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SEH has been working to reduce project costs by exploring alternate construction materials and methods, <br />reducing watermain depths, reducing the amount of directionally drilled watermain, and exploring the viability of <br />the City pre -purchasing watermain materials to avoid paying sales tax. However, SEH has also been working to <br />incorporate numerous proposed improvements required to switch chemical treatment processes from individual <br />pump houses to the Water Treatment Plant before the plant is commissioned, which have increased estimated <br />project costs significantly. Based on SEH's current revised plans, the engineer's project cost estimate is <br />$8,950,000. <br />The anticipated construction schedule for this work is 3 to 4 months, depending on weather and material <br />availability (material availability continues to be a concern due to the ongoing supply chain issues). Work on this <br />project can therefore start well after the Water Treatment Plant improvements are under construction, but to keep <br />bid prices as low as possible Staff proposes to re -bid this project later this Fall to allow bidders to order materials <br />as many months in advance as possible prior to needing to start construction to meet project deadlines. <br />Water Treatment Plant <br />On May 20, 2021, the city issued a Request for Proposals (RFP) for Design/Bid/Build services for a centralized <br />Water Treatment Plant. Five firms submitted proposals and the firm of AE2S was selected based on experience <br />in designing water treatment facilities, proposed work plan, ability to meet construction time lines, and proposed <br />fees for services. <br />AE2S recently completed final plans and specifications. The engineer's Opinion of Probable Total Project Costs <br />for the Water Treatment Plant is $38,648,644. <br />Funding <br />Total estimated project costs for both the Water Treatment Plant and the Trunk Watermain Improvements total <br />$47,598,644. It is worth noting that these costs include indirect costs for administrative, engineering, finance and <br />legal fees therefore several hundred thousand dollars in engineering fees have previously been paid. <br />The 2022 - 2031 CIP identifies a total project cost of $32M based on SEH's Feasibility Study. <br />Project Schedule <br />This project is intended to reduce Manganese concentrations in our water supply system. In 2019, the Minnesota <br />Department of Health (MDH) recommended that the City of Ramsey develop short and long-term plans to reduce <br />manganese concentrations in our water supply system. In April of 2019, the City began supplying water to <br />municipal water users using only the three wells with the lowest manganese concentrations to make sure <br />manganese concentrations throughout the water supply system would not exceed the MDH Health Based Value <br />(HBV) for manganese of 0.100 mg/L, which addressed the City's short-term plans. The City's long-term solution <br />requires construction of a water treatment plant to remove manganese from the municipal water supply system. <br />Since the Spring of 2019, the City of Ramsey has been collecting water samples from random locations and has <br />had the samples tested for Manganese. In general, these test results have indicated that utilizing municipal wells <br />with the lowest historical Manganese concentrations has allowed Manganese concentrations in the City's water <br />supply system to remain below 0.100 mg/L the vast majority of the time, and no tests to date have exceeded 0.300 <br />mg/L, which MDH has identified as the highest concentration of Manganese fit for adult consumption. However, <br />the City is planning to construct its next municipal water supply well (well #9) within the next few years and it is <br />not known how much Manganese will be produced by the new well as Manganese concentrations vary with <br />location. <br />Originally, the intent was to have the WTP operational before the high-water use season started in the Summer of <br />2024. However, due to current supply chain issues, Water Treatment Plants are now averaging approximately 2 <br />years to construct. Therefore, bidding the WTP project in the Fall of 2022 would allow the plant to be <br />commissioned, tested, and fully operational by the Summer of 2025. <br />Based on the most recent information available to Staff and the City's engineering consultants leading the Water <br />