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| GOING
INSIDE Open site plans may end as plant designers
opt for enclosed plants. |
The ominous discovery
of U.S. water system plans at an Al Qaeda hideout in Afghanistan
two years ago brought home stark new realities facing water
agencies. Utility officials and consultants say that the upgrades
completed since 9/11 represent only the beginning of far-reaching
changes in planning, procurement, design, technology and budgets.
"Youre just going to
see security issues entering into every part of our business
as well as every part of our clients business,"
predicts Deborah English, engineering manager for Kansas City-based
Black & Veatch.
Utilities are prepared to invest
heavily in security, says Tom Curtis, deputy executive director
for government affairs in the Washington, D.C., office of
the American Water Works Association. One major western system
has earmarked $80 million for security-related measures, he
says. Agencies must find the money either by rate hikes or
by deferring other capital projects, Curtis predicts.
SAFETY CHECKS
Much work will emerge primarily from the federally mandated
vulnerability assessments that water systems serving at least
50,000 customers completed this year. The implications of
those assessments for capital planning "are just now
shaking out," says Brian Ramaley, director of Newport
News (Va.) Waterworks.
For most utilities, major security-related
changes are still in the planning stage, says Anne Speisman,
a project manager for CDM in Annandale, Va. But security is
already shaping both small and large decisions. "Were
looking at minimizing the number of doors and access points,"
and "putting up windows a little bit higher to limit
access," says Bill Desing, CH2M Hill Cos. Milwaukee-based
national security manager.
The 9/11 attacks provided an added
urgency to reconsider the role of chlorine gas, a re-examination
that began in the 1980s after the Union Carbide plant disaster
in Bhopal, India (see story, p. 6). "I dont think
its going to do away with chlorine, but certainly systems
are interested in using aqueous chlorine solutions sodium
hypochlorideas opposed to gas," says Speisman.
Last Augusts massive electricity
blackout, which temporarily crippled Cleveland, Ohios
water service, pointed up the importance of backup generation.
The San Diego County Water Authority is among agencies that
plan "to put in more backup power generation than we
have in the past," says John Economides, the agencys
chief engineer.
In regions where mild weather once
allowed utilities to leave pump stations and other components
uncovered, "You are finding some utilities that are now
trying to put buildings around their facilities so they can
better provide a barrier between the intruder and the critical
asset," says Fred Elwell, an Orlando-based CDM senior
vice president.
Some agencies are taking more dramatic
steps. "We have actually changed a couple of projects
purely out of security considerations," Ramaley says.
Newport News had initially selected an inflatable dam for
a spillway expansion. But the agency switched to concrete
because it is "more expensive, more permanent, more difficult
to damage or destroy material," he says. Although the
change will raise the cost by an estimated 20 to 30%, concrete
also offers the project a much longer service life.
These and other security-related
decisions will follow the initial wave of post-9/11 upgrades,
observers say. After 9/11, many utilities went after what
Elwell calls "low-hanging fruit," basic items such
as installing or strengthening fences and locks, motion detectors,
surveillance video cameras, or installing sophisticated card-entry
systems and instituting or augmenting employee background
checks.
As they revise their capital plans,
utilities must grapple "with how much is enough and what
level of security do you provide," says Desing. "If
the consequences of failure are great, even if the probability
of that happening is low, you have to do something about it,"
says Economides.
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| ALTERNATIVES
Changing procurement practices could open door to more
bidders. |
NO GUIDANCE FROM EPA
Some officials keenly feel the absence of national standards
for water systems and are "frustrated that theyre
not getting more guidance from the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency and industry as to what they should be doing,"
says English. A recent EPA inspector generals report
criticizes the agency for failing to establish a baseline
and set security goals. However, says Curtis, "The federal
government has never defined what the threat is, and frankly
were not asking them to because they probably couldnt
do it very well."
Future master plans and projects
could incorporate far more redundancy and decentralization,
says James Conboy, vice president and director of security
services for Malcolm Pirnie Inc., White Plains, N.Y. Decisions
about redundancy were once driven primarily by predictions
about equipment failure. "But now were looking
at a separate piece of equipment to do the same function"
but at a different location, Conboy says.
Historically, utilities have preferred
to centralize facilities to minimize costs, "but smaller,
interconnected plants or trains within a plant provide more
[ability] to recover" from an event, Conboy points out.
Agencies must now consider which is more secure: building
a new plant at a separate location or expanding an existing
one, says English. Spreading power generation among multiple
facilities may also offer safeguards.
Looking further into the future,
designers must account for future online contamination monitoring,
a technology expected to emerge in the next several years.
"Were designing telemetry systems now to allow
room for additional analytical instruments," leaving
real estate and access points in the distribution system,
says Conboy.
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| BEEFED-UP
Systems adding redundancy. |
PROCUREMENT ADJUSTMENTS
Some particularly knotty issues are beginning to emerge in
the procurement process. Utilities are wrestling with "the
conflict between public bid laws and the desire to maintain
sensitive information as sensitive," Conboy says. Owners
who previously gave consultants system-wide design contracts
"are divvying up contracts evenly among consulting engineers
to limit any single consultants knowledge of the system,"
says Speisman.
Contract documents may omit some
potentially sensitive details and require a contractor to
deal with a pre-selected supplier. "A lot of information
will be held back and dealt only to the successful contractor,"
Conboy predicts.
Prequalifying contractors may also
free utilities from having to make plans and specifications
widely available. For plans on file from past projects in
San Diego, "Were talking about going back and asking
consultants how they protect their copies of the plans of
our facilities," says Economides.
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