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CC Regular Session <br />Meeting Date: 06/22/2021 <br />Submitted For: Len Linton, Engineering/Public Works <br />By: Len Linton, Engineering/Public Works <br />Information <br />5.23. <br />Title <br />Adopt Resolution #21-188 Approving Risk and Resilience Assessment for America's Water Infrastructure Act of <br />2018 <br />Purpose/Background: <br />America's Water Infrastructure Act (AWIA) was passed in to law in 2018. Section 2013 of the law requires <br />community drinking water systems serving more than 3,300 people to develop or update risk assessments and <br />emergency response plans (ERPs). The law included deadlines by which water systems must certify to the federal <br />Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) completion of the risk assessment and ERP. Deadlines for certification <br />were staggered, systems serving a population of 100,000 or more were required to certify by March 31, 2020. <br />Systems serving 50,000 or more and less than 100,000 were required to certify by December 31, 2020. Systems <br />serving a population greater than 3,300 and less than 50,000 were required to certify by June 30, 2021. <br />The City of Ramsey falls into the last category. City staff requested permission to go out for Requests for Proposals <br />from consultants to prepare the risk and resilience assessment. The Public Works Committee was hesitant to go out <br />for proposals and requested staff to prepare the risk and resilience assessment in-house. <br />The risk and resiliency assessment must address: <br />1. the risk to the system from malevolent acts and natural hazards; <br />2. the resilience of the pipes and constructed conveyances, physical barriers, source water, water collection and <br />intake, pretreatment, treatment, storage and distribution facilities, electronic, computer or other automated <br />systems (including the security of such systems) which are utilized by the system; <br />3. the monitoring practices of the system; <br />4. the financial infrastructure of the system; <br />5. the use, storage, or handling of various chemicals by the system; and <br />6. the operation and maintenance of the system. <br />Emergency Response Plans <br />No later than six months after certifying completion of its risk and resilience assessment, each system must prepare <br />or revise, where necessary, an emergency response plan that incorporates the findings of the assessment. The plan <br />shall include - <br />1. strategies and resources to improve the resilience of the system, including the physical security and <br />cybersecurity of the system; <br />2. plans and procedures that can be implemented, and identification of equipment that can be utilized, in the <br />event of a malevolent act or natural hazard that threatens the ability of the community water system to deliver <br />safe drinking water; <br />3. actions, procedures, and equipment which can obviate or significantly lessen the impact of a malevolent act <br />or natural hazard on the public health and the safety and supply of drinking water provided to communities <br />and individuals, including the development of alternative source water options, relocation of water intakes, <br />and construction of flood protection barriers; and <br />4. strategies that can be used to aid in the detection of malevolent acts or natural hazards that threaten the <br />security or resilience of the system. <br />Community water systems must, to the extent possible, coordinate with local emergency planning committees <br />established under the Emergency Planning and Community Right -To -Know Act of 1986 (42 U.S.C. 11001 et seq.) <br />