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LTC 212-2018 Deferred MaintenanceAA A1v'iIBEACN City of Miami Beach, 1700 Convention Center Drive, Miami Beach, Florida 33139, www.miamibeachfl.gov Jimmy L. Morales, City Manager Tel: 305-673-7010 , Fax: 305-673-7782 NO. LTC# 212-2018 LETTER TO COMMISSION TO: Mayor Dan Gelber and Members of ; e City mission FROM: Jimmy L. Morales, City Manager DATE: April 20, 2018 SUBJECT: DEFERRED MAINTENANCE The purpose of this LTC is to provide feedback about deferred maintenance from the ULI public listening session earlier this week. By way of background, the City of Miami Beach stormwater system consists of 108.4 miles of gravity pipe, 1.74 miles of force main pipe, 8,202 structures, 37 pump stations, and 367 outfalls. The city is over 100 years old and many of its assets were installed soon after its inception. There are many cases of deferred maintenance and reinvestment presumably going back for decades. With our current aggressive approach to maintenance most of the city's stormwater system is functioning near its existing design flow rates and capacity. Lack of maintenance has not been the cause of flooding in the lowest lying areas of the city such as Alton Road, Indian Creek, Orchard Park, or Crespi Boulevard. We have experienced record high tides and extreme weather events that have led to flooding. Unfortunately, there had been deferred maintenance to our system, but the current administration has tasked staff with operations, maintenance, and renewal of its stormwater assets to provide dependable drainage into the future. Staff reported many examples of deferred maintenance such as inoperable pumps and obstructions in the system due to sand and debris. Previously purchased pumps were from a variety of manufactures and repair parts were not readily available. The system cleaning was being performed by a contractor based on an hourly contract rate that yielded minimal results, and City employee teams were using vacuum trucks originally purchased for the sewer division that were near the end of their useful life. The vacuum trucks assigned to the stormwater team were inadequate and spent an inordinate amount of time out of service needing repairs. A series of needed improvements were identified and implemented. With the approval of the Commission, action was taken that all future pumping equipment will be standardized to insure availability of parts and service. An additional contractor was hired to perform cleaning services on a pay for production basis to yield better overall performance. Two new vacuum trucks were purchased, at a cost of nearly $800,000, taking delivery of one in 2016 and the other is expected in 2018. A staff training plan was initiated where team members were incentivized with rewards to increase their skill set through certification programs in stormwater operations and maintenance. All of these improvements in the management of the system have resulted in significant increases of effectiveness for typical daily summer rainfall events. In many areas of the City the best management practices for the existing systems are not sufficient to mitigate extreme tidal events or even worse extreme tidal events coupled with rainfall. Particularly in areas where the ground elevation is below the tidal elevations no amount of maintenance is going to make the water flow uphill. Historically lack of maintenance may have contributed to some localized flooding however the programmed stormwater system improvements are the only solution to date proven to be effective in abating the influence of extreme tidal events. Deferred maintenance unfortunately is a common occurrence in cities across the nation, fortunately here in Miami Beach our City Commission is investing in our resources and our staff is identifying needs and improving our system. With record high tides and extreme weather becoming more and more prevalent, we not only need to protect and maintain the assets we have, but also invest in new and improved infrastructure to reduce our risk in the future. JLM/EC/R