Virtual - Texas WaterTM 2021 - Conference Preview - Texas Water TM 2021
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Texas Water goes Virtual for its 26th Year! We are excited to invite you to attend Texas Water™ 2021 – Virtual, the largest (virtual) regional water conference in the nation! Texas Water™ 2021 – Virtual will offer an opportunity to view a considerable number of online presentations plus opportunities to receive TCEQ approved Operator hours or Engineering CEU hours for viewing these presentations. We have endeavored to create what we believe will be the most interactive virtual water conference for all our colleagues. The sessions will be made available “on-demand” once they are posted, allowing for convenient viewing at any time. You will not have to choose between attending different sessions as you would at an in-person conference. Better yet, all the sessions will remain posted for multiple months after the conference, to provide for maximum viewing flexibility. Texas Water™ 2021 – Virtual will also feature a Virtual Exhibition, which will give you the opportunity to (virtually) visit our loyal vendors that have continued their support of the conference. Plus, once again play an online version of our “Match-the-Name Game” scavenger hunt for some amazing door prizes. We hope that you’ll join us online for Texas Water™ 2021 – Virtual. In the midst of very challenging times, the Texas Section of the American Water Works Association and the Water Environment Association of Texas continue their mission of advancing the clean water and drinking water professions and protecting the health of our communities and environment. Our industry has never been more essential, and we hope that you and yours are safe and healthy as we navigate these difficult circumstances. We all look forward to meeting in person in the near future, but for now, we invite you to celebrate the 26th year of the Largest Regional Water Conference in the U.S.©, Texas Water™ 2021 – Virtual! Mike Howe Julie Nahrgang Executive Director Executive Director Texas Section American Water Works Association Water Environment Association of Texas Full registration for Texas WaterTM 2021 - Virtual includes access to all technical sessions as well as all REGISTER ONLINE AT other virtual conference events such as the Opening Session, Women in Water event, Dodson’s Drive Virtual www.txwater.org Fun Run, Curtis Smalley Virtual Environmental Event, Young Professional Panel and Reception, virtual Exhibit Hall and Awards Ceremonies: C.E. HOURS Texas Water is seeking TCEQ Operator Training • Member: (in AWWA or WEF): $200 Certification Hours for most technical sessions. on/after March 29: $250 • Non-Member: $425 Engineers may also receive self-reporting on/after March 29: $475 CE hours for attending. Non-member registration includes a free* Details on how to submit your hours will be one-year membership in either AWWA or WEF. provided closer to the conference date. *New members only, not for membership renewals WWW.TXWATER.ORG |3
PROVIDING WATER AND WASTEWATER TREATMENT EQUIPMENT AND SERVICES THE TRUE SOURCE FOR YOUR PROCESS NEEDS AUSTIN, TX · DALLAS, TX · HOUSTON, TX · OKLAHOMA CITY, OK VISIT US ONLINE FOR MORE INFORMATION EI2TEXAS.COM
TENTATIVE VIRTUAL CONFERENCE SCHEDULE While the technical sessions will be available to view at your convenience, be sure to join us live for these events the week of March 29! And enjoy the Women in Water panel, Virtual Tours, Operations Challenge Events, and Texas AWWA and WEAT Award ceremonies on demand for viewing at your convenience. The schedule is subject to change; please visit www.txwater.org for the latest conference news and updates. Ongoing Events Scholarship Golf Tournament: February 1 - April 15 Dodson’s Drive: March 25 - March 30 Monday, March 29 Wednesday, March 31 8:15-9:00 am Curtis Smalley Environmental Event 8:30-10:10 am Technical Sessions 9:00-11:00 am Exhibit Hall Opening 10:10-10:40 am Visit Exhibits 11:00 am-12:00 pm Opening Session 10:40-11:45 am Technical Sessions 12:00 pm WFP Silent Auction Opens 11:45 am-12:00 pm Live Q&A for all Wednesday 12:00-1:00 pm Exhibitor Power Hour Morning Technical Sessions 1:00-2:40 pm Technical Sessions 12:00-1:00 pm Exhibitor Power Hour 2:40-3:10 pm Visit Exhibits 1:00-2:40 pm Technical Sessions 3:10-4:15 pm Technical Sessions 2:40-3:10 pm Visit Exhibits 4:15-4:30 pm Live Q&A for all Monday 3:10-4:15 pm Technical Sessions Technical Sessions 4:15-4:30 pm Live Q&A for all Wednesday 4:30 pm Young Professionals Development Afternoon Technical Sessions Event – Panel Discussion 4:30-5:00 pm Operations Challenge Awards Ceremony Tuesday, March 30 5:10-6:40 pm Conference Entertainment Event 8:30-10:10 am Technical Sessions 10:10-10:40 am Visit Exhibits Thursday, April 1 10:40-11:45 am Technical Sessions 8:30-10:10 am Technical Sessions 11:45 am-12:00 pm Live Q&A for all Tuesday Morning 10:10-10:40 am Visit Exhibits Technical Sessions 10:40-11:45 am Technical Sessions 12:00-1:00 pm Exhibitor Power Hour 11:45 am-12:00 pm Live Q&A for all Thursday Morning 1:00-2:40 pm Technical Sessions Technical Sessions 2:40-3:10 pm Visit Exhibits 12:00 pm WFP Silent Auction Closes 3:10-4:15 pm Technical Sessions 12:00-1:00 pm Awards Celebration - Live event 4:15-4:30 pm Live Q&A for all Tuesday Afternoon 12:00-1:15 pm Engineering Ethics - Live event Technical Sessions 4:30 pm YP & Student Reception/Mentoring Program Networking Event Visit the Virtual Exhibit Hall, explore poster presentations and more that will be included with attendee registration. Attendee and Exhibitor Registration is Now Open! For more information and to sign up, visit www.txwater.org Texas WaterTM 2021 is a registered trademark of Texas AWWA for the exclusive use for this joint conference with WEAT. All rights reserved. WWW.TXWATER.ORG |5
Message from the Associations On behalf of the Texas American Water Works Association (TAWWA) and the Water Environment Association of Texas (WEAT), we invite you to join us for Texas WaterTM 2021 – Virtual, the Largest Regional Water Conference in the U.S.©. Although a virtual conference, we are still honoring Austin as our “host city” and would like to thank the wonderful volunteers who have been planning for months to make Texas WaterTM 2021 – Virtual a success. The committee is led by our 2021 Conference Chairs, Shay Roalson of Austin Water and Rick Coronado of Austin Water, and supported by the dedicated leadership of both organizations, Mike Howe (TAWWA) and Julie Nahrgang (WEAT). While there will be no handshakes or exchanges of business cards this year, TAWWA and WEAT are committed to still making this conference the best virtual conference and many of our Texas Water special events available to you. Now more than ever we encourage each of you to take part in special events such as the Opening Session, Awards Ceremonies, Women of Water, Young Professionals Recognition, Water for People Silent Auction, and MORE! An added benefit of this virtual format is that you no longer have to choose between attending different sessions as you would at an in-person conference. All sessions will be made available “on-demand” once they are posted, allowing for convenient viewing at any time. Furthermore, you don’t have to spend time traveling as you can enjoy the activities from the comfort of your own office or home while wearing your most comfortable slippers. We wish you all a great virtual conference experience in 2021 and hope you and your families are happy and healthy in 2021! Melissa Bryant Rick Hidalgo Chair President Texas Section American Water Works Association Water Environment Association of Texas 6| TEXAS WATERTM 2021 - VIRTUAL
CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS SCHOLARSHIP GOLF TOURNAMENT The 2021 Dodson’s Drive Fun Run will be completely All profits from the Virtual Texas Water Golf Tournament virtual. All the event information will available and go toward the scholarship programs. This year our updated regularly on our online platforms. Participants mission is to keep players safe by following safety can run at their convenience anytime during the week precautions but still enjoy a round of golf and continue of Texas Water starting on Thursday, March 25th. The our mission to assist students with scholarships. We 5K will also feature a pre-run stretch-out and warm-up, are changing our format to accommodate every golfer which will be posted on our online platforms. We will playing as a single, a group of two, three, or foursome. provide several sample routes for various cities across Your golf event will be held at a golf course in your Texas. Try them out or make your own! Runners will community. Your group will register and independently be able to print a finisher certificate and be able to post pick a course and submit your scorecard and picture of photos for a social media photo contest! yourself or your group to Texas Water before the March 15th deadline to be featured on the website. Fill out the Tech shirts for Timed/Team participants will be mailed. form on page 23 or register online at www.txwater.org. Awards will be during the YP Recognition Event, as always! Be sure to follow our social media page for other event updates. Finally, thank you so much to our WATER FOR PEOPLE SILENT AUCTION generous sponsors for their support of this year’s YP Now, more than ever, access to clean water is Dodson Drive 5K! Register online at www.txwater.org. critical. That is why Texas WaterTM is committed to continuing to raise funds to support the important work that Water for People is doing across the globe VIRTUAL EXHIBIT HALL Stop by the Virtual Exhibit Hall to connect with our Texas to provide access to safe, reliable water services. Water Virtual exhibitors. You can also take part in our The Water for People Silent Auction will be hosted virtual game to win some amazing prizes! online using HANDBID, a mobile silent auction platform that allows you to bid from your smartphone. (If you’ve attended our in-person conferences before, this is the A REPUTATION OF same platform we have used to support the Water for People Silent Auction in 2018, 2019, and 2020.) Donate EXCELLENCE. an item for the auction at www.txwater.org. “Pape-Dawson’s results are without question YOUNG PROFESSIONALS’ DODSON on point, on schedule, on budget, and in a DRIVE FUN RUN word: invaluable.” – Scott Parrish President Garney Construction/Vista Ridge, LLC VIRTUAL RACE THURSDAY, MARCH 25 THROUGH TUESDAY, MARCH 30 The Dodson’s Drive was created in the spring of 2011 to honor the life and work of Kenneth Dodson. Kenny D worked in the wastewater industry for 20 years and was a tireless supporter of YP education and growth. The net proceeds from the registration fees in this event benefit our young professionals by providing contributions for scholarships and assisting them to attend the annual Young Professionals summit. All timed-donation participants will receive an official event tech shirt and access to our virtual timing portal with eligibility for team and single participant awards! Runners are also welcome to join us as untimed participants and participate in our virtual social media contests. Donations can be made on the Dodson Drive 5K registration page; any amount is appreciated. WWW.TXWATER.ORG |7
CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS TECHNICAL SESSIONS 2021 WEAT STUDENT DESIGN COMPETITION The Texas Water Program Committee offers technical AVAILABLE ON-DEMAND sessions presented by the top experts in the industry City of Houston Intercontinental Airport WWTP, BNR and targeted to the most important issues facing water and Solids Improvements and wastewater professionals today. Once registered, The WEAT Student Design Competition gives students the sessions will be available for you to view starting the the opportunity to design and present a project based on week of March 29 and be available for weeks after. For a real-world wastewater treatment plant design problem. a listing of presentations that have committed to the Students will be competing to represent WEAT at the virtual conference, see Pages 10-21. Student Design Competition at WEFTEC 2021. The prompt this year is focused around the City of Houston’s PRESENTATION POSTERS Intercontinental Airport Wastewater Treatment Plant in Texas WaterTM 2021 - Virtual will give attendees an Houston, TX. Students shall propose design alternatives expanded opportunity to learn with the presentation of to construct new facilities required for expanded capacity, posters. The posters give authors the opportunity to rehabilitate existing facilities, convert the plant from a display their research topics and share the information conventional activated sludge facility to a biological they discovered. Authors are encouraged to leave nutrient removal facility, and design of proposed solids contact information so that viewers can direct questions processing facilities. Come out and support your alma or comments their way. mater or see some prospective future leaders in the industry! This year teams from the University of Houston, OPS CHALLENGE COMPETITION Lamar University, Southern Methodist University, Texas Tune in and cheer on your favorite Ops Challenge team Tech University, and SMACC will compete. in this year’s VIRTUAL competition. Teams will compete via a live Zoom meeting link that we will be broadcast on CURTIS SMALLEY ENVIRONMENTAL EVENT MONDAY, MARCH 29, 8:15 AM WEAT’s FB page. This year, even more than year’s past, The Curtis Smalley Environmental Event honors the sector operators have proven that they are essential legacy of Curtis Smalley. His contribution, leadership, front-line workers protecting human health and the mentorship, dedication to service, and passion for the environment. Show your appreciation and watch some of water industry left a significant impact. He was a driving Texas’ best water professionals compete in the Collections force to include the environmental event as part of Texas Event simulating real-life operations challenges. More Water to provide fellowship for colleagues and an information including log in information to come! opportunity to give back to the community in a fun and engaging manner. We can’t plant seeds together or jump WOMEN IN WATER FORUM into kayaks to clean up a waterway this year, but we AVAILABLE ON-DEMAND look forward to sharing ideas and opportunities for Each year for the annual Texas Water™ Conference, we environmental conservation efforts in a panel discussion host The Women In Water Forum. This event focuses on about stewardship and conservation featuring water the specific efforts, successful techniques, and utilities from across the state. achievements of a variety of women in the water community who are willing to share their experiences to OPENING GENERAL SESSION empower others to be successful in their careers. This MONDAY, MARCH 29, 11 AM TO 12 PM year participants will also discuss the impacts of the Join Texas AWWA Chair Melissa Bryant and WEAT pandemic on their work and life experiences. Join President Rick Hidalgo as we kick off Texas WaterTM Melissa Bryant, Chair of the Texas Section AWWA, 2021 - Virtual. Joining Melissa and Rick will be Melissa along with Sally Wright, of Dallas Water Utilities, Yvonne Elliot, President of AWWA, and Jackie Jarrell, Past Forrest of Houston Water, Shay Roalson with Austin President of WEF. Plus, we are honored to be joined by Water, Heather Cooke also with Austin Water, Theresa Representative Tracy King, Chair of the Texas House Pedrazas with TetraTech, Liz Fazio Hale with Gulf Coast Natural Resources Committee, as our Keynote Speaker. Authority, and Allison Blake Hage with Freese and We will conclude with the “passing of the gavel” from Nichols. You won’t want to miss the Women in Water Melissa Bryant to the new Texas AWWA Chair, Theresa Forum, available on-demand for your convenience. Pedrazas, and from Rick Hidalgo to the new WEAT 8| TEXAS WATERTM 2021 - VIRTUAL President, Jeff Caffey.
YOUNG PROFESSIONALS DEVELOPMENT you will need to preregister the week of March 29 at EVENT – PANEL DISCUSSION www.txwater.org; seating is limited; only available to MONDAY, MARCH 29, 4:30 PM those registered for the conference. Join us for a virtual professional development event specially geared towards students and young VIRTUAL TOURS professionals! A panel of seasoned professionals will AVAILABLE ON-DEMAND share their experiences and guidance for success in the Enjoy our virtual tours, available on-demand for you to water industry and answer questions from attendees. view at your convenience: YP & STUDENT RECEPTION/MENTORING South Austin Regional WWTP: Please join Austin Water for a virtual tour of its South Austin Regional PROGRAM NETWORKING EVENT Wastewater Treatment Plant. Built in 1984, South Austin TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 4:30 PM Regional (SAR) is one of three wastewater treatment Come out and join the YPs and seasoned professionals facilities in the City of Austin and has the capacity to for a virtual event recognizing our competition winners treat up to 75 MGDs. Other large wastewater facilities and discussing the Mentoring Program. Networking break include the Walnut Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant out sessions will follow the awards and announcements! and the Hornsby Bend Biosolids Management Plant. Austin Water has invested over 45 million dollars over CONFERENCE ENTERTAINMENT EVENT the last four years on improvements to update the air WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 5:10 PM TO 6:40 PM distribution system and convert aging sand filter One of the highlights of every Texas Water is the galleries into a state-of-the-art cloth disk filter complex. Conference Entertainment Event and we’re keeping that Staff will walk you through the plant virtually, giving you tradition alive…virtually. Please join us in supporting a behind the scenes look at the facility and operations. Austin musicians at this year’s Texas Water Conference This walkthrough will highlight new equipment, Night Out Virtual Happy Hour starting at 5:10 pm! technologies, recent upgrades, as well as some of Local non-profit Black Fret will bring together three the future challenges for the plant. After the virtual tour, artists to share some Texas bluegrass with us as we staff will be on hand to answer questions and facilitate celebrate another great conference! an exciting discussion about the operations and maintenance of the SAR Wastewater Treatment Plant. AWARDS CELEBRATION THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 12 PM TO 1 PM Combating Zebra Mussels: Zebra mussels were first Texas Water will honor TAWWA and WEAT friends discovered in the US in the Great Lakes in the late and colleagues who have demonstrated their 1980s. Since then, this invasive species has spread commitment to the water and wastewater profession. across the country and made its way into our Highland Seating is limited in this live Zoom event. You will need Lakes in 2017. Zebra mussels negatively impact to preregister the week of March 29 at www.txwater.org; ecosystems in many ways, and they are here to stay. only available to those registered for the conference. They filter out algae that native species need for food, attach to and incapacitate native mussels, and wreak PROFESSIONAL ETHICS WORKSHOP FOR havoc on underwater infrastructure. Water utilities have ENGINEERS spent millions of dollars to remove zebra mussels from THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 12 PM TO 1:15 PM clogged water intakes. In this virtual tour, learn how The Texas Water Engineer’s Ethics Seminar is an Austin Water has worked to combat this pest at our interactive and thought-provoking session led by Bob facilities. We will discuss the use of divers for Pence and Gina Smith from Freese and Nichols, Inc. inspections and cleanings, the multi-phase approach While earning one Professional Development Hour and to implementing the chemical feed systems, and some satisfying the annual ethics requirement, you will learn to of the challenges that were overcome along the way. recognize ethical situations faced by engineers, analyze You will get a first-hand look at the equipment at our the issues of ethical situations, and discuss how to facilities and gain insight into the ongoing efforts resolve ethical situations in a creative and professional needed to mitigate this destructive mollusk. manner. There is no additional fee for this training but WWW.TXWATER.ORG |9
*We encourage you to watch sessions at their scheduled date and time but all sessions will be available to view at your own convenience. TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS Monday, March 29, 2021 Pretreatment Legislative/Regulatory Small Systems Social Distancing 101: Keeping Industrial Pollutants Far and Few Updates from The 87th Session 1:00 - 1:30 pm Benchmarking For Small Between Through Technically of the Texas Legislature Wastewater Treatment Plants Based Local Limits Julie Nahrgang Chris Malinowski John Lozano Water Environment Association of Texas/ HDR Garver Texas Association of Clean Ty Riebe Water Agencies Garver Small MUD, Big Plan: Development TCEQ Updates on Water Quality/ and Execution for a more Robust 1:35 - 2:05 pm Drinking Water Issues PFAS: Industrial Source Control and Resilient Water System Louis C. Herrin III and Wastewater Pretreatment Michael Whitaker TCEQ Susan Spore Harris County MUD 132 Joel Klumpp AECOM Matthew Froehlich TCEQ BGE Industrial Water System Weekend Warrior: How Stay-at-Home Order Affected Water Demand in a Suburban Community Treatability Testing Significance 2:10 - 2:40 pm Samantha Greivell in Industrial Wastewater EPA Region 6 Updates on Drinking Garver Treatment Plant Design Water and Water Quality Issues Wade Parks Jeffrey Steinwinder TBD Garver Brown and Caldwell Francisco Carillo Ronald Ballard City of Mont Belvieu Brown and Caldwell Marcel Khuouw IDS Engineering Group Visit Exhibitors Laboratory Source Water Protection for AWWA/WEF Small Texas Communities 3:10 - 3:40 pm Getting Ready for Your Combined Updates Mason Miller ISO 17025 Audit Utilizing Tommy Holmes TCEQ an Auomated Quality AWWA Rose Sobel Management System, Qualtrax Steve Dye CDM Smith Michelle Robertson WEF Kimberly Chanslor GBRA CDM Smith One City’s Rounding Error is 3:45 - 4:15 pm Nutrients Are Telling: Reporting Traceability in Whole Another SUD’s Max Day: Modeling Requirements to Nutrient Limits Effluent Toxicity Testing
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS Monday, March 29, 2021 Water Resources Odor & Corrosion Control Young Professionals Impact of Climate Trends on Water Supply, Demand, and 1:00 - 1:30 pm Return Flows in North Texas Odor Complaint Challenges in Working Out the Bugs - Tips and Cody Graham, North Texas Municipal Water Co-vid Environment in Austin, TX Tricks for Starting Up a Facility District Soo Koon Soon Kyle Kubista Katharine Hayhoe, ATMOS Research Austin Water Kimley-Horn and Associates Billy George, North Texas Municipal Water District Lissa Gregg, Freese and Nichols Sulfur Modeling: A Texas Facility’s Houston 2100 – Do We Have Enough Assessment of Odor Control Water to Last for Years to Come? Approaches and Whole Plant Impacts Breaking the Red Tape: Tina Petersen 1:35 - 2:05 pm Dusty Brannum A Step-by-Step Through Harris Galveston Subsidence District Trinity River Authority of Texas the SRF Loan Process Sunil Kommineni Eric Redmond Holly McCuistion KIT Professionals Black & Veatch Garver Michael Turco Mike Young Kirby Young Harris Galveston Subsidence District Trinity River Authority Garver Justin Bartlett Lynne Moss KIT Professionals Black & Veatch TRWD Develops a Portfolio of Future Demand Projections and Spatial Allocation to Inform Water 2:10 - 2:40 pm Tools of the Trade: How to Use Show Some Restraint! Supply Planning Efforts Materials, Coatings, and Cathodic Introduction to Valves and Nicole Rutigliano Protection to Mitigate Corrosion Pipe Fittings in Water Industry Tarrant Regional Water District Stephen Foster Keval Satra Jessica Fritsche Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates HR Green Brown and Caldwell Jenny Bywater CDM Smith Visit Exhibitors Workforce Development Large-Scale Impacts of Small-Scale Projects: Integrating Austin’s 3:10 - 3:40 pm Cathodic Protection of a Innovative Water Management 1 Vision, 4 Pillars and 60 Chapters. Long Distance Multi Material Strategies into the State Water Plan Establishing a Unified Vision Water Pipeline Alicia Smiley, AECOM and Framework Christopher Sheldon Jaime Burke, AECOM Andrew Swirsky V&A Consulting Engineers Marisa Flores-Gonzalez, Austin Water Stantec Helen Gerlach, Austin Water What Lies Beneath: Dealing with Labor in the Time of COVID: Hydrogelogic Uncertainties Keeping a Strong Team of When Implementing Aquifer Storage Diverse Engineers in the 3:45 - 4:15 pm Sister Grove Odor Control - and Recovery Projects Midst of a Pandemic An Update on Phase II and Charles Schoening Katherine Hallaway Staying Ahead of the Odor! Arcadis BGE Bruce Singleton Michael Short Roman Grijalva CDM Smith New Braunfels Utilities BGE Neil Deeds Lizanne Douglas INTERA Incorporated BGE Q&A for all Monday Afternoon Sessions WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 11
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS Tuesday, March 30, 2021 Municipal Resource Drinking Water Quality Wastewater Collection Recovery & Design Biological Nutrient Removal in the First Magnetite Ballasted Activated What is the Magic Sauce in My Sludge Installation in Texas Water Source? Solving Disinfection Re-Plumbing the Sims Sewershed 8:30 - 9:00 am Anton Dapcic Residual Mysteries When Managing to Mitigate Flood Risk: WWTP Carollo Engineers Multiple Drinking Water Sources Consolidation, WWTP Expansion Jody Zabolio Xi Zhao, Freese and Nichols and Tunnels in Houston Upper Trinity Regional Water District John Pippins, City of Beaumont Brian Gettinger Joe Thompson Amalia “Molly” Villarreal, City of Beaumont Freese and Nichols Upper Trinity Regional Water District David Munn, Freese and Nichols Toshio Shimada Carollo Engineers CFD Simulations on the Let’s Play a Game: The Floor is Lava Making Ends Meet - Rebuilding Water Quality Performance of (or, in our case, Municipal Solid Waste) the Front and Back Ends of a WRRF 9:05 - 9:35 am Ground Storage Tanks Kendall NeSmith While Adding a Completely Rishi Saladi Kimley-Horn and Associates New Treatment Train AECOM Patrick O’Connor Robert Adams Shriram Manivannan SAWS Plummer AECOM Gaby Mena Nicholas Sherman Ryan Edison Kimley-Horn and Associates Cibolo Creek Municipal Authority AECOM Something Smells Fishy: From East to West: Learning Investigating Water Quality City of Hurst Replaces a Critical from Experiences of MBRs Issues in Blended Waters Sewer Interceptor Using Minimally from Texas to Singapore 9:40 - 10:10 am Corey Smith Invasive Pipe Bursting Technology Andrew Shaw KIT Professionals Kyle Wroblewski Black & Veatch Shashi Kumar Aegion Joshua Berryhill City of Missouri City Duane Hengst eHT Engineering Sunil Kommineni City of Hurst Dylan Christenson KIT Professionals Shawn Garcia Black & Veatch Todd Hoover Underground Solutions Laura Stratton City of Missouri City Black & Veatch Visit Exhibitors Design Considerations and Operational How Low Can You Go? Tools to Promote Fermentation for Bromide Occurrence in Texas and Alternative Inverted Siphon EBPR at a Greenfield WRRF 10:40 - 11:10 am Its Implications for Disinfection Construction Method Reduces Alexandra Doody Byproduct Formation Overall Construction Costs CDM Smith Marshall Plunk by Nearly $1M Samir Mathur Plummer Associates Ty Riebe CDM Smith Christopher Boyd Garver Jyh-Wei Sun Plummer Associates Paul Banschbach CDM Smith Garver Donna Long North Texas Municipal Water District Alternative Delivery, Design, Construction, and Operations Lessons Learned on Emergency Replacement 11:15 - 11:45 am Proposed Revisions to LCR: From Theory to Practice: of Wastewater 30/36” Dual Steel Why Optimizing Corrosion Hydrocyclone-Based Force Mains with 36” FRP Control Treatment is Critical Wasting for Settling and Michael Ancell for Water Utilities Nutrient Improvements Jacobs Engineering Group Amlan Ghosh Erin Tracy Gilbert Trejo Corona Environmental Consulting Brown and Caldwell El Paso Water Jason Bowen Oscar Renda Contracting Q&A for all Tuesday Morning Sessions 12 | TEXAS WATERTM 2021 - VIRTUAL
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS Tuesday, March 30, 2021 Water Distribution Diversity/Inclusion University Forum The Water Goes on the Inside - A Review of Real World Ground Storage Tank Post-Testing Concerns Addressing Old Wounds: 8:30 - 9:00 am Kim Keefer Utility Strategies for The Heterogenous Nucleation Pape-Dawson Engineers Advancing Equity of Gypsum Flat Surface: Chris Noe Heather Dalrymple the Role of Hydrophobicity Pape-Dawson Engineers Austin Water Xiaochuan Huang Tim Kleppe Denise McGlown Rice University Preload Austin Water Eric Neune Raba Kistner Environmental New Braunfels Utilities Deploys Utilis Satellite Service as a Standard Operating Procedure for 9:05 - 9:35 am Diversity & Inclusion, Nitrification of High Strength Ongoing Leak Detection Does it Matter? Waste Streams at Low pH in a Jessica Green Ana Pena-Tijerina Membrane Aerated Bioreactor New Braunfels Utilities Aisha Niang Maryam Salehi Jason Theurer Houston Water Texas Tech University New Braunfels Utilities Paul Gagliardo Gagliaqua Out of Sight, But Not 9:40 - 10:10 am Out of Mind: Using Satellites Best Practices to Increase Accelerating Water Hammer to Find Leaks and Improve Diversity and Inclusion in Simulations Using Vectorization the Dependability of the Water Your Organization Gerardo Riano-Briceno Distribution System in Irving Regina Smith The University of Texas at Austin Donna Starling Freese and Nichols City of Irving Visit Exhibitors Changing Regulations and New Developments Along a Pipeline Alignment Over an Extended 10:40 - 11:10 am Design Timeframe Break the Illusion and Go Enhancing Solar Membrane Showri Nandagiri for Inclusion: Diversity and Distillation Performance Using North Harris County Regional Water Authority Inclusion in the Water Industry Core-shell Nanofiber Paul Vining Andre Garces Ruikun Xin AECOM Plummer Rice University Alan Moon Jones|Carter David Warner Jones|Carter Northeast Transmission Line 108” x 84” Interconnect: Innovative Design Strategies to Overcome Space Constraints 11:15 - 11:45 am Christine Kirby Building a Better A Topological Technique for Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam Workforce Through Optimizing Parallel Speedup Eric Hernandez Diversity and Inclusion of Urban Water Modeling Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam Ashok Perera Edward Tiernan Warren Green Atkins North America The University of Texas at Austin Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam Kevin Tran City of Houston Q&A for all Tuesday Morning Sessions WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 13
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS Tuesday, March 30, 2021 Municipal Resource Drinking Water Quality Wastewater Collection Recovery & Design Multifaceted Nitrification City of Frisco Utilizes Horizontal Management: Where are We After Conroe Central Wastewater Directional Drilling with 20-inch Two Years of Implementation? Treatment Plant – Designing Fusible PVC® Pipe to Mitigate 1:00 - 1:30 pm Yue Sun for the Future Construction Impact Ardurra Paul Wood Kyle Sanderson Nicholas Cook Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam Kimley-Horn City of Deer Park Norman McGuire Kyle Wroblewski Shannon Jungman City of Conroe - Public Works Aegion Ardurra Group Greg Hall Shawn Garcia Matt Noland City of Conroe - Public Works Underground Solutions City of Deer Park Gravity or Pressurized Sewer? Formation(!) and Removal of 1:35 - 2:05 pm Get a Lift Station That How Do You Get Salt Out of Water? Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Can Do Both! Approaches for Mitigation of Substances (PFAS) in Advanced Eric Johnson TDS in Treated Wastewater Water Treatment Plummer Zaid Chowdhury Eva Steinle-Darling Jimmy Sibert Garver Carollo Engineers City of Irving Going Retro: Lessons in Modernizing a 1970s Wastewater Challenge Accepted: A Case Treatment Facility 2:10 - 2:40 pm Study of Unique Approaches for Keith OConnor Accident Awareness and Membrane WTP Expansion KIT Professionals Loss Prevention Erica Agha Gholizadeh Greg Lushbaugh Malvin “Rusty” Nezat Tetra Tech San Jacinto River Authority Nezat Training and Consulting Jorge Barrera Chris Meeks City of Eagle Pass Water Works System San Jacinto River Authority Corey Smith KIT Professionals Visit Exhibitors A Robust Modeling Tool for Smart Water Operations and Planning Development of a Genetic Jose Porro 3:10 - 3:40 pm Algorithm Tool for RDII KIT Professionals Repurposing Infrastructure Parameterization Robert Upton for Phosphorus Removal Michelle Lacks City of Pearland Leon Downing Garver Rajendra Shrestha Black & Veatch Samantha Greivell City of Pearland Garver Rasika Perera City of Pearland Flexible Process Configuration Mitigates Wastewater 3:45 - 4:15 pm Quality Uncertainty The Long and Winding Road to TTHM Toshio Shimada Compliance - High TOC Groundwater Carollo Engineers Steve Walden Troy Laman Steven Walden Consulting Carollo Engineers Daemeon Stovall City of The Colony Q&A for all Tuesday Afternoon Sessions 14 | TEXAS WATERTM 2021 - VIRTUAL
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS Tuesday, March 30, 2021 Water Distribution Water Conservation Young Professionals Challenges of Designing a Large Diameter Water Line in Beyond Total GPCD: Building on this Unique Energy Saving Strategy 1:00 - 1:30 pm Urban Area of Houston Simple Measure to Provide by Using Compound Control Meng Liu Additional Utility-Level Water Loop of Both DO and Ammonia Aurora Technical Services Use Efficiency Insights Based Aeration Probes Rafael Ortega Miguel Morales Suparna Mukhopadhyay Aurora Technical Services Austin Water CDM Smith Showri Nandagiri North Harris County Regional Water Authority Little Fish in a 320-mgd Pond: Quantifying Historical Being a Resident Engineer on Conservation Achievements the Northeast Water Purification 1:35 - 2:05 pm How Low Can You Go? A Review Across TRWD’s Service Area Plant Expansion Project of the Ability of Long Transmission Pipe Dustan Compton Rajeev Datta Kamalampet Conveyance Systems to Cool Water Tarrant Regional Water District CDM Smith Kim Keefer Jessica Fritsche Rajinder Singh Pape-Dawson Engineers Brown and Caldwell City of Houston Jenny Bywater Jasmin Zambrano CDM Smith City of Houston Building Water System Resiliency – McKinney’s 2:10 - 2:40 pm Redbud Pump Station Rainwater Harvesting in Texas: Inspiring a Lifelong Journey Sam Meisner Then, Now, and the Future of Water Education Freese and Nichols Shae Luther Paula Monaco Craig Sherwood Texas Water Development Board Plummer Associates City of McKinney Paul Tucker City of McKinney Visit Exhibitors Houston’s Leap Year Leak – No Good Deed Goes Unpunished: A Catastrophic Blow-out of a The Unintended Consequences of Mentoring is a Two-Way Street: 3:10 - 3:40 pm 96-inch WL and how Houston Water Conservation Value Gained on Both Sides of the Responded to a Boil Water Notice Ellen McDonald Mentor-Mentee Relationship and Fast-Tracked the Repair Plummer David Munn Drew Molly, City of Houston Dexter May Freese and Nichols Venus Price, City of Houston Plummer Valetta Saldanha Jim Wilson, City of Houston Gilbert Trejo AECOM Phillip Goodwin, City of Houston El Paso Water Don’t Stress, Pre-stress! Basics of the Design and Feast or Famine: Factors that 3:45 - 4:15 pm Construction of Prestressed You Can Model Too: Contribute to Rebate Application Concrete Ground Navigating Process Model Submittals for Outdoor Water Storage Tanks Development as a YP Incentive Programs Keval Satra Rachel Adkisson Christopher Charles HR Green Freese and Nichols Austin Water Satej Kulkarni CDM Smith Q&A for all Tuesday Afternoon Sessions WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 15
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS Wednesday, March 31, 2021 Water Treatment Asset Management Construction Issues & Operations How can a Dynamic Water Model Help with Rapidly Screening Alternatives and A River Runs Through It – Building a Identifying a Cost-Effective Solution Vista Ridge Regional PS in the Flood Plain 8:30 - 9:00 am Sunil Kommineni Supply Project: Creating and Cameron Lawrence KIT Professionals Configuring an Asset Register Freese and Nichols Jose Porro and Computerized Management Jason Ward KIT Professionals Maintenance System Freese and Nichols Chris Munson Alan Foster Travis Markham Ardurra Group KCI Technologies North Texas Municipal Water District Michael Lawrence Stantec Lessons Learned: Integrating The Hard Truth about Softening “Dirty Data” into Cartegraph 9:05 - 9:35 am Super Operator: How the When a Flood Washed Away Abby Owens Construction Liaison Role All of the Hardness – Austin’s City of Plano Keeps Things Flowing Flood Response Stephen Johnson Gary Hammond Greg Pope Freese and Nichols Austin Water Carollo Engineers Mazen Kawasmi Freese and Nichols Commissioning Through Integrated Reservoir Asset COVID – Managing the Startup Revisiting Highland Lake Flooding Management: Practical of a Fast Track 48.6 MGD 9:40 - 10:10 am Fall 2018, Why Travis Co. WCID 17 PWS Application and Lessons Learned Water Treatment Plant Survived Unscathed? Rachel Crawley Amidst the Pandemic Patrick Lackey Tarrant Regional Water District Matt Richart Trihydro Corporation Esteban Azagra Black & Veatch Jason Homan Arcadis Alissa Lockett Travis County WCID No. 17 Dorota Koterba San Antonio Water System Tarrant Regional Water District Mike Watson PLW Waterworks Visit Exhibitors Asset Management: Proven Leveraging the ICS Framework Planning and Innovation Pays Formula by the City of Houston to Clarify the Murky Waters 10:40 - 11:10 am Off – How an additional 10 MGD to Prioritize Maintenance of Outage Planning was gained from our Membrane Mitchell Ramon Rebecca Vento Water Treatment Plant City of Houston Austin Water Adam McKnight Susana Blauser Joe Smith Upper Trinity Regional Water District BGE Austin Water Kurt Staller Amit Sengupta Chuck Chapman Upper Trinity Regional Water District BGE Austin Water Tanks a Lot: Expediting Additional Water Supply and Storage in One of Texas Fastest Growing Counties Through CMAR 11:15 - 11:45 am Multi-Factor Resiliency Planning Cost Effective Tools to Cale Underberg for Surface WTPs Improve the Data Collected HDR Ian Toohey During a Treatment Plant Sherif Mabrouk Garver Condition Assessment HDR Brandon Pritchett Chris Malinowski Heath Woods City of Pflugerville HDR CLWSC Larry Bittle CLWSC Q&A for all Wednesday Morning Sessions 16 | TEXAS WATERTM 2021 - VIRTUAL
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS Wednesday, March 31, 2021 Wastewater Operations & Utility Management Public Information Maintenance 8:30 - 9:00 am Intelligent Manhole Monitoring Communicating Your CIP to Emergency Response: Shannon Dunne Key Stakeholders, including Continuing Wastewater Service City of Houston the Press and the Public John Croom Vince Turner Mike McGill AUC Group City of Houston WaterPIO From Cloudy Gas to Bright Rays: 9:05 - 9:35 am Gender Diversity in Working with Stakeholder Groups: A Chlorine Conversion Story Public Works A Survival Guide Sharon Miller Donna Renner Josh Sendejar North Texas Municipal Water District CP&Y Texas Water Development Board Jeremy Thompson North Texas Municipal Water District Should I Keep My Plant, Expand It, Buy More Water, or Both? – 9:40 - 10:10 am Charting a Course for the Future H2OMG Podcast: Reaching Safety #1: Reevaluating Site Ferdous Mahmood New & Diverse Audiences in Safety for Handling Critical HDR Water Communications Chemicals and Bulk Deliveries Robert Hoffman John-Michael Perkins Michael Leeper HDR Fort Worth Water PVS Minibulk Kelly Rouse City of Lewisville Visit Exhibitors Value of Water 10:40 - 11:10 am Digital Water as a Technology Misinformation vs. Education: Bearing Failure: GBRA’s Platform: From Design to Utility Which Holds Water? Bearing Failure Analysis Program Management to Optimization Rachael Rodgers Michael Urrutia Kevin Stively Kimley-Horn and Associates Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority Brown and Caldwell Alicia Smiley AECOM Houston’s Innovative Interactive Dynamic Platform for Collection System Capacity Evaluation Using 11:15 - 11:45 am Appraisal District Database and Engaging Stakeholders Nutrient Removal for Managing Customers Water Consumption Data Through Strategic Events Your Operations Budget Pratistha Pradhan Lisa Rosendorf Fred Ramirez City of Houston El Paso Water Jacobs Fazle Rabbi City of Houston Kabindra Shrestha Gunda Corporation Q&A for all Wednesday Morning Sessions WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 17
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS Wednesday, March 31, 2021 Water Treatment & Operations Asset Management Construction Issues From Lessons Learned to Innovations: A Case Study on the Flocculators Rehabilitation Project at the Largest More Than a Band-Aid: Developing 1:00 - 1:30 pm Water Treatment Plant in Houston Area Large Utility Applies Advanced a Long Term Fix to a 104-Inch Vinoth Manoharan Analytical Techniques to Understanding Pipeline Failure AECOM and Managing Water Main Breaks Justin Reeves Yong Wang Darryl Corbin Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam City of Houston Carollo Engineers Kelly Davis Hanh Pham Trinity River Authority of Texas City of Houston Valetta Saldanha AECOM Switching from Gas Chlorine to On-Site Hypochlorite Generation – City of Technology Benefits Asset Management Deer Park’s Story of Decision-Making Melissa Mack 1:35 - 2:05 pm Nicholas Cook Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam Keeping the Construction Party City of Deer Park Robert Henry Going During Pandemic Lockdowns Yue Sun Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam Steven Metzler Ardurra Kyle Leblanc Trinity River Authority of Texas Xinyi Yi Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam Ardurra Fabiola de Carvalho Matt Noland City of Sugar Land City of Deer Park 21st Century Designing: Learn How 3D Forensic Analysis of a 72-Inch Design Tools Result in Conflict Resolution Water Transmission Pipeline Failure and Ease of Construction Hail Mary By “Pass” Pumping – 2:10 - 2:40 pm Ben Stephens Corey Smith Considerations During Halff Associates KIT Professionals Project Planning Cody Graham Wayne Murphy Marco Ramirez North Texas Municipal Water District CH2M HILL Garver Jayson Melcher Sunil Kommineni Jesus Esparza-Lozano North Texas Municipal Water District KIT Professionals Garver Ashan McNealy Randy Rogers Pure Technologies U.S. CDM Smith Visit Exhibitors Finding a Way: Conducting Facilities Assessments in a Virtual Environment Robert Hoffman Construction Challenges with a 3:10 - 3:40 pm Texas Optimization Program HDR Large Diameter Tunnel (Top Ops) Reporting: Ben Kuhnel Christopher Haeckler GBRA-San Marcos WTP Top Ops Arcadis U.S. HDR Kasey Belote Chaise Holmgren Miguel Vazquez Guadalupe Blanco River Authority Dallas Water Utilities North Texas Municipal Water District Sally Wright Dallas Water Utilities Houston’s Approach to Preparing Swamp Pipeline – Design and and Equipping Staff to Operate and Construction of a 66-inch Pipeline in 3:45 - 4:15 pm Maintain a New $1.765B, 320 MGD WTP Awful Ground Conditions Power BI for Water Operations. Paul Walker Eric Engelskirchen Not Just for the Business Office. Carollo Engineers Freese and Nichols Johnny Partain Andrew Molly Chad Sharbono Carollo City of Houston Garney Construction Eric Garza Amanda Stubblefield City of Houston Freese and Nichols Q&A for all Wednesday Afternoon Sessions 18 | TEXAS WATERTM 2021 - VIRTUAL
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS Wednesday, March 31, 2021 Wastewater Operations & Utility Management Resiliency, Safety & Cybersecurity Maintenance Houston’s Groundwater Operations and Maintenance Team Built for the Future: Signs the Heart of Your Plant Business Practices Advance Utility is Needing Regular Check-ups Tarrant Regional Water District: Wade Parks 1:00 - 1:30 pm Maintenance and Capital Planning A Case Study on Regional Collaboration Mitchell Ramon Garver and Emergency Response City of Houston John Warnement Poonam Dagli Sandeep Aggarwal City of Webster Arcadis City of Houston Sean Scuras Norman Ashton Howard Smith Garver Tarrant Regional Water District City of Houston Jared Sienkiewich Josue Aceitunolopez Garver City of Houston SARS-CoV-2 in Houston Wastewater: Tracking, Interpretation and Action Managing the Cash Register: A Baffling and Head(works) Rae Mills 1:35 - 2:05 pm Capturing Lost Revenue Scratching Puzzle: Using City of Houston from Large Meters Computational Fluid Dynamics Loren Hopkins Ashley Waits Modeling for Configuring City of Houston City of Irving Grit Removal Lauren Stadler Frank Kaplan Max Wallack Rice University Olea Edge Analytics Arcadis U.S. Paul Zappi City of Houston 2:10 - 2:40 pm Got Data? Visualization Cyber Threat Risk Management Training Plant Operators Techniques to Improve in a Hackers World with Digital Twins Workforce Efficiency James Forbes Garrett Owens Leticia Gomar Pipeline Analysis Jacobs Engineering Group Carollo Engineers Visit Exhibitors Confronting the Challenges of Clear Water: An Inflow and How Austin Water Achieved Results City of Houston Implements Infiltration Study for Universal City 3:10 - 3:40 pm and Teamwork Through Largest U.S. Microgrid Project Cale Underberg Effective Utility Management for Water Purification Plant HDR Anna Bryan-Borja Greg Bowen Amy Shoebotham Austin Water Utility Enchanted Rock HDR Matthew Saragosa Ravi Kaleyatodi Progga Chirontoni Austin Water Utility City of Houston HDR Randy Luensmann City of Universal City Does Robust Biological Phosphorus Elevated Tank Visual Inspections: Removal have to be Complex? 3:45 - 4:15 pm A Community Seeing Red – Alternatives to Climbing Elevated Arifur Rahman Fixing Red Water Without Tanks for Visual Inspections Freese and Nichols Going in the Red Financially and Investigations Nick Landes Matthew Garrett Gary Alford Freese and Nichols NewGen Strategies & Solutions Benbrook Water Authority Rachel Adkisson Freese and Nichols Q&A for all Wednesday Afternoon Sessions WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 19
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS Thursday, April 1, 2021 Biosolids Applied Research Watershed Management/Stormwater Free-Water Surface Wetland Use of Copper to Prevent Significantly Improves the Quality Can Regionalization Achieve 8:30 - 9:00 am Zebra Mussel Attachent in a of Hypereutrophic Lake Water Economies of Scale? Key 75 MGD Raw Water Pipeline Tim Noack Considerations in Consolidating Caroline Russell Plummer Associates Solids Processing Carollo Engineers Ryan Pierce Natalie Sierra Mark Ernst Plummer Associates Brown and Caldwell Tarrant Regional Water District Gregg Eckhardt San Antonio Water System The OIG Report as a Catalyst: Implementing the 3 Key Goals 9:05 - 9:35 am Community-Wide Sewage Responses and New Research of the Collaborative 8-County Surveillance Targeting SARS-CoV-2 Define a Roadmap for Gulf-Houston Regional Prevalence in San Antonio, Texas Biosolids Management Conservation Plan Haya Al-Duroobi Lynne Moss Deborah January-Bevers UTSA Black & Veatch Houston Wilderness A Tale of Two Pump Stations: Electron Beam Technology How a Flood-Prone City Can 9:40 - 10:10 am Cost Impact of PFAS on for PFAS Treatment Overcome a Depressed Highway Biosolids Programs Suresh Pillai Lizanne Douglas Eric Spargimino Texas A&M University BGE CDM Smith David Staack Makenzie Davis Samir Mathur Texas A&M University BGE CDM Smith Purshotam Juriasingani Christen Specht Tetra Tech TxDOT Visit Exhibitors Biosolids Dewatering System Selection: How City of Port Arthur Did It and So Can You! Reduction of Concentration Westcliff Drainage Improvements 10:40 - 11:10 am Bansi Khajuria Polarization in Desalination & Phase 2B: A Tunneling Success Freese and Nichols Water Treatment Membrane Story for the City of Fort Worth Somnath Chilukuri Processes: An Effort Towards Matt Koziol Freese and Nichols Higher Energy Savings Schnabel Engineering Donald Stanton Progga Chirontoni Karen Stafford-Brown City of Port Arthur HDR Engineering Wade Trim Murali Erat Freese and Nichols Bioenergy Modeling – 11:15 - 11:45 am Enhancing Freshwater Recovery New Orleans Green Infrastructure – Determining the Highest Value in Brackish Groundwater From Concept to Constructability for Hornsby Bend’s Biogas Desalination by Diatom-Based Jessica Watts Jeffrey Meadows Photobioloigcal Treatment CDM Smith CDM Smith Keisuke Ikehata Jessica Addison John Mitchell Texas State University CDM Smith Austin Water Q&A for all Thursday Morning Sessions 20 | TEXAS WATERTM 2021 - VIRTUAL
TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS Thursday, April 1, 2021 Water Reuse Infrastructure Financing Electrical and SCADA/I&C Updating Miscellaneous Utility Fees – What Are The Benefits? What Happens in Texas Doesn’t How Tough Can It Really Be? Stay in Texas: How a Small-Town Ensuring Equipment Protection 8:30 - 9:00 am Varenya Mehta Texas DPR Study Inspired an and Improving System Reliability KIT Professionals International Award-Winning Through Relay Setting Betsy Varghese Non-RO Direct Potable Reuse Reviews and Maintenance City of Houston Demonstration (in Florida) Douglas Durand Paula Komazin Eva Steinle-Darling HV Engineering KIT Professionals Carollo Engineers Jennifer Ivey Carollo Engineers Reuse in North Texas - DPR to IPR Hunter Adams Flying Blind No More: GBRA’s 9:05 - 9:35 am City of Wichita Falls Optimization of a Complicated How Wall Street Views Your Mark Southard Raw Water Pumping System Utility’s Environmental Risks City of Wichita Falls Mike Bernard Ted Chapman Harold Burris Specific Energy S&P Global Ratings City of Wichita Falls Kasey Belote Daniel Nix Guadalupe Blanco River Authority City of Wichita Falls More than a Backyard Pool – Weathering the Automation Storm Lubbock’s Pursuit of a Successfully Navigating Juliana Wafer 9:40 - 10:10 am Sustainable New Water Supply SRF Funding with a CMAR Signature Automation Aubrey A. Spear Project-Tips and Tricks on Linda Bevis City of Lubbock How to Survive in a San Antonio Water System David Dunn Federal Funding World Chad Morris HDR Stacy Barna Black & Veatch Paula Jo Lemonds CDM Smith Matthew Friend HDR Signature Automation Visit Exhibitors 10:40 - 11:10 am Shower Water Collection, A ‘Capital’ Idea: How to Cleaning, and Reuse in a Novel Fund Needed Utility Improvements Cost Effective Replacement of a Dual Water Toilet Flushing Kimberly Bostik 23 Year Old SCADA System System in a Single Family Home NewGen Strategies and Solutions Jim Wyatt Mehaa Amirthalingam Chris Ekrut Guadalupe Blanco River Authority GSA Travis High School NewGen Strategies and Solutions Roadmap to Successful Saving Lake Leon Dam Water 11:15 - 11:45 am Virtual Re-use-ality: Giving Remote Monitoring/Control of Supply Reservoir with Plant Operators a Glimpse Water and Wastewater (W/WW) Multiple Grant Funding into El Paso’s Direct Facilities Using the Appropriate Cristopher Parker Potable Reuse Future Industrial Wireless Communication HDR Engineering Hilma Perez Technology Brandon Hilbrich Carollo Engineers Kalyani Ganesan HDR Engineering Carollo Engineers Q&A for all Thursday Morning Sessions WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 21
March 29-April 1 Texas Water 2021 - Virtual Registration Online Payment Must Accompany this Form or Registration Cannot be Processed REGISTER ONLINE: www.txwater.org. PLEASE PRINT OR TYPE FIRST NAME______________________________________LAST NAME________________________________________ COMPANY________________________________________TITLE_____________________________________________ ADDRESS__________________________________________________________________________________________ CITY/STATE/ZIP____________________________________________________________________________________ PHONE__________________________________________MEMBER #___________________________ ❑ AWWA ❑ WEF EMAIL (REQUIRED FOR PROCESSING*)_____________________________________________________________________ *Must use unique email for each attendee or they will not receive their individual conference log in information later on ❑ This is my first time attending the Texas Water Conference By registering, you agree to receive email communications from our exhibitors. Our exhibitors have agreed to comply with our privacy rules to protect your information. You may opt out of providing your email to exhibitors by checking the box: ❑ Received before 3/29/21 Received on/after 3/29/21 ❑ Full Registration - MEMBER ..................................... $200 ................................... $250 ................................ ______ ❑ Full Registration - NON MEMBER ............................ $425 ................................... $475 ................................ ______ NON MEMBERS ONLY. Full registration at the non-member rate includes a free one-year membership to either AWWA or WEF. With full, non-member registration, please indicate which organization you wish to join (new members only - no renewals): ❑ AWWA ❑ WEF ❑ Donation “Water for People” - Optional ............................................................................................................ ______ ❑ I registered prior to Texas Water going virtual in 2020 and opted to receive a discount off 2021 registration TOTAL PAYMENT (add right column) ..................................................................................................... ______ THE EASIEST WAY TO REGISTER IS ONLINE: www.txwater.org PAYMENT METHOD: ❑ Check Payable to Texas Water Bill My: ❑ AMEX ❑ VISA ❑ MasterCard ❑ Discover Card #_________________________________________________________Expiration____________Security Code________ Cardholder Name_______________________________________________________________________________________ Signature_____________________________________________________________________________________________ Credit Card Billing Address________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________________ For more information, contact: Texas Water: 512-251-8101 | texwater@texas.net Register online at www.txwater.org or mail form with payment to: Texas Water 2021 Registration c/o GCP Association Services PO Box 676 Pflugerville, TX 78691 or fax to 512-251-8152 No refunds will be granted but substitutions will be allowed. All substitutions must be requested in writing. Email or fax substitutions to Texas Water at texwater@texas.net or (fax) 512-251-8152. cp
Texas WaterTM 2021 - Virtual Scholarship Golf Tournament February 1, 2021 – April 15, 2021 Help raise funds for scholarships to assist students with families in the water and wastewater industry. All profits from the Virtual Texas Water Golf Tournament go toward the scholarship programs. This year our mission is to keep all players safe by following safety precautions but still enjoy a round of golf and continue our mission to assist students with scholarships. We are changing our format this year to accommodate every golfer playing as a single, a group of two, three or foursome. Your golf event will be held at a golf course in your community. Your group will complete the registration form below and independently pick a course and submit your scorecard and picture of yourself or group to Texas Water before the March 15 deadline to be displayed on the Texas Water virtual site during the conference. Otherwise, the deadline for submitting the picture is April 15. Since we cannot be together to enjoy the game of golf, we are still offering opportunities to assist with fundraising by offering four levels of Scholarship Sponsorships as listed below. In addition, there are mulligans for purchase and the forward tee to be used at the team’s discretion on any Par 5. Your generosity is sincerely appreciated by all and let’s enjoy our golfing event. CHOOSE THE NUMBER OF PLAYERS CALCULATE FEES REGISTRATION FEE PER PLAYER Diamond Sponsorship..... $5,000 ......... $___________ $75 each due by April 15, 2021 Platinum Sponsorship..... $2,500 .......... $___________ Deadline to submit score cards and single or group photos: Gold Sponsorship............ $1,500 .......... $___________ April 15, 2021. Submit photos using #TexasWater2021Golf Silver Sponsorship.......... $1,000 ......... $___________ SCHOLARSHIP SPONSORSHIPS Diamond Sponsorship Individual Registration: $75 x ____..... $___________ Platinum Sponsorship Team Registration (4):...$300.............. $___________ Gold Sponsorship Silver Sponsorship Tournament Extra(s) ___Mulligans ($5/each; max 4/player)... $___________ 100% of the sponsorships will go to our students. Your company ___Forward Tee ($20/team)............... $___________ logo will be displayed throughout the conference virtually. INDIVIDUAL OR TEAM CAPTAIN Name (Team Name):__________________________________ TOTAL (ADD COLUMN AT RIGHT) $___________ Firm Name:_________________________________________ Address:____________________________________________ Tournament Chairs: City:_______________________________________________ Yvonne Gil-Vallejo, 713-213-2328, ygilvallejo@cityofkyle.com State:_______________________Zip:____________________ Van VanWinkle, 409-527-2626, van.vanwinkle@austintexas.gov Daytime Phone:______________________________________ Email:______________________________________________ REGISTER ONLINE: www.txwater.org TEAM PLAYER NAMES Or mail form with payment to: #2:_________________________________________________ TW21 Golf P.O. Box 676 #3:_________________________________________________ Pflugerville, TX 78691 #4:_________________________________________________ Or fax to 512-251-8152 PAYMENT METHOD: Check Payable to “Texas Water” CHARGE MY: AMEX VISA MasterCard Discover Card #: ___________________________________________________________Expiration: _____________________________________ Cardholder Name: __________________________________________________Security Code: _________________________________ Credit Card Billing Address: ________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Signature: ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ cp
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