The Times West Virginian

Local News

August 30, 2008

Water plant mediation held behind closed doors

City continuing to evaluate options

FAIRMONT — A legal mediation session between Fairmont officials and professionals involved with the sale and construction of the city’s faulty $40 million membrane-bound water plant were held this week behind closed doors.

City Attorney Kevin Sansalone, who was one of the three city staff members slated to attend Thursday’s session, said that the details discussed during the meeting and all discussions surrounding those details are confidential. But he said the city is continuing to evaluate its options.

Sansalone, City Finance Director Eileen Layman, and City Utilities Manager Dave Sago were all slated to attend the session.

Officials have said that engineers and legal counsel from STRAND Associates, the Wisconsin-based corrective action engineering firm hired to assess the problems at the plant and make recommendations and repairs, were also set to attend the meeting. Also attending the session were legal counsel and officials from Chapman Technical Group, the water plant engineers and designers, and GE Zenon Environmental, the plant’s manufacturers.

City Planner Jay Rogers said the mediation session was completed Thursday but he did not have any further information about the session or any details surrounding it on Friday afternoon.

On Aug. 19, council members met in executive session, and City Manager Jim Snider said one of the topics of discussion was the strategy the city would take during the mediation. And Rogers said city staff met at least once since that meeting to go over the details.

City officials have said they believe that Chapman and Zenon are responsible for a pair of water emergencies that occurred within the 5-year-old system during the winter of 2007.

At that time, the membranes in the plant were getting clogged with residue from it’s Tygart River source, slowing water production to a point too low to completely meet the high demand of all of its customers. This left some customers with little to no pressure and led to boil-water advisories for several days at a time.

If possible, city officials have said they would like to receive at least some compensation from these two companies to pay for the costly consequences of the crises. Snider has said that if things are not worked out in mediation, the city is prepared to go to litigation over the issue.

Council is prepared to introduce a 50.7 percent customer rate increase to pay for the short- and long-term system improvements that STRAND officials deemed necessary to bring the plant back up to par.

The increase was taken off of the agenda during council’s July 23 meeting pending the results of Thursday’s mediation. Snider said at that time that he planned on introducing that or a revised percentage hike at the next council meeting set for Sept. 9.

Currently, an $8.7 million project is in the planning stages, and a short-term project was completed last year to get the plant through this past winter without any problems.

The city has also purchased additional membranes for the system and Zenon recently introduced a $400,000 hike in the annual payments required for the membrane reserve account. All of these costs rolled together are what the potential 50.7 percent increase was based on, Snider has explained.

E-mail Mallory Panuska at mpanuska@timeswv.com.

Local News
  • Back to brick surface Back to brick surface

     

    The Fourth Street Bridge is open.

    Motorists wanting to cross between Fairmont Avenue and Locust Avenue no longer have to search for creative shortcuts to avoid the enormous hill on Seventh Street or a plethora of stoplights.  

    “I am very pleased that it is once again open,” said Councilman Chuck Warner, who took a trip across the bridge a few hours after it opened on Thursday morning.

    March 19, 2010 1 Photo

  • Waterline break quickly repaired Waterline break quickly repaired

     

    Business was interrupted downtown Thursday by a waterline break.

    City of Fairmont Utilities Manager David Sago said the break occurred in a 10-inch line on Jackson Street at about 9:30 a.m.

    City crews were on the scene in less than 25 minutes, Sago said.

    March 19, 2010 1 Photo

  • Haymond Street work set Tuesday

     

    Motorists driving on Fairmont’s East Side next Tuesday will be running into some delays while state road crews prepare a portion of Haymond Street for a fresh coat of asphalt in about six months. 

    This project is part of the developing Gateway Connector Highway, the 1.5-mile, four-lane roadway set to connect downtown Fairmont to Interstate 79, which is set for completion at the end of this year. 

    March 19, 2010

  • ‘Out of the panic period’

    Economists provided their insights into the future of the local and national economy Wednesday at the annual Morgantown Economic Outlook Conference.

    March 18, 2010

  • Tim McAteer ‘It’s fun to be Irish’

    “I may not be Irish, but it’s fun to be Irish on St. Patrick’s Day,” said Charles Long as he sat down for lunch at McAteer’s restaurant Wednesday.

    March 18, 2010 1 Photo

  • Fairmont hopes to add to K-9 unit

    The Fairmont City Police Department has plans to introduce a pair of furry four-legged officers to its fleet in the near future.

    March 18, 2010

  • Principals East schools focus on transition

    Schools in the East attendance area have truly embraced a new initiative.

     

    March 17, 2010 1 Photo

  • Former county teacher acquitted

    Curtis Boylen, a former Marion County teacher accused of assaulting his former stepdaughter in 2007, was acquitted of all charges earlier this week following a four-day trial in Marion County Circuit Court. 

     

    March 17, 2010

  • Arrest ‘expected’ in Fairmont woman’s death

    The Monongalia County Sheriff’s Department Tuesday denied that a suspect in the case of the death of a 45-year-old Fairmont woman is “at large.”

     

    March 17, 2010

  • Jason Anderson Evidence in dispute

    According to testimony delivered by a Marion County sheriff’s deputy Tuesday, 21-year-old Jason Clay Anderson showed “no emotion” while answering questions just hours after his infant son was pronounced dead on the afternoon of June 23, 2007. 

     

     

    March 17, 2010 1 Photo

Featured Ads

Community Calendar

Loading…
Events by eviesays.com

NDN Video

House Ads

Hyperlocal Search

Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide