements to
date (26 local and 10 national).
2. Government Outreach – (1) Coordinated two workshops for
elected officials; (2) Briefed
10 new council members and two city councils; (3) Briefed nine
planning commissions.
3. Minority Outreach – (1) Cultivated support from three
medical clinics and county-wide
minority health organizations; (2) Received an endorsement
from Vietnamese Catholic
Bishop Luong; (3) Hosted informational tables at minority
events reaching thousands of
residents in the Vietnamese, Korean and Filipino communities;
(4) Placed articles in
14
minority news publications; (5) Received 20 minority leader and
minority organization
endorsements.
4. Media Outreach – (1) Placed 26 balanced and or positive
local media stories; (2)
Taped three cable television public affairs programs; (3)
Distributed eight press
releases announcing project milestones.
34. 5. Construction Outreach – (1) Implemented an aggressive
construction community
outreach program utilizing two community liaisons that gained
the support for the
project around the treatment plant facility and proactively
outreached to neighbors in
three cities potentially impacted by pipeline construction.
In September 2004, the Committee reassessed the outreach
needs. At this point in time, all
the construction contracts had been issued and were in various
stages of completion. The
Committee had decided that the goals of the business and health
and medical outreach had
been reached and decided not to actively pursue focused efforts
in those areas. The
Committee also decided that for the following year that at least
half the budget should be
devoted to the construction outreach because of the intense
activity in this area, which
included building a 22-km long pipeline. Outreach would
continue with the remaining target
audiences of minorities, government and media. The Committee
awarded a one-year
extension to the Porter Novelli contract to perform these
activities.
Over the next three years, outreach continued at the same level
with the same amount of
resources being spent. The construction projects were
completed without any major difficulties
and there were no instances were neighborhood groups protested
because they were being
ignored. The culmination of the efforts was realized when the
GWRS began producing
35. 265,000 m3/d in January 2008 with no active opposition to the
project. However, the outreach
did not stop and, as you will find, continues today.
Phase 5
A positive article about the GWRS appeared in the New York
Times in November 2007, two
months prior to the opening of the project. That article helped
put the project on national and
international radars and drew more media attention than ever
before. The Committee wanted
to build upon that momentum. In addition, with more eyes on
the project, maintaining support
for the agencies’ $481 million investment and helping other
projects get off the ground were
priorities that drove project’s post-opening outreach efforts.
The GWRS also influenced how consumers started to look at
wastewater – as another
resource they should take care of and reuse. Prior to the project
coming online, telling the
wastewater side of the story was limited for fear that people
would only focus on the source
water for such projects. Messaging focused mostly on the water
purification side of the project
and was methodically communicated to the public and media by
OCWD staff, not OCSD staff.
As more favorable media coverage of the GWRS increased,
OCSD’s Board of Directors
expressed the desire to have a greater role in media efforts and
tours involving dignitaries.
As such, the Committee directed staff to continue speaker’s
36. bureau efforts, update messaging
and print and digital materials, make enhancements to the
GWRS tour program, and apply for
15
industry awards. Most of these efforts would be done without
the assistance of outside
consultants. Since the outreach framework from Phases 1-4 was
still relevant, staff modified it
and built upon it to address new issues and interests as they
arose.
Branding and Logo:
Much of the same need and benefits originally communicated in
the pre-operation outreach
still holds true today. However, about a year after coming
online, federal environmental rulings
significantly impacted imported water supplies from Northern
California to Southern California,
the cost of imported water increased significantly and the
Southwest United States
encountered the first year of a six-year drought. The gap
between the cost of imported water
supplies and OCWD’s local groundwater that included GWRS
water was growing and
continues to grow, making the GWRS project more economical,
sooner than originally
projected. Building the project to accommodate future
population growth was a part of pre-
operation messaging, but anti population growth groups in
California started to become more
37. vocal about projects in general. Staff chose to deemphasize that
benefit and focus more on the
cost of the water compared to other options and the reliability
potable reuse provides during
times of drought. Though drought-resiliency became a more
prominent talking point, staff also
stressed that potable reuse should not be viewed as a project of
last resort, but rather as part
of a diversified water portfolio when feasibly possible.
With a desire from OCSD to have greater project visibility, the
agencies underwent joint
branding exercises to best determine how to fold the important
story about wastewater source
control into talking points and print and digital materials and to
create a protocol for engaging
with media and government officials.
The Committee and staff participated in branding exercises, led
by the Utility Branding
Network. These exercises resulted in the creation of a new
project logo by LJG Partners,
which was selected through an RFP process. In addition to the
full title of the project, the new
logo included the prominent project acronym since many staff
and industry professionals were
referring to the project by its acronym. It also featured three
water drops in different shades of
blue to represent the three-step advanced purification process.
Print and Digital Materials:
With new Committee-approved messages and logo, staff worked
with LJG Partners to create a
new website that allowed media to better access information and
project b-roll footage, and the
38. Acorn Group to create a GWRS technical brochure. Additional
print and digital materials were
created in-house.
A nontechnical brochure was created for non-technical visitors
or interested parties and a 24-
page technical brochure, similar to a Water Factory 21
brochure, was created for guests with a
scientific background. Over time, the non-technical brochure
was phased out as the general
public and media found value and interest in the technical
aspects of the project.
16
Social media also came on the scene after the plant came online,
so social media channels
and protocol were created so the GWRS could have a presence
and voice in the new
communications forum.
New PowerPoint presentations were also created to reflect the
new messaging and logo and
to include animations, videos and infographics to appeal to a
wide variety of audiences.
Speaker’s Bureau:
Staff continued to implement a very active speaker’s bureau.
While the pre-operation
presentations were mostly given locally, the District began
receiving requests to present at
39. forums outside California and abroad. With a growing demand
for presentations, more staff
were trained to provide presentations. Today, about 20 staff and
board members have been
trained for the speaker’s bureau program. The program has not
wavered. In the 2017-2018
fiscal year alone, more than 50 presentations were given offsite
at conferences and meetings,
more than 70 were provided to approximately 7,500 children at
the District’s annual Children’s
Water Education Festival and nearly 200 presentations were
given onsite to tour guests and
media.
Tour Program:
Before the GWRS came online, OCWD offered tours of the
demonstration facility, so people
could see the technology for themselves and taste the final
product water. In 2008, OCWD
hosted about 2,500 tour guests. In 2018, numbers will reach
nearly 5,000. Approximately 70%
of tour guests are students from about 60 Orange and Los
Angeles counties’ high schools and
colleges. The tour program has become a part of the curriculum
for many state collegiate
environmental studies, engineering and nursing programs. The
remaining 30% of tour guests
is a mix of water industry professionals, service organizations,
chambers of commerce, elected
officials, and media. The project continues to pull in interest
from many international guests
and has hosted visitors from almost every continent. Tours and
the GWRS technical brochure
are available in English, Spanish, Korean, Chinese, and
Vietnamese to accommodate this
40. international interest.
Enhancements to the tour program also included plant signage
and samples of membranes
guests could see and touch up close, incorporating a headset
sound system so guests could
wander through the plant and still hear the tour guide clearly,
the inclusion of videos created by
vendors Trojan and Evoqua, and the creation of giveaway bags
and other tour mementos.
Like the speaker’s bureau program, about 20 staff and board
members were trained to provide
tours to ensure consistent messages are communicated and to
accommodate about 200 tour
requests annually. One staff member is designated fulltime to
coordinate tours and provide
most of the tours. Tour guide kits, that include laminated
talking points, were created and are
used by staff to refresh their memories before going out with a
tour or to use as a quick
reference to help answer guests’ questions.
Joint GWRS and OCSD tours are also now a big part of the
program. Prior to the project
coming online, it was almost unthinkable to encourage guests or
media to tour the sanitation
17
side as part of the GWRS experience for fear that viewing the
sewage may be unpalatable and
close people’s minds to water recycling. With more than a year
of operations under their
41. belts, the agencies decided that allowing guests to tour both
facilities to see all the steps, from
beginning to end, provided an opportunity to tell the important
source control story and to
reinforce all the safe guards in place to ensure only high-quality
water makes it out of the
GWRS plant. Incorporating OCSD’s pre-GWRS tour also
provided an opportunity to highlight
the unique collaboration between two public agencies to meet
multiple needs and maximize
taxpayer dollars.
Two other tour enhancements included the creation of a $1.3
million permanent exhibit in
2016 that touches upon every aspect of OCWD’s operations and
tells the big picture story of
water on Earth and in California. The exhibit was created by
Discovery Science Center,
Cinnabar and Rodriguez Designs and includes animations by
New Water ReSources that
demonstrate the geology of the groundwater basin and how the
GWRS refills the basin and
combats seawater intrusion, and videos of global water
recycling projects from the Australian
Recycling Centre of Excellence’s Global Water Connections
map. The exhibit became part of
the H2O Learning Center at OCWD.
The newest component of the tour program is Next Generation
Water Leaders, which is a
program for middle school and high school classes that includes
a presentation, GWRS tour,
exhibit scavenger hunt, and a hands-on water quality testing
activity. Staff from OCWD and
the non-profit organization Inside the Outdoors facilitate these
42. visits. The program is meant to
expose students to careers in water, inspire students to become
stewards of the environment
and reinforce common core standards for Science, Technology,
Engineering, and Mathematics
curriculum.
Surveys:
In outreach Phases 1-4, focus groups and surveys were
completed with groups that reflected
demographics in OCWD’s service area to gauge support for the
project. Positive media
sentiment and the growing number of requests for media
interviews, tours and speaker’s
bureau presentations validated continued support and interest
for the GWRS. With these
monitored numbers, the Committee decided to forego doing
additional focus groups and have
staff survey tour audiences instead to evaluate how effective the
new tour presentations and
tour itself were in influencing support not just for the GWRS,
but for water reuse in general.
Tour survey results indicate that the number of guests who
strongly support advanced purified
(recycled) water as part of their drinking water supply nearly
double after taking a GWRS tour
and tasting the GWRS water. From July 2017 through June
2018, 93% of surveyed tour guests
supported or strongly supported having advanced
purified/recycled water as part of their
drinking water supply.
Water Tastings:
Throughout the years, OCWD would often get requests from
43. other water agencies and policy
makers for samples of GWRS water to feature at conferences
and community events. Tastings
offsite were very limited and cumbersome. In 2016, OCWD,
OCSD and WateReuse
18
Association California Section successfully passed legislation,
Assembly Bill 2022, that allows
limited bottling of advanced purified water. OCWD made a
previous attempt in 2010, but the
legislation stalled in an environmental quality committee and
was pulled when the author of the
bill was forced to resign from the legislature due to an unrelated
matter. In 2017, OCWD and
OCSD became the first in the Western Hemisphere to bottle this
water. The bottling kicked off
a year-long celebration to commemorate the 10-year anniversary
of the GWRS which included
tabling at water industry events and mainstream events
throughout California, like music and
food festivals and the USC-UCLA rival football game. OCWD
and OCSD utilized the services
of Dick Jones Communications to help manage the year-long
outreach plan. Approximately
17,000 people tasted GWRS water during the 10-year
anniversary campaign.
Media:
The bottled water roadshow started with a media kick-off event
on Hollywood Boulevard,
44. where there is typically heavy tourist foot traffic, on the first
day of summer in 2017. Los
Angeles was experiencing a heat wave and all media outlets
were looking to, at the very least,
mention the new season and record temperatures in their daily
broadcasts. Staff created
displays that resembled lemonade stands to help reinforce how
reused water quenches
Californian’s thirst. Media kits boxes that included bottles of
GWRS water were mailed out to
50 members of the media and social media influencers inviting
them to the press conference to
unveil the bottled GWRS water. All these tactics, timing and
appealing visuals with the
opportunity to pull people and ask them their opinions about the
water and water reuse,
resulted in pre-launch day coverage by National Public Radio
and coverage by five Los
Angeles market television stations and two nationally-
syndicated radio shows on the day of
the event. Immediate post-event coverage interviews also
appeared on Green Sense Radio,
Water Deeply, SiriusXM radio podcasts, and News4 San
Antonio. One local television station
syndicated its video and story via the CNN Network to TV news
stations across the United
States. The event press release was picked up on 223 news and
information websites with 88
million potential views. Total audience impressions for the
kick-off event exceeded 150 million.
Media coverage has been overwhelmingly positive in Phase 5,
with stories covered in coveted
outlets including 60 Minutes, National Geographic and the CBS
Morning News. In fiscal year
2017-2018 alone, staff responded to 108 media inquiries and
45. archived 2,145 articles. Monthly
potential viewership ranged from 1.8 million to as high as 133
million. The phrase “toilet-to-tap”
continues to find a place in some media stories, but not as often
as the early years of the
GWRS. When it is mentioned, it is often just used by writers
and reporters to try and draw
viewers’ attention to the story and is then followed by accurate
information that debunks the
myth. WateReuse California Section’s recently formed
Communications Collaborative Group
has decided to focus some of its efforts to create an alternative
phrase for media and the
public to latch onto.
Awards:
The Committee thought it important that staff apply for water,
engineering and communications
awards to continue interest in the project and provide another
means of validating continued
19
support of the project. Since coming online in 2008, OCWD
has garnered more than 50
awards related to the GWRS project; most notably, the
Stockholm Industry Water Award, The
Lee Kuan Yew Prize and the Governor’s Environmental and
Economic Leadership Award for
OCWD’s environmental education and outreach programs.
46. The year-long 10-year anniversary campaign culminated with
OCWD and OCSD achieving a
Guinness World Record for purifying the most wastewater to
drinking water in a 24-hour period
of time. The award required the commitment of multiple judges
throughout the time period and
included past and current consultants, vendors, staff from
elected officials’ offices, and
supporters. The record announcement was made at a community
open house for
approximately 1,200 guests. It was a great way to celebrate this
GWRS milestone and, like
the media kick-off event, generated excellent media metrics.
Conclusion
The success of the GWRS project was based on many factors,
but one of the primary factors
contributing to its success was, and continues to be, its outreach
program. The key to
outreach on any project is to be transparent, start early in the
process and continue through
the life of the project.
The first step for a successful outreach process needs to be to
identify the issues key
stakeholder groups may have with a proposed project. This is
done by utilizing polling and
focus groups to identify those issues and then developing
talking points and collateral
materials that can answer any questions that may materialize.
The initial focus then needs to
be on identifying key stakeholder groups, going out and giving
presentations on the project and
obtaining written support letters from those groups. The
47. outreach must be flexible and
continually evaluated so that it can change as conditions change
and new issues and
opportunities arise.
As my Public Information Officer told me early in the project
“Mike, this is not an engineering
project, it’s a PR project”.
References
1. Los Angeles Times, “Smaller Water Reclamation Plan
Appeases Miller Beer”, February 9, 1996
2. Los Angeles Times, “Sewer Water Reclamation Plan Comes
Under Fire”, June 6, 2000
3. R. Rhodes Trussell, Paul Gagliardo, Samer Adham, Patricia
Tennison, MWH, City of San Diego
and Katz & Associates, Inc., “The San Diego Potable Reuse
Project an Overview”, IWA
Conference, Hong Kong