Texas Water '23 Preview

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Conference Preview April 11–14, 2023 • George R. Brown Convention Center • Houston, Texas What’s Inside: Competitions........................21 Facility Tours...................24-25 Gloyna Breakfast.................16 Golf Registration Form........35 Highlights...........................6-18 Registration Form.................37 Technical Sessions ...........26-33 Tentative Schedule..................5 T exas Water TM 2023 TEXAS WATER™ 2023 TAWWA WEAT

Head to Houston for Texas WaterTM 2023

We’re excited to welcome you back to Houston for Texas WaterTM 2023, the Largest Regional Water Conference in the U.S.©!

Volunteers for Texas WaterTM 2023 have been putting in long hours so that your experience in Houston is educational and fun! The technical sessions, carefully crafted by a strong technical program committee, will provide the information to make your work easier.

In the George R. Brown Convention Center Exhibit Hall we invite you to learn about new tools and technology that solve problems — some you know you have and some you may not have discovered yet. Don’t forget to stop by and see the competitions, or sign up if you dare!

After learning and networking, it’s time to have fun at Thursday’s Conference Night-Out at Pitch 25. We look forward to seeing you in Houston for Texas WaterTM 2023!

Full registration is your best value for Texas WaterTM 2023. With full registration, you receive:

• access to all technical sessions

• full access to the Exhibit Hall

• tickets to the Awards Lunch, the Women of Water Breakfast, the Box Lunch and the Thursday Night Out event

Non-member full registration includes a free* one-year membership in either AWWA/TAWWA or WEF/WEAT.

*New members only, not for membership renewals

Tickets for the Women of Water Breakfast, Facility Tours, Lunches, Conference Night Out event and the Gloyna Breakfast are also available for purchase.

REGISTER ONLINE AT
www.txwater.org The easiest way to register is online at www.txwater.org You may also register by mail to Texas Water c/o GCP Association Services PO Box 676 Pflugerville, TX 78691 or by fax to 512-251-8152 Deadline for discounted early registration is March 20, 2023
Venus Price Texas Water Co-Chair Texas Section American Water Works Association Elizabeth Fazio Hale Texas Water Co-Chair Water Environment Association of Texas
WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 3
We see water differently . ® Beyond the science, beyond the engineering, we see communities. We see families. We see clean drinking water where none exists, and solutions to issues that haven’t arisen yet. Our singular focus on water inspires us to look beyond the surface of what’s doable, into the depth of what’s possible. The results are industry-changing innovations and solutions that impact our communities and our ecosystems. It all comes at a critical time in our industry because while many see uncertainty, we see opportunity. It’s all in how you look at it. 1.800.523.5826 | carollo.com

TENTATIVE CONFERENCE SCHEDULE

All events are at the George R. Brown Convention Center, 91001 Avenida De Las Americas, Houston, unless otherwise noted. Schedule is subject to change.

TUESDAY, APRIL 11

7:00 am Golf Tournament • Memorial Golf Course

7:30 am–2:30 pm

8:30 am–11:30 am

1:00 pm–4:00 pm

6:30 am

8:00 am–8:15 am

Move-In • Exhibit Hall

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12

WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 5
Exhibitor
Curtis Smalley Environmental Event • Buffalo Bayou
TAWWA
WEAT
Registration
WEAT
Meet
Annual Board Meeting 1:00 pm–4:00 pm
Annual Board Meeting 4:00 pm–6:30 pm
4:30 pm–5:00 pm
Ops Challenge Pre-Meeting 4:30 pm–6:30 pm
& Greet • Exhibit Hall
Dodson’s Drive Fun Run
WEAT
Registration 8:00
Speaker Ready/Moderator Check
Room 8:15
WEAT Ops Challenge Process Control Event
WEAT Ops
Electrical Events
Exhibit Hall
TAWWA
Meeting
Opening
WEAT Student
Competition
pm TAWWA Hydrant Hysteria
Exhibit Hall 10:00 am–10:30 am TAWWA Business Meeting 10:00 am–11:00 am Beverage Break • Exhibit Hall 10:00 am–5:00 pm Exhibits/Innovation Lounge • Exhibit Hall 10:00 am–5:00 pm Water For People Silent Auction • Exhibit Hall 11:30 am–1:00 pm Awards Lunch TICKET REQUIRED 1:00 pm–1:15 pm WEAT Business Meeting 1:00 pm–1:30 pm Meter Challenge Pre-Competition Meeting • Exhibit Hall 1:00 pm–4:30 pm Meter Challenge (Jr. Meter Challenge 1 pm) • Exhibit Hall 1:20 pm–3:00 pm Technical Sessions/Posters 1:20 pm–5:10 pm University Forum 1:20 pm–5:10 pm Young Professionals Technical Session 3:00 pm–3:30 pm Networking Break • Exhibit Hall 3:00 pm–3:30 pm Door Prize Drawings • Exhibit Hall 3:00 pm–5:00 pm Texas Shoot-Out • Exhibit Hall 3:30 pm–5:10 pm Technical Sessions/Posters 5:00 pm Exhibit Hall Closes For Day 5:15 pm–6:15 pm Young Professionals & Student Reception/ Mentoring Program Networking Event THURSDAY, APRIL 13 7:15 am–9:00 am Women of Water Breakfast TICKET REQUIRED 7:30 am–5:00 pm Registration 8:00 am–2:45 pm WEAT Ops Challenge Safety, Collection System, Maintenance and Exhibition Events • Exhibit Hall 8:00 am–5:00 pm Speaker Ready/Moderator Check in Room 8:30 am–9:30 am Exhibit Hall Break • Exhibit Hall 8:30 am–1:15 pm Water For People Silent Auction • Exhibit Hall 8:30 am–4:00 pm Exhibits/Innovation Lounge • Exhibit Hall 9:00 am–9:30 am TAWWA Top Ops Pre-Competition Meeting • Exhibit Hall 9:00 am–9:30 am TAWWA Pipe Tapping Pre-Competition Meeting • Exhibit Hall 9:00 am–11:50 am Technical Sessions/Posters 9:00 am–11:50 am Value of Water Program 9:30 am–1:30 pm TAWWA Top Ops Competition • Exhibit Hall 9:30 am–4:00 pm TAWWA Hydrant Hysteria • Exhibit Hall 9:30 am–4:00 pm TAWWA Pipe Tapping Competition • Exhibit Hall Noon–1:00 pm Box Lunch with Exhibitors • Exhibit Hall TICKET REQUIRED Noon–1:00 pm Awards Celebration Lunch • Exhibit Hall TICKET REQUIRED FOR BOX LUNCH 1:10 pm–2:50 pm Technical Sessions/Posters 1:30 pm–3:00 pm Professional Ethics Workshop for Engineers 1:30 pm–3:00 pm TAWWA Best-Tasting Drinking Water Event • Exhibit Hall, Top Ops Area 2:45 pm–3:45 pm WEAT Ops Challenge Awards Ceremony • Exhibit Hall 2:50 pm–3:20 pm Networking Break • Exhibit Hall 2:50 pm–3:20 pm Door Prize Drawings • Exhibit Hall 3:20 pm–5:00 pm Technical Sessions/Posters 4:00 pm Exhibit Hall Closes/Exhibit Breakdown 6:15 pm Gavel Passing • Pitch 25 6:30 pm–8:30 pm Conference Night-Out • Pitch 25 TICKET REQUIRED FRIDAY, APRIL 14 7:00 am–8:30 am Gloyna Breakfast TICKET REQUIRED 7:00 am–Noon Registration • Outside Tech Session Rooms 8:00 am–9:00 am Beverage Break • Outside Tech Session Rooms 8:00 am–Noon Facility Tours • Depart from Convention Center TICKET REQUIRED 8:00 am–Noon Speaker Ready/Moderator Check in Room 8:30 am–10:10 am Technical Sessions 10:10 am–10:20 am Networking Break • Outside Tech Session Rooms 10:20 am–Noon Technical Sessions Noon Conference Adjourns
Ops Challenge Check In 8:00 am–5:00 pm
am–5:00 pm
in
am–8:45 am
8:45 am–3:00 pm
Challenge Laboratory, Exhibition and
9:00 am–9:30 am
Hydrant Hysteria Pre-Competition
• Exhibit Hall 9:00 am–10:00 am
Session 9:00 am–1:30 pm
Design
9:30 am–4:00

TW23 Keynote: Mayor Sylvester Turner

Texas Water is excited to welcome Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner to provide the keynote comments at Texas WaterTM 2023. The address will take place during the Opening Session at 9 a.m. Wednesday, April 12.

Elected in December 2015 and overwhelmingly reelected in December 2019, Mayor Turner is serving his second four-year term. He is Houston’s 62nd mayor.

Operating within the city’s fiscal constraints, Mayor Turner has passed five balanced budgets. He also oversaw Houston’s remarkable rebound from Hurricane Harvey, championed historic pension reform, and cheered on the World Series Houston Astros. He also launched Houston’s first Climate Action Plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, meet the Paris Agreement goal of carbon neutrality by 2050, and lead the global energy transition.

In February 2022, Mayor Turner released his One Safe Houston initiative to combat the increase in violence resulting from the pandemic, domestic violence, mental illness and the proliferation of guns on the street.

As the chief executive of the world’s energy capital, Mayor Turner brings a performance-driven approach to the job, creating a more responsive, streamlined, and efficient delivery of city services while shoring up Houston’s financial future. Thanks to his leadership, the Texas Legislature, and local voters approved the pension reform package that reduced the city’s liability by billions of dollars and provided a “fix” that had eluded the city for 17 years.

Before serving as Houston’s mayor, Turner served for 27 years as the Representative for Texas House District 139. He worked on the House Appropriations Committee for 21 years and served as Speaker Pro Tem for three terms. He was appointed to several Budget Conference Committees to balance the state’s budget and serve on the Legislative Budget Board.

ANNUAL GOLF TOURNAMENT

TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 7 A.M.

The Texas Water 2023 Scholarship Golf Tournament will be held at the Memorial Golf Course. The tournament benefits the scholarship programs of both TAWWA and WEAT and is a great way to meet new friends and colleagues. Get more details and a registration form on Page 35 or sign up online at www.txwater.org.

CURTIS SMALLEY ENVIRONMENTAL EVENT

TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 8:30 A.M. TO 11:30 A.M.

The Curtis Smalley Environmental Event honors the legacy of Curtis Smalley. His contribution, leadership, mentorship, dedication to service and passion for the water industry left a significant impact. He was a driving force to include the environmental event as part of Texas Water to provide fellowship for colleagues and an opportunity to give back to the community.

This year’s Curtis Smalley Environmental Event will be held in partnership with Buffalo Bayou Parks on Tuesday, April 11 from 8:30 am to 11:30 am. Kayaks will be provided as we pick up trash and work to beautify the Bayou. All volunteers will be provided with gloves, trash bags and water. If you would like to volunteer, please sign up for the event online at www.txwater.org (under “Events”) and be sure to sign any waivers. Transportation will not be provided but parking information will be available closer to the event date. Let’s work together to beautify the Bayou.

MEET & GREET/EXHIBIT HALL

TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 4:30 TO 6:30 P.M.

Texas Water attendees Meet & Greet in the Exhibit Hall at the George R. Brown Convention Center for refreshments. Registration opens at 4 p.m., then you can enjoy the relaxed atmosphere of the Exhibit Hall. Texas WaterTM 2023 hosts the largest regional water exhibition on the continent. More than 600 exhibitors are in one place, at one time, in the convention center.

INNOVATION LOUNGE

TUESDAY, APRIL 11 – THURSDAY, APRIL 13

The Texas Water™Conference has always promoted innovation and creative design to solve some of our most complex water problems. The Innovation Lounge highlights innovative and advanced technologies from across North America. Don’t miss this opportunity to check out these new technologies while collaborating with your colleagues in the Innovation Lounge inside the Exhibit Hall. There is no additional fee to visit the Innovation Lounge.

CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS 6 | TEXAS WATERTM 2023
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TEXAS WATER DODSON’S DRIVE 5K FUN RUN/WALK

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 5:30 A.M. CHECK IN; 6:30 A.M. START TIME

The Dodson’s Drive Fun Run supports young professionals in the Texas water industry by raising funds to support the TAWWA/WEAT Dodson’s Drive Fund. The Dodson’s Drive Fund, established in 2011 to honor the late Kenneth Dodson, provides scholarships for young professionals and funding to send our young professionals to the annual Young Professionals Summit.

This year’s Fun Run is a 5K course location starting in front of the George R. Brown Convention Center. It will be a five-loop course (1K per loop) around beautiful Discovery Green where participants will see the Downtown Houston skyline at sunrise. All teams and paid participants will be chip timed and receive a technical shirt. Finishers will receive their very own finisher’s ribbon to wear on your Texas Water badge. Awards will be given to the fastest male and female overall runners, fastest male and female masters runners, fastest YP male and female runners, and the fastest team. Sign up at www.txwater.org! Don’t miss being a part of this conference tradition!

NETWORKING BREAKS

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12 – FRIDAY, APRIL 14

Start each Texas WaterTM 2023 day with networking breaks in the Exhibit Hall Wednesday and Thursday and near the Technical Sessions on Friday.

TECHNICAL SESSIONS

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12 – FRIDAY, APRIL 14

The Texas Water Program Committee offers technical sessions presented by the top experts in the industry and targeted to the most important issues facing water and wastewater professionals today. This year we had more than 700 abstracts submitted that were peer-reviewed to bring you 195 leading-edge presentations that are offered only at Texas WaterTM 2023. And, once again, we will provide a number of top Poster Sessions as part of our full technical program presentation. Attending Texas WaterTM allows you access to the best of the best technical presentations. For a full listing, see Pages 26-33.

PRESENTATION POSTERS

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12 – THURSDAY, APRIL 13

Texas WaterTM 2023 will give attendees an expanded opportunity to learn with the presentation of posters. The posters give authors the opportunity to display their

research topics and to share the information they discovered. The posters will be displayed in the George R. Brown Convention Center from Wednesday morning through Thursday afternoon. Authors are encouraged to leave business cards or other contact information so that viewers can direct questions or comments their way. A listing of the posters will be provided in the Texas Water Conference Program and in the conference app.

STUDENT DESIGN COMPETITION

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 9 A.M. TO 1:30 P.M.

The WEAT Student Design Competition gives students the opportunity to design and present a project based on a real-world wastewater treatment plant design problem. Students will be competing to represent WEAT at the Student Design Competition in Chicago at WEFTEC 2023. The prompt this year is focused around the City of Austin Walnut Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant, Austin’s largest WWTP. Students are tasked with developing detailed design alternatives and final recommendations for expansion of the WCWWTP from 75 MGD to 100 MGD Average Annual Daily Flow (AADF) and converting the Conventional Activated Sludge system to a BNR system. Students will have to factor in the industrial loading that sends large loads of ammonia with low concentrations of organics. Additionally, students are to evaluate and present on phosphorus sequestration technology to remove phosphorus from the process streams and ultimate disposal. Recommendations and solutions for plant expansion and to meet permit requirements are presented in a detailed Preliminary Design Report and presentation as described in the Competition Details handout. Come out and support your alma mater or see some prospective future leaders in the industry! This year, teams from Texas Tech University, Southern Methodist University, University of Texas, and Tecnologico de Monterrey will compete.

AWARDS LUNCH

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 11:30 A.M. TO 1:00 P.M.

TICKET REQUIRED

Enjoy a great meal with your colleagues at the Awards Lunch. The luncheon will feature the first of the conference award ceremonies, recognizing some of the longtime leaders of our water/wastewater community. Your ticket to the luncheon is included with Full or Wednesday-Only Registration. Additional tickets are available for $75 on or before March 20; $85 after.

WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 9
CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS

CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS

YP TECHNICAL SESSION

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1:20 P.M. TO 5:10 P.M. Young Professionals will share their knowledge and experiences on an array of matters aimed at engaging YPs and seasoned professionals alike. Reference the program lineup for details.

YP & STUDENT RECEPTION/MENTORING PROGRAM NETWORKING EVENT

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 5:15 P.M. TO 6:15 P.M.

Join the YPs and seasoned professionals for drinks and hors d’oeuvres during this networking event. We will also recognize the winners of the Student Design Competition, the University Forum, the Dodson’s Drive Run and Inflow. The Networking Event will provide Young Professionals an opportunity to meet with Mentors and discuss their career journey. Join us to learn more about the Mentoring Program and how you can participate.

WOMEN OF WATER BREAKFAST

THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 7:15 A.M. TO 9:00 A.M.

TICKET REQUIRED

Each year at the annual Texas WaterTM Conference, we host the Women of Water breakfast. At this event, the participants will hear from women leaders in the water industry who will share their career stories, leadership successes and challenges, their thoughts on work-life integration, mentorship and much more! This year, Liz Fazio Hale, General Manager for Gulf Coast Authority, will moderate a panel of women leaders that include Jenna Covington, General Manager for North Texas Municipal Water District; Carol Haddock, Director for Houston Public Works; Tina Peterson, Executive Director for Harris County Flood Control District; and Irazema Rojas, Chief of Technical Services at El Paso Water.

We look forward to having you join us for breakfast as these women showcase the difference women can make in our water community, while also providing a forum for future leaders to network with seasoned professionals. One ticket is included with Full Registration. Additional breakfast tickets are available at $50 each if purchased on or before March 20; $60 after March 20.

10 | TEXAS WATERTM 2023 Visit www.txwater.org for the latest conference information and to register. See you in Houston!
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CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS

VALUE OF WATER PROGRAM

THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 9 A.M. TO 11:50 A.M.

The Value of Water (VOW) Program at the Texas Water conference is a half-day session devoted to promoting water communication successes and best practices in Texas. This year’s presentations focus on the theme of MAKING TEXAS WATER RESILIENT. This unique session provides an interactive and collaborative environment for water education and outreach professionals across the nation, as well as any other water professionals interested in improving their relationship with rate payers and the general public. In 2015, TAWWA partnered with WEAT to embrace the “one water” concept and since that time the VOW Committee consists of co-chairs from the TAWWA Education Division and the WEAT Public Communication and Outreach Committee. Please join us again at the 2023 conference on Thursday from 9 am

BOX LUNCH

THURSDAY, APRIL 13, NOON TO 1:00 P.M.

TICKET REQUIRED

Thursday is a big day at the Texas Water Conference. In addition to the great Technical Programs and the full day of Exhibits, Thursday is also your opportunity to cheer on your favorite team at the Exhibit Hall competitions –Pipe Tapping, Operations Challenge, Hydrant Hysteria or Top Ops. So you won’t miss a minute of the action, we’ll serve a great Box Lunch at numerous locations in the Exhibit Hall. Your Full Registration or Thursday-Only Registration includes a ticket for the Box Lunch. Extra tickets are available for $40 on or before March 20; $50 after.

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Visit www.txwater.org for the latest conference information and to register. See you in Houston!

AWARDS CELEBRATION LUNCH

THURSDAY, APRIL 13, NOON TO 1:00 P.M.

TICKET REQUIRED

Texas Water will honor TAWWA and WEAT friends and colleagues who have demonstrated their commitment to the water and wastewater profession. This fast-paced, live and fun event will take place in the Exhibit Hall. Box lunches will be available, and box lunch tickets are included in Full Registration and Thursday-Only Registration. Additional box lunch tickets are available at $40 each if purchased on or before March 20; $50 after.

PROFESSIONAL ETHICS WORKSHOP FOR ENGINEERS

THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1:30 P.M. TO 3 P.M.

The Texas Water Engineer’s Ethics Seminar is an interactive and thought-provoking session led by Bob Pence and Gina Smith from Freese and Nichols, Inc. While earning one Professional Development Hour and satisfying the annual ethics requirement, you will learn to recognize ethical situations faced by engineers, analyze the issues of ethical situations and discuss how to resolve ethical situations in a creative and professional manner. There is no additional fee or need to preregister for this training.

C.E. HOURS

TCEQ Operator Training Certification

Hours will be available for attending technical sessions and participating in competition events and facility tours.

Engineers may also self-report CE hours for attending sessions.

Please note that we will not have engineering forms onsite. Keep track of the sessions you attend so you can self-report your hours.

Deadline

Texas

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CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS

CONFERENCE NIGHT OUT

THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 6:30 P.M. TO 8:30 P.M. TICKET REQUIRED

Our conference mixer and night out will take place just a few minutes’ walk away from the convention center at Pitch 25 (2120 Walker St, Houston, TX 77003). Located in East Downtown (EaDo), practically in the shadow of the George R. Brown Convention Center, Pitch 25 is the creation of former Houston Dynamos superstar, Brian Ching. With over 45 screens, multiple bars, patio games, hammocks, and even a miniature indoor soccer field (or pitch), there really is nowhere else like it.

The hallmark of any good sports bar starts with a strong selection of drinks and Pitch 25 definitely does not disappoint. With nearly 100 beers, ciders, and even wines on tap and a 25,000 square-foot venue, you are sure to find the perfect refreshment while visiting with your comrades in the water industry. A drink ticket will be included, followed by a cash/credit bar for those that wish to continue. To keep you satisfied, there will be several amazing food options throughout the event. Vegetarian options will be available as well.

The Gavel Passing will be held on stage at 6:15 p.m. and the mixer starts at 6:30 p.m. with plenty of food and drinks and a chance to network, mingle, and even jump on the pitch for a game of cornhole.

Guests can make the 10-minute walk to the venue or use the free shuttle service. Shuttle transportation will be provided at the south entrance of the Conference hotel, right across the street from the Pappadeaux Seafood Kitchen located in the George R. Brown Convention Center.

Signage and volunteers will be stationed near the hotel and conference exits to provide guidance to the shuttle bus pick-up location. The event concludes at 8:30 p.m., and shuttle rides back to the hotel will be provided until that time. A Conference Night Out ticket is included with Full Registration or with the Guest Badge. A limited number of tickets are available for purchase for $100 by March 20 and $110 after March 20.

WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 15

CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS

GLOYNA BREAKFAST

FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 7 TO 8:30 A.M. TICKET REQUIRED

Rhonda Harris will be the featured speaker at the Gloyna Breakfast at 7 a.m. on Friday, April 14.

Harris has more than 45 years of experience in managing and administering a variety of facilities and programs in the water environment sector. Her experience includes developing and implementing training programs for public and private sector personnel, developing regulations for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, knowledge management and management consulting, condition assessments, business practice evaluations, asset management and life cycle costing, engineering design, construction and O&M renewals, and operations for facilities and systems.

Harris is a certified Texas Water and Wastewater Operator and approved Operations Trainer, as well as a licensed Wastewater Operator in Ontario, Canada. She is also a registered Professional Engineer in Texas, a

P. Eng, in Ontario, Canada, a Board-Certified Environmental Engineer(BCEE) from the American Association of Environmental Engineers and Scientists (AAEES), a Certified Project Management Professional (PMP), a Diploma-Certified Member of the Institute of Asset Management (MIAM), an Elected Fellow of the Water Environment Federation (F.WEF) and an Honorary Member of AWWA. Ms. Harris is a leader in operations management, O&M Issues and asset management, working for change, improvement and enhancement in the global water environment. She served as the 19961997 President of the Water Environment Association of Texas and the 1998-1999 President of the Water Environment Federation.

The breakfast honors the long and distinguished career of Dr. Earnest F. Gloyna, Emeritus Professor of Environmental and Water Resources Engineering at the University of Texas at Austin. Dr. Gloyna’s teaching, research and professional practice have touched an unusually large number of students, educators, engineers and the public leadership not only in Texas but throughout the world. Tickets for the Gloyna Breakfast are $50 and are sold separately.

16 | TEXAS WATERTM 2023
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CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS

CONFERENCE GUEST INSIDER’S GUIDE *new this year

The Texas WaterTM 2023 conference hotel and convention center are at the heart of one of the most exciting cities in the nation, Houston. Houston’s Discovery Green Park, Minute Maid Park and the restaurants along the Avenida De Las Americas are just steps away from your hotel. Spouses and guests of the registered attendees at Texas WaterTM 2023 will have the opportunity to embark in self-guided tours to explore the sights, sounds and amazing cuisine of the Bayou City in a self-guided program.

Registered conference guests will be provided access to the Texas WaterTM 2023 Insiders Guidebook that will connect you with Houston’s amazing history, art and antiques, museums, sports and outdoor activities, restaurants, shopping and available downtown guided tours of the City. This year, you can plan and visit all the attractions this vibrant City has to offer at your own pace and schedule.

Conference guests will be offered a special guest registration* that includes a ticket to the Conference Night Out, access to the convention center and exhibit hall, the Conference Meet and Greet and networking opportunities with other registered conference guests. *Guest registration must accompany a full or one day registration (excluding Exhibit Hall Only badge) and costs $110 if purchased by March 20; $130 after.

Texas WaterTM Code of Conduct

The Texas Section of American Water Works Association (TAWWA) and the Water Environment Association of Texas (WEAT) are dedicated to providing a safe, harassment-free experience for everyone during Texas WaterTM and official Texas WaterTM conference events. TAWWA and WEAT will not tolerate harassment of conference attendees, exhibitors, speakers, volunteers, or staff. TAWWA and WEAT prohibit Texas WaterTM participants from intimidating, harassing, unwelcome, abusive, disruptive, violent or offensive conduct. Texas WaterTM participants asked to stop any such behavior must comply immediately. Violators may be subject to expulsion without refund. Harassment should be reported to conference staff immediately.

Please refer to our full Code of Conduct at www.txwater.org/codeofconduct_2023.cfm for more information including contact information for reporting actions contrary to the Texas WaterTM code of conduct.

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Head to Head Sawcut All Events Are Open to All TX Water Attendees

Proceeds benefit the Curtis Smalley Memorial Fund

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

Entry Details: $5 Per Entry · All Equipment Provided

Pre-Registration + Questions: For pre-registration (recommended, not required)

Which division title will you take home?

Women · Ops Challenge Competitor · Men

SPONSORED BY:
Fastest
Competition Schedule of Events:
Utility
Traditional
Traditional
Sixteenth Annual Texas Shootout
Saw Cut
3:30 – 4:30 p.m.
Management Tournament
Head to Head Sawcut 4:30 – 5:00 p.m.

COMPETITIONS

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12–THURSDAY, APRIL 13 Operations Challenge

Wednesday, April 12, 8 am-3:00 pm

Thursday, April 13, 8 am-2:45 pm

Thursday, April 13, 2:45 pm-3:45 pm: Awards Ceremony

Watch the nation’s best operators and maintenance staff compete in the Operations Challenge Competition at Texas WaterTM 2023. The competition returns in person this year and is open to any team that would like to sign up; teams of two to four can compete in as many as seven events. Sign up your utility today! The competition takes place in the Exhibit Hall on Wednesday and Thursday. This multi-day competition showcases each team’s knowledge and skills in Process Control (Sponsored by Freese and Nichols), Laboratory Event (Sponsored by Hartwell Environmental), Maintenance (Sponsored by CP&Y), Collection System (Sponsored by AECOM), Safety (Sponsored by Carollo), and our three exhibition events: Electrical (Sponsored by Gupta), Vaughan Exhibition Event (Sponsored by Vaughan), and Victaulic Exhibition Event (Sponsored by Victaulic).

Awards for the Operations Challenge Competition, as well as the Three Municipal Treatment Plant of the Year awards and Operator of the Year Award will be handed out at the Operations Awards Ceremony at 2:45 pm in the Exhibit Hall in the Meter Challenge area.

Non-Utility teams and any person in attendance at the show can sign up and compete in the Exhibition Events where two divisions are available. Division I represents past teams who have competed in all events, and Division II represents new teams competing in any event for the first time. Competitors can receive up to 10 TCEQ CEU hours, t-shirts, entry into the technical sessions and exhibit halls, and bragging rights! The top Texas Teams earn a free trip to the National WEFTEC competition. Contact Jeff Sober at 214-883-6263 or jlsober@garverusa.com or register at www.txwater.org.

Hydrant Hysteria

Wednesday, April 12, 9:30 am-4 pm, Exhibit Hall

Thursday, April 13, 9:30 am-4 pm, Exhibit Hall

Hydrant Hysteria is a fast-paced competition where two member teams assemble a specified hydrant as quickly as they can. The Section winners will compete at AWWA ACE23 in Toronto in June. Registration has closed.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12

Junior Meter Challenge Contest

1 pm-2:30 pm, Exhibit Hall

The Junior Meter Challenge Contest matches students from high school environmental programs for a test of their meter-assembling skills and dexterity. Please support these future water professionals by attending on Wednesday.

Meter Challenge

2:30 pm-4:30 pm, Exhibit Hall

Contestants race to assemble a 5/8-inch meter from loose parts and test for leaks. The winner represents Texas at AWWAACE23 in Toronto in June. Limited to 12 competitors. Visit www.txwater.org to sign up.

Texas Shoot Out

3 pm-5 pm, Exhibit Hall, Ops Challenge Area

Who is the fastest draw on cutting a piece of 8-inch SDR 35 pipe with a hand saw? It’s time to show who really has the quickest hands in Texas at the annual Texas Shoot Out. This competition is designed to demonstrate elements of the Operations Challenge’s Collection event. The event is open to all. The $5 entry fee proceeds go to Curtis Smalley Memorial Fund. First place in all events will receive a plaque. Contact Grace Sober at gdsober@ lan-inc.com for more information and to sign up.

THURSDAY, APRIL 13

Top Ops

9:30 am-1:30 pm, Exhibit Hall

Water operations personnel can impress their coworkers and dazzle their bosses with their technical knowledge by competing in this quiz show-style event. The winning team advances to the National Top Ops Competition in June at AWWAACE23 in Toronto. Visit www.txwater.org to sign up.

Pipe Tapping Contest

9:30 am-4 pm, Exhibit Hall

Four-person teams from across the state compete to determine who will represent Texas at the National Pipe Tapping Competition at AWWAACE23 in Toronto. Visit www.txwater.org to sign up.

Best Tasting Drinking Water Contest

1:30 pm-3 pm, Exhibit Hall

The Best Tasting Drinking Water Contest brings together entries representing utilities across Texas. A panel of celebrity judges will grade the samples. Along with Texas bragging rights, the winning entrant competes at AWWA ACE23 in Toronto in June. Visit www.txwater.org to sign up.

WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 21

The Texas Water 2023 room block at the Hilton AmericasHouston hotel is sold out. The Hilton may have rooms at their regular rate. You can contact them at 713-739-8000 or access their website here

Please check availability at the alternate hotels below.

Texas Water does not have room blocks, special rates or arrangements with the below hotels, but all are within a short walking distance to the George R. Brown Convention Center. No transportation is being provided by Texas Water 2023. Rates may be higher so if you make a reservation at another hotel, note your cancellation date and check back often to see if more rooms become available at the Hilton at the conference rate: https://book.passkey.com/go/TEXASwater23

Marriott Marquis Houston - Adjacent to George R. Brown Convention Center

1777 Walker Street, Houston, Texas 77010 +1 713-654-1777

Website

Embassy Suites by Hilton Houston Downtown

1515 Dallas St, Houston, TX 77010 (713) 739-9100

Website

Courtyard Houston Downtown/Convention Center 916 Dallas Street, Houston, Texas, 77002 832-366-1600

Website

COVID Statement - Subject to change

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Texas Water™ 2023 has been making the necessary adjustments to ensure participant safety is our top priority. Together, with the George R. Brown Convention Center and local hotels and venues, we are following current guidance and information shared by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), Harris County and the City of Houston. Attendees are encouraged to take any necessary steps to protect themselves and others when attending conference events including being vaccinated, wearing masks and distancing when appropriate.

Residence Inn by Marriott Houston Downtown/ Convention Center

904 Dallas St, Houston, TX 77002 (832) 366-1000

Website

SpringHill Suites by Marriott Houston Downtown/ Convention Center

914 Dallas St, Houston, TX 77002 (713) 655-0002

Website

See special information below regarding booking more than 5 hotel rooms.*

*Texas Water negotiates hotel rates to provide reasonable rates for conference attendees. As part of this agreement, Texas WaterTM 2023 assumes financial responsibility for any unsold rooms at the hotels where we have contracts.

The following policy will apply to anyone who books more than 5 hotel rooms at the negotiated Texas Water rate. Any person, group, company or organization that reserves more than 5 rooms at the Texas Water Conference rate agrees that they will cancel any rooms they do not plan to use earlier than the normal cut-off date for room reservations. The cut-off date for reservations in excess of 5 rooms is February 27, 2023.

By registering for Texas WaterTM 2023 at the conference rate, and/or within the Texas Water negotiated room block, any person, group, company or organization agrees that if they fail to cancel the rooms by the cutoff date above, they will assume full responsibility to pay for any unused rooms at the full conference rate including all taxes and other fees in the event the rooms go unsold and the hotel acts to hold Texas WaterTM 2023, TAWWA and/or WEAT, responsible for any unused rooms under the terms of the contract. Please direct any questions regarding this policy to info@txwater.org.

22 | TEXAS WATERTM 2023
INFORMATION
HOTEL

SILENT AUCTION

AUCTION DONATIONS NEEDED!!

TYPICAL DONATION ITEMS INCLUDE GIFT BASKETS, GADGETS, EXPERIENCES, EVENT TICKETS, ARTWORK, DECORATIVE ITEMS, COLLECTIBLES, GIFT CARDS, ETC.

COMMIT TO DONATING AT:

WWW.TXWATER.ORG/WFP_AUCTION_ SUBMISSION_2023.CFM

ALL PROCEEDS WILL BENEFIT WATER FOR PEOPLE , A GLOBAL NON-PROFIT BRINGING WATER AND SANITATION TO EVERY FAMILY, EVERY SCHOOL, AND EVERY CLINIC IN WHICH IT WORKS, FOREVER!

VISIT US AT THE AUCTION BOOTH IN THE EXHIBIT HALL, OR USE HANDBID TO VIEW AND PLACE BIDS!

BIDDING ENDS

1:15 PM

THURSDAY, APRIL 13

TE XA S COMM IT TE E
GUATEMALA • HONDURAS • PERU • BOLIVIA
• RWANDA •
UGANDA
MALAWI
INDIA

Attendees can add to their Texas WaterTM 2023 experience by registering for one of the three Friday morning tours. Tour tickets are in addition to conference registration and include transportation. Cost is $35 if purchased by March 20; $40 thereafter. A limited number of tickets may be available for purchase on-site. Choose one of the three tours that will leave from the George R. Brown Convention Center at 8 a.m. Friday morning:

Option 1: City of Houston Northeast Water Purification Plant Expansion

The City of Houston partnered with four regional water authorities to plan, design and construct a 320 MGD expansion to the Northeast Water Purification Plant (NEWPP). The project has been underway since 2012, design was completed in 2019, and construction is progressing towards start-up of the first phase of operation in 2023 and final completion by mid-2025. The project is being delivered using progressive design-build with a total budget of almost $2 billion. The City, authorities, project advisor and design-builder have worked collaboratively through many issues and challenges to be ready to deliver a new source of drinking water to over 2 million customers in the greater Houston area.

Participants will be guided on a walking tour of the areas that are under construction including pretreatment, intermediate ozonation, filtration, pumping and other support facilities. All participants for this tour will be required to wear approved PPE and must arrive wearing construction-toed shoes. Hard hats, vests, gloves, and safety goggles will be available for loan. The tour is limited to the first 40 people who sign up.

Option 2: Sugar Land Surface Water Treatment Plant & Constellation Stadium

The City of Sugar Land’s surface water treatment plant began delivering water to Sugar Land customers in November 2013. The completion of this plant marked an important milestone in the city’s long-range plans to meet growing water demands and comply with state mandate for groundwater reduction requirements. Water produced by the treatment plants originates from the Brazos River. The plant can deliver 10.86 MGD. Two raw water storage reservoirs can hold 27 MGD. The raw water undergoes robust treatment processes including high-rate plate settlers, membrane filters and granular activated carbon filters. Sugar Land’s water is treated to meet a very high standard which surpasses all federal and state drinking water standards. The plant received the Best Tasting Water in Texas in 2019 and the Best Tasting Water in USA in 2019.

Schedule:

8:00 am: Leave from George R. Brown Convention Center

8:45 am: Arrive at Northeast Water Purification Plant

9:00 am: Safety Briefing and Project Overview

9:30 am: Walking Tour of Expansion facilities

11:00 am: Complete tour and leave for George R. Brown Convention Center

11:45 am: Arrive back at George R. Brown Convention Center

Next, the tour will stop at the Constellation Stadium. Constellation Stadium is a state-of-the-art field and is the home of the Sugar Land Space Cowboys, the official Triple-A Minor League Baseball affiliate of the Houston Astros. The ballpark’s multi-purpose design features a variety of dynamic settings accommodating everything from intimate catered events to large festivals. This tour will provide an intimate look at the stadium. The tour is limited to the first 40 people who sign up.

FACILITY TOURS
24 | TEXAS WATERTM 2023

Schedule:

8:00 am: Leave from George R. Brown Convention Center

8:45 am: Arrive at Sugar Land Surface Water Treatment Plant

9:45 am: Complete Tour and Leave from Sugar Land

Surface Water Treatment Plant

10:00 am: Arrive at Constellation Stadium

10:45 am: Complete tour and leave for George R. Brown Convention Center

11:30 am: Arrive back at George R. Brown Convention Center

Option 3: GCA Bayport Wastewater Treatment

Facility & Armand Bayou Nature Center

Bayport Wastewater Treatment Facility (WWTF) is Gulf Coast Authority’s largest facility, serving primarily industrial customers via a 2.25-mile BioSan pipeline for process wastewater and contaminated storm water runoff and a parallel “Clean Stream” concrete channel for streams that require solids treatment only, such as cooling tower blow-down water. The original plant was built by Friendswood Development Company, then owned by Exxon, as part of its Bayport Industrial Complex. GCA acquired the facility in 1974 and has expanded and improved it since. With customers ranging from petrochemical plants, warehouses and transportation cleaning facilities, Bayport WWTF treats one of the most diverse wastewater streams in the GCA system.

Next, you will have the opportunity to experience Armand Bayou Nature Center (ABNC) on a Bayou Safari Tour. ABNC is one of the largest urban wilderness preserves in the United States, containing 2,500 acres of the natural wetlands forest, prairie and marsh habitats once abundant in the Houston and Galveston area. ABNC is home to over 370 species of birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians and offers hiking trails, live animal exhibits and a historic farm site. The Bayou Safari Tour begins with a leisurely stroll down our elevated boardwalk to our Environmental Learning Center, observing an abundance of local plants and wildlife. Then board on electric vehicles, the Bayou Ranger I and II, for a ride through the riparian forest down to the bayou, prairie and farm area, and end by saying hello to our bison. The tour is limited to the first 40 people who sign up.

Schedule:

8:00 am: Leave from George R. Brown Convention Center

8:45 am: Arrive at GCA Bayport Wastewater Treatment Facility

9:45 am: Complete Tour and Leave from GCA Bayport Wastewater Treatment Facility

10:00 am: Arrive at Armand Bayou Nature Center

11:00 am: Complete tour and leave for George R. Brown Convention Center

11:45 AM - Arrive back at George R. Brown Convention Center

WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 25

*The Texas Water Program Committee has cultivated a wide-ranging array of technical sessions that address many pressing drinking water and clean water issues. While these sessions have been arranged into primary subject tracks for organizational purposes, attendees are encouraged to review the entire program in-depth, as many technical sessions address multiple relevant subjects.

TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 12

Biosolids Odor & Corrosion Control Workforce Development Young Professionals

1:201:50 pm

No Redundancy, No Space, No Problem: A Dewatering Solution

Jason Crawley

Freese and Nichols

Tim Walker

Town of Little Elm

Spencer Lindsay

Freese and Nichols

1:552:25 pm

Wastewater: A Reflection of Society. The Impact of PFAS on Water Reclamation Facilities

Jane Madden

CDM Smith

Eric Spargimino

CDM Smith

Fort Worth’s Transition to Thermal Drying of Biosolids

Steven Nutter

City of Fort Worth Water Department

Are Your Wet Scrubbers Effective/ Operating - A Working Guide for the Successful Operator!

Richard J Pope

Hazen and Sawyer

Odor Mitigation in Wastewater Interceptor Collection Systems

Eric Dawson Parsons

The Other Type of Severe Wastewater Corrosion (not hydrogen sulfide)

John Mitchell

Austin Water

Rode Mora

Austin Water

Planning, Training, Funding –Partnerships and Programs that are Building the Water Workforce of Tomorrow

Chirine Chidiac Arcadis

Mariana Anguiano

Trinity River Authority of Texas

A Pipeline For Success: WEAT SDC and Inflow Collaboration Designing a Diverse Workforce for the Future

Tori Haugvoll

Black & Veatch

Caitlin Ruff

Black & Veatch

Tanya Miro-Warren

Kimley-Horn and Associates

Tally the Score: Improving Staffing through the Comparison of Benchmark Metrics

Kyle Swank

KIT Professionals

Robert Upton

City of Pearland

Sunil Kommineni

KIT Professionals

Julian Kelly

City of Pearland

Emerging Membrane Strategies to “Unstick” PFAS from WRF’s Raul Dominguez

Kimley-Horn and Associates

Jordan Duncan

Kimley-Horn and Associates

X-Ray Vision with Advanced Hydraulic Modeling – Conquering Water Quality Issues in Nooks and Crannies of a Water System

Varenya Mehta, KIT Professionals

Debbie Webb, City of Lake Jackson

Sunil Kommineni, KIT Professionals

Justin Bartlett, KIT Professionals

The ABCs of Technical Writing: Improving Readability Using Accuracy, Brevity, and Clarity

Abigail Graves

Garver

Jami Castillo

Garver

Networking Break in the Exhibit Hall

Pretreatment

Water Conservation

4:35 pm

A Personality of Its OwnWhat is Sludge Rheology and Why is it Important?

Tracy Chouinard

Brown and Caldwell

Innovating City of Austin’s Hornsby Bend Biosolids Management

Plant: Design Challenges Behind the First Municipal Deammonification Plant in Texas

Aldo Sotelo

Stantec Consulting Services

Nicole Stephens

Stantec Consulting Services

Pretreatment Program Audits –A TCEQ Perspective

Colleen Cook

TCEQ

Pretreatment to the Rescue: Emergency Pretreatment Tools for Tackling Industrial Challenges

Peter Reale

Plummer

Jennifer Moore

Trinity River Authority of Texas

Connecting Conservation and Planning: A Texas Water Story

Shae Luther

Texas Water Development Board

• 3:00 - 3:30 PM 3:304:00 pm

Sugar Land Leak Detection Program

Case Study – Ranking Performance Against the ASTERRA Texas

Big 12 Client Base

Merritt Nolte-Roth

City of Sugar Land

Gadi Kovarsky ASTERRA

Change Can Be Good: The Story of Aeration Upgrades and Process Changes at Three Oklahoma City WWTPs

Annie Jiang, Ardurra

Joy Kotey, City of Oklahoma City

Megan Martin, Ardurra Randel West, Ardurra

Dive into Virtual Reality: Incorporating 3D Visualization Tools for Design, Client Communications, and Operator Engagement

Tasie Kade

Carollo Engineers

Steven Hand

John Mitchell

Austin Water

PAD Your Mainstream - A Novel Dual N and P Sidestream Approach

Caitlin Ruff

Black & Veatch

Theo Chan

Trinity River Authority of Texas

Mike Young

Trinity River Authority of Texas

Leon Downing

Black & Veatch

When Surcharge Limits Are Not Enough: The Affects of Uncontrolled Overstrength Waste on a Treatment Facility

Natalie Taylor

Trinity River Authority of Texas

Water Conservation in 4DX

Kevin Kluge

Austin Water

Know Your Wastewater’s Character Arc - Influence and Impact of Influent Characterization

Prachi Salekar

Black & Veatch

Carollo Engineers 4:405:10 pm

Eric Redmond

Black & Veatch

2:30
3:00 pm
4:05
26 | TEXAS WATERTM 2023

*The Texas Water Program Committee has cultivated a wide-ranging array of technical sessions that address many pressing drinking water and clean water issues. While these sessions have been arranged into primary subject tracks for organizational purposes, attendees are encouraged to review the entire program in-depth, as many technical sessions address multiple relevant subjects.

TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 12

Water For People/ International Issues

Uniting Entire Communities

Around “One Water”: WASH Solutions & Modeling in Rural Peru

Jacob Niemeier

Vera Aqua Vera Vita

Sonja Cook Plummer

Water For People Bolivia

Municipalities Reaches

Sustainability: History of Programs, Advocacy, Outreach and Communication from 1992 to 2022

Crystal M Broadbent Hazen and Saywer

Legislative/Regulatory Public Info

Electrical and SCADA/ I&C University Forum

Polarity Modulation

AWWA National Update

Tommy Holmes AWWA

View from Washington: Federal Update from NACWA or WEF NACWA/WEF

Successful PFAS Public Communications: How to Handle the Press and the Public During Discoveries and Panics

Mike McGill WaterPIO

Establishing a Customer Service Program for Small Systems

Lauren Willis Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority

Manage Alarms, Manage Your Process – How to Implement an Alarm Management System

Joanne MacDougall Gulf Coast Authority

Improving SCADA Situation

Awareness and Process

Optimization Using Machine Learning Models in Water and Wastewater System

Francisco Alcala

CDM Smith

Enhances Electrocatalytic Reduction of Nitrate by Iron Nanocatalysts

Yuren Feng, Rice University

Xiaochuan Huang, Rice University

Zhen-yu Wu, Rice University

Haotian Wang, Rice University

Kuichang Zuo, Rice University

Qilin Li, Rice University

Electrochemical Conversion of Waste Activated Sludge to Short Chain Fatty Acids on the Surface of NonPrecious Metal Electrodes

Maasoomeh Jafari

Texas Tech University

Gerardine G. Botte

Texas Tech University

Quantifying Intra- and Extracellular Legionella in Building

Water/Wastewater Masterplanning Challenges for an Orphange in Oaxaca, Mexico

Roel Huerta AECOM

This is Water’s Moment: Navigating New Funding Streams for Your Water Projects

Stacy Barna

CDM Smith

Industry ESG Commitments Create New Funding Opportunities for Utilities

Kristin O’Neill Brown and Caldwell

Brian Perkins

Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority

Impact Fees: An Effective Means to Economically

Distribute Costs for Water, Wastewater, Drainage, and Street Improvements to Developers

Kelly Hajek

Strand Associates

Mark Rudolph Strand Associates

1:201:50 pm

EPA Presentation EPA

Outreach Strategies to Protect Our Wastewater System from Fats, Oil and Grease

Ryan Prillman City of Houston

Networking Break in the Exhibit Hall

TCEQ

The 88th Session of the Texas Legislature: It’s Always a Water Session in Texas!

Julie Nahrgang

WEAT/TACWA

Nutrient Regulations in Texas – Status Update from the WEAT Nutrient Committee

Peter Reale Plummer

Chris Pasch Plummer

1:552:25 pm

Restoring An Aging SCADA System and Increasing the Reliability of a Private Radio Communication Network for CRMWD

Michael Schuster

Freese and Nichols

A Proactive Monitoring Plan for Algal Blooms, Taste & Odor, and Cyanotoxins

Hunter Adams, City of Wichita Falls

Sam Reeder, City of Wichita Falls

Emily Appleton, City of Wichita Falls

Mark Southard, City of Wichita Falls

An Exploration of Sample Prep Techniques for Nontargeted Analysis of PFAS Using Combustion Ion Chromatography

Jay Gandhi Metrohm USA

How Laboratories use Computer Databases to Increase Communication, Accuracy, and Traceability that can Assist Operations

Kylie Gudgell

Guadalupe Blanco River Authority

Microplastics - How Managing a Small Particle Can Become a Macro-Challenge

Susan Spore

Brown and Caldwell

Hot, Hot, Hot: Biological Treatment Temperature Control Strategies Under Extreme Heat Conditions

Joanne MacDougall

Gulf Coast Authority

Plumbing and Drinking Water Distribution Systems Across the U.S.

Danielle M. Angert, UT Austin

Lan Nguyen, UT Austin

Jess Brown, UT Austin

Caroline Russell, UT Austin

Melina Bautista, UT Austin

Eric D. Cambronne, UT Austin

Mary Jo Kirisits, UT Austin

2:30 -

3:00 pm

Ultrafiltration for Municipal Wastewater Reclamation and Potable Reuse

Qinlin Li

Texas A&M University

Shankar Chellam

Texas A&M University

3:304:00 pm

Chlorine-resistant Covalent Organic Framework (COF) Thin-Film Composite Membranes for Desalination

Siddhartha Paul University of Houston

Devin L. Shaffer University of Houston

4:054:35 pm

• 3:00 - 3:30 PM
Presentation TCEQ
Calculating Water QualityBased Effluent Limitations In The Texas Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (TPDES) Permits Michael Redda TCEQ NA 4:405:10 pm
WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 27
Infrastructure Financing Laboratory Industrial

9:009:30 am

TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS

THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 13

Water Reuse Resiliency, Safety & Cybersecurity

Proposed Design Criteria

Changes to 30 TAC Chapter 217 Subchapters C and D with Emphasis on Reclaimed Water Distribution Systems

Paul Brochi

TCEQ

am

-

20 Years in the Making on Mary’s Creek - A New Water Reclamation Facility for the City of Fort Worth

Ellen McDonald Plummer

Chris Harder

City of Fort Worth Water Department

Network Asset Visibility –Fundamental for OT Cybersecurity

Randy Petersen San Jacinto River Authority

Flood Mitigation Improvements and Funding Resources for Liberty WWTP

Rebekkah Sandt

HR Green

Keval Satra

HR Green

Small Systems

TAP into Conservation: A Technical Assistance Program for Water Conservation Plans

Shae Luther

Texas Water Development Board

Travis Brice

Texas Water Development Board

Water Resources

Getting Closer to the Finish Line with El Paso’s Advanced Water Purification Facility

Gianna Aguirre

Carollo Engineers

Harnessing Sustainable Water for Weatherford with Indirect Potable Reuse

Bill Smith

City of Weatherford

Allison Blake Hage

Freese and Nichols

Ryan Opgenorth

Freese and Nichols

Use and Benefits of GAC Adsorption in Potable Reuse Applications

Zaid Chowdhury Garver

Building Back a Resilient and Sustainable Wastewater System Using Emergency Management Funding to Maximize the Benefit-Cost Ratio

Jeff Pelletier

Atkins North America

Fazle Rabbi

Houston Public Works

Water Sector Federal Cybersecurity Legislation - What You Need To Know to Prepare

Mark McKinney

Tetra Tech

Getting it Right: Utility Resilience Beyond Legislative Requirements

Linda Warren

Launch! Consulting

Texas Sized Needs in Small Communities: Ensuring Small Communities are Represented in Regional Flood Planning

Jenny Bywater

CDM Smith

Travis Pruski

Nueces River Authority

Stacy Barna

CDM Smith

Jessica Watts

CDM Smith

Integrated Wastewater Planning and Financing to Solve the Pains of Rapid Growth

Rachel Adkisson

Freese and Nichols

Dan Johnson

City of Manvel

Ishita Rahman

Freese and Nichols

Adam Conner

Freese and Nichols

Come and Take It! A Utility’s Struggle for Water Independence

Matt Froehlich BGE

Danny McGuire Port O’Connor Improvement District

Climate and Hydrology

Modeling for Austin’s Integrated Water Resource Plan

Helen Gerlach

Austin Water

Enhancing CIP Resilience: Lessons Learned for a Tangible Approach to Resilient Planning

Tess Sprague Brown and Caldwell

Navigating the Regulatory MazePermitting Lake Ralph Hall, a Look Back

Edward Motley

Upper Trinity Regional Water District

Ronna Hartt

Upper Trinity Regional Water District

Utilizing Reclaimed Water to Sustainably Revitalize Park Land While Aiding in Subsidence

Groundwater Reduction GoalsCity of Rosenberg Seabourne Creek Reclaimed Water System

Kyle Kaspar

Quiddity Engineering

Cloud-Based SCADA Levels the Playing Field for Small Systems

Mauritz Botha XiO

Digging Deep for Long-term Flood Relief: Phase 2 Tunnel Feasibility Study

Jason Becker

Halff Associates

Chris Mueller

Black & Veatch

Scott Elmer

Harris County Flood Control District

9:35
10:05
10:10 -10:40
am
10:4511:15 am
11:20
am11:50 am
28 | TEXAS WATERTM 2023

TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 13

Applied Research Diversity & Inclusion

Investigation of Alternative Management Strategies to Prevent PFAS from Entering Drinking Water Supplies and Wastewater

Kyle Thompson Carollo Engineers

Eva Steinle-Darling Carollo Engineers

A Successful Demonstration of Ammonia Based Aeration Control (ABAC) Results in Energy and Chemical Savings via Simultaneous Nitrification and Denitrification (SND)

Ahmed Al-Omari

Brown and Caldwell

Not-So-Forever Chemicals: Field Demonstration of PFAS Destruction by a Pilot-Scale Nanofiltration and UV-Sulfite

Treatment Train

Charlie Liu

Kennedy Jenks Consultants

Wastewater Surveillance for Monitoring COVID-19 and Other Infectious Diseases in Houston, Texas

Camille McCall

Rice University

Development of a Hurricane Storm Surge and River Runoff Model for the Texas Coast

Erik Valseth

The University of Texas at Austin

Matthew Scarborough

The University of Texas at Austin

Chayanon Wichitrnithed

The University of Texas at Austin

Clint Dawson

The University of Texas at Austin

Sharing Stories: DEI in TAWWA

Dedra Ecklund

Lockwood Andrews & Newnam

Watershed Mgmt/ Stormwater

Using Stormwater for Managed Aquifer Recharge

Gretchen Miller

Collier Consulting

Construction Issues Value of Water

The Plot Thickens: Maintaining Sludge Processing Operations During Replacement of Gravity Thickener

Joseph Grano Arcadis

Robert Moss

Austin Water Utility

Laying the Foundation for a New Reservoir: Economic Analysis and Financial Planning to Ensure Success

Angie Flores

Raftelis Financial Consultants

Daniel Nix

City of Wichita Falls

9:00 -

9:30 am

Dallas Fort Worth International Airport (DFWIA) – A Resilient

Stormwater Master Plan

Assistance that Saves: Let us Count the WaysAn Analysis of Actual Water Savings of the Plumbers to People Program

Chad Cosper San Antonio Water System

Seth Nehrke

CDM Smith

Michael Schmidt

CDM Smith

Eduardo Tovar

Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport

Ada Inda

Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport

DEI 201: Tools and Resources to Build a Safe and Welcoming Workplace

Ari Copeland Black & Veatch

Xi Zhao

Black & Veatch

Empowering Every Colleague: Strategies to Address Intersectionality in Inclusion and Diversity

Isabel Perez Rios Bravo Stantec

Sarang Agarwal Stantec

Making Sense of the Monsoon: Using Storytelling to Build a Foundation of Collaboration to Advance an Equitable Water Future Across Texas

Sarah Robinson US Water Alliance

Navigating the Implementation of Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs) Through Polluted Waters

Samantha Agniel

CDM Smith

Cory Sellars City of Beaumont

Two-Headed Monster: Operational Startup Challenges during a MultiOrganizational Startup of a Dual Purpose Pump Station

James McQuery

Dallas Water Utilities

Gabe Trejo Arcadis

Jeff Haasch

JH Engineering

Lelya Gutierez

Freese and Nichols

A Fast Track With Extra Hurdles: New Braunfels Expands a Water Treatment Plant Amid

Economic Volatility

Bansi Khajuria

Freese and Nichols

Ashley Zimmermann

New Braunfels Utilities

Kira Iles

Freese and Nichols

Noble Technique for Bank Stabilization at Wastewater Line Utilizing Stream Barbs

Made of Christmas Trees, City of Frisco, TX

Aiza Jose HDR

Emily Daniel HDR

Resilience Through Stream Restoration: How Fort Worth is Protecting its Critical Infrastructure

Keith Byrne

Freese and Nichols

Pratima Poudyul

City of Fort Worth

Jonathan Schwartzenberg

Freese and Nichols

What Have You Always Wanted to Ask a Contractor?

Mike Watson

MWH

Construction in a Volatile Market from an Owner and Design Builder Perspective

Aron Soto

MGC Contractors

Water Supply Augmentation to Rio Grande Diversions and Water Conservation

Charles Ortiz

Laguna Madre Water District

-

San Antonio’s Ever Changing Path to Water Resiliency

Jeffrey Haby

San Antonio Water System

Gregg Eckhardt

San Antonio Water System

The Economic Importance of Your Utility – What Your Customers Need to Know and How to Tell Them

William Zieburtz Stantec

-

am

Interactive Discussion

am -

9:35
10:05 am
10:1010:40 am
10:45
11:15
11:20
11:50
am
WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 29

1:101:40 pm

TENTATIVE SCHEDULE •

TECHNICAL SESSIONS

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 13

Wastewater Collection Utility Management

Designing the Perfect Storm: Utilizing Historical Rainfall to Validate a Design Storm and Evaluate Your Modeled Collection System

Dan Hilderbrandt

San Jacinto River Authority

Kendall Ryan

Freese and Nichols

Nabeel Khan

Leveraging Asset Life Cycle Data to Optimize Capital and Maintenance Investments

John D’Antoni

Black & Veatch

Water Treatment & Operations MRRDC (Wastewater Treatment)

Fast and Furious: Expanding a Membrane Water Treatment Plant through Retrofit while Coping with a Volatile Market

Yue Sun, Ardurra

Brandon Pritchett, City of Pflugerville

Jonathan Degen, Ardurra

Brian Camp, City of Pflugerville

Successful Full-Scale Continuous Flow Densification of Activated Sludge at Crooked Creek Water Reclamation Facility Without Physical Selection

Brandt Miller

Hazen and Sawyer

Ron Latimer

Hazen and Sawyer

Gaya Ram Mohan

Freese and Nichols

How to See it All: Machine Learning for Prediction of Manhole Condition

Samantha Greivell Garver

Dynamic Water SystemsHow SJRA is Applying Digital Transformation Strategies

Chris Meeks

San Jacinto River Authority

Shawn Dent Carollo Engineers

Meera Meera Carollo Engineers

Houston’s Approach to Preparing and Equipping Staff to Operate and Maintain a New $1.8B, 320 MGD WTP

Paul Walker, Carollo Engineers

Eric Garza, City of Houston

Joey Eickhoff, City of Houston

Stories of Carbon Redirection for Energy Efficient Wastewater Treatment in the Age of Advanced Nutrient Removal

Arifur Rahman Jacobs

Tim Constantine Jacobs

Hazen and Sawyer 1:452:15 pm

William Stauber, Carollo Engineers

3:203:50 pm

Truthiness: Field Data, Model Data, Design Data – Resolving Reality Among Conflicting Sources of Information

Andrew Czubai

Trinity River Authority

Nick Dons

Trinity River Authority

How a $200 Air Release Valve Postponed a $2,500,000 Booster Pump Station Project by Years –A Valuable Lesson in Air-Locking

Eric Dole Garver

Optimized Biofilters – How To Get There: Side-by-Side Evaluation at 440 MGD Plant

Kimberlie Brashear

City of Dallas Water Utilities

Emma Shen Jacobs 2:202:50 pm

Innovative Process Piping Modifications to Enhance Carbon Management in Primary Treatment

Anton Dapcic Carollo Engineers

Tanya Rauch-Williams Carollo Engineers

Dale Gabel Carollo Engineers

Networking Break in the Exhibit Hall

E-74 Rosillo Creek Sewer Project: Keeping Sewer in Line with In-line Storage Solutions

Jeffrey Reck Arcadis

Cristina de la Garza

San Antonio Water System

How the Workforce of Tomorrow Influences City of Houston’s Digital Transformation Today

William Kuehne Ardurra

Fazle Rabbi

Houston Public Works

2:50

- 3:20 PM

Implications of the Reactions Between Monochloramine and Free Chlorine for Water Operations

David Simons TCEQ

Benefits of Hydrocyclones for WRRF Performance: Better Settling, Improved Nitrification… and Reduced E. coli?!

Alexandra Doody, CDM Smith

Samir Mathur, CDM Smith

Jamie Belden, City of Wichita

Quick – The Wastewater is Coming! A Multi-phase System Improvement Approach for a Rapidly Growing Area with High Head Pumping Requirements

Anamika Kumari

CDM Smith

Ana Marie Karamalegos

CDM Smith

Charles Leist

City of Waco Water Utilities

5:00 pm

Collection System Moneyball

Temple Williamson

Pipeline Analysis

Wesley Nebgen City of Corpus Christi

LCRR: Failure to Communicate is a Violation Waiting to Happen

Mary Gugliuzza

City of Fort Worth

Baking up Fresh Transmission Pipeline Design Standards from Scratch

Ryan Sowa

Kimley-Horn and Associates

Graham Moore

Alliance Regional Water Authority

That’s Right, You’re Not from Texas but Texas Wants You Anyways: Using an Established Technology that is New to Texas for Iron and Manganese Removal

Joseph Jenkins

Walker Partners

Equipment and Subsystem Testing on Houston’s First Drinking Water Ozone Disinfection System

Lander Kennedy

CDM Smith

Daniel Bond

CDM Smith

Jasmin Zambrano

City of Houston

There’s a New (Primary) Sheriff in Town: Evaluating Primary Filters for Texas WRRFs

Dylan Christenson

Black & Veatch

Elaine Hung

Trinity River Authority of Texas

Andrew Moore

Trinity River Authority of Texas

Daniel Dair, World Water Works 3:554:25 pm

Eric Redmond

Black & Veatch

Addition by Subtraction –Expanding Lewisville’s Secondary Treatment Capacity From Three Processes to One

Joel Cantwell

HDR

Kelly Rouse

City of Lewisville

Cedric West

City of Lewisville

4:30
30 | TEXAS WATERTM 2023

TENTATIVE SCHEDULE •

Wastewater Operations &

Maintenance

Performic Acid: The New Kid on the WRRF Disinfection Block

Christine Ngan

CDM Smith

Brian Hilts

CDM Smith

Samir Mathur

CDM Smith

Domenico Santoro USP Technologies

A Utility Might Not Own That Connection, But They Own What Comes Down It – Getting the Most Out of Trenchless Lateral Rehabilitation

Jeff Maier Garver

When Material/Equipment Delivery Dates Can’t Be Met

Mike Querry

Trinity River Authority of Texas

Emile Lang

Trinity River Authority of Texas

What’s In Your Maintenance Wallet?

Developing and Implementing a Maintenance Management Strategy to Decrease Risk and Improve Equipment Availability

Laura Moreno

Black & Veatch

Simon Watson Black & Veatch

Words Every Engineer Love, but Commissioning Managers Dread…

“Largest installation ever” / “Full System Integration” / “First of its Kind”

Kiersten Lee

MWH Constructors

Try This One Bizarre Trick! How Fort Worth Water Bridged The Gap During The Replacement of Their Primary Thickening Process

Eduardo Aguirre

City of Fort Worth Water Department

Russell Redder

City of Fort Worth Water Department

TECHNICAL SESSIONS

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 13

Asset Management

Streamlined Risk Management: Less Intrusive Methods; Same Benefit

Scott Taylor

Trinity River Authority of Texas

John Rice

Trinity River Authority of Texas

From Conceptualization to Reality – Austin

Water’s Vertical Asset Management Program

Lauren King

Austin Water

One Strategic Step for Fort Worth Water, One Practical Leap for Asset Management

Wendy Chi, City of Fort Worth

Nicholas McCormick, Freese and Nichols

Mazen Kawasmi , Freese and Nichols

Jessica Brown, Freese and Nichols

Gage Muckleroy, GHD

Water Distribution

Design of an 84” Water Transmission Line Curved Tunnel under a Major Texas Highway Interchange

Chris Campbell, Binkley & Barfield

Matt Koziol, Schnabel Engineering

Showri Nandagiri, NHCRWA

Tim McQueary, HB Trenchless

Three For One - Alliance Water’s $50 Million Segment A Pipeline Brings Water to Central Texas, Plus 2 Future Pipelines

Travis Michel

Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam

Hunter Hanson

Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam

Graham Moore

Alliance Regional Water Authority

Using Something Tried and True When you Can’t Build a Pump Station to be Brand New

Lizanne Douglas

BGE

David Miller

CWA

Makenzie Davis

BGE

Networking Break in the Exhibit Hall

2:50 - 3:20

PM

Drinking Water Quality

If It Ain’t Broke, Do Fix It? Phosphate Demonstration Testing towards Achieving Compliance with the Lead and Copper Rule Revisions

Justin Bartlett, KIT Professionals

Nicholas Cook, City of Deer Park

Cindy Dong, KIT Professionals

Kyle Swank, KIT Professionals

Coupon Immersion vs. Pipe

Loop Study: Two Road Maps for Developing OCCTs

Amlan Ghosh

Corona Environmental Consulting

1:10 -

1:40 pm

1:452:15 pm

Source to Tap: Optimizing Treatment and Distribution System Operation and Tracking to Prevent Nitrification

Tyler Hudson, Hazen and Sawyer

Logan Burton, Ardurra

Meric Selbes, Hazen and Sawyer

Michael Rodgers, City of Laredo

2:202:50 pm

City of Austin Water Service Line Analytics That Identify Highly Frequented Customers

Brent Bassett

Austin Water

Houston Implements an Automated Risk-based Capacity and Condition Assessment Model for its 6000 Miles of Wastewater Gravity Pipes

Jinia Islam

City of Houston

Fazle Rabbi

City of Houston

Fort Worth’s Storm Drain Rehabilitation Program: Exploring Artificial Intelligence For Cost-Effective Operations and Planning

Matt Stahl

Halff Associates

Cannon Henry City of Fort Worth

Cooper Hoffman

Halff Associates

Mass Deployment of Static Meters

Marty Martinez

San Antonio Water System

Jeff Evans

VASS Solutions

The Decisive Factor: Building a Decision Matrix Dashboard for the City of Houston Surface Water Transmission Program

Kate Hallaway BGE

Singarpal Sekhorn

City of Houston

Lindsay Kovar BGE

The Show Ain’t Over Until the Pipeline is Installed: A Case Study on Design Improvements During Construction

Jason Ward, Freese and Nichols

Jared Barber, Freese and Nichols

Nathan McMillan, Freese and Nichols

Chase Juhl, Dannenbaum Engineering Corporation

Corrosion Control Study on Harvested Lead and Copper Service Lines

Trevin Heisey

Burns & McDonnell

Unregulated Contaminants –Navigating Integration of Advanced Water Treatment Technologies

Sunil Kommineni

KIT Professionals

Kyle Swank

KIT Professionals

Justin Bartlett

KIT Professionals

Estimating the PFAS Price Tag for Drinking Water Utilities: Cost Model Collaboration with AWWA

Adam Feffer

Black & Veatch

Xi Zhao

Black & Veatch

Nicholas Burns

Black & Veatch

3:203:50 pm

3:554:25 pm

4:305:00 pm

WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 31

TENTATIVE SCHEDULE • TECHNICAL SESSIONS FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 14

One Year into the City of Houston’s use of Artificial Intelligence in Automated Defect Recognition and Coding of Sewer Lines, Reflections, Challenges and Lessons Learned

Ayobamidele Bello, HR Green

Fazle Rabbi, Houston Public Works

Bintuan Zhui, Houston Public Works

San Antonio’s Transition to Polymer Concrete Sanitary Sewer Structures

Jonathan Vorheis

Jacobs Engineering

Joshua Garcia

San Antonio Water System

HDPE Pipe – It’s Not Just For Waterlines Anymore

Edward Ambler

Alliance for PE Pipe

David Freireich

City of Round Rock

Aaron Davey

Alliance for PE Pipe

The Journey to Develop an Executable Wastewater CIP Project

Rebekah Pepper

Austin Water

Simplifying Force Main Inspections with New Inline Tool

Patrick Hulsebosch

RJN Group

Water-Cooled New Customer You Have! Understanding Data Centers’ Water Demands and Meeting Them Sustainably

Nissim Gore-Datar Arcadis

Haste To Treat Waste: Fast-Tracking WWTP Expansion in Response to Accelerated Growth

Amy Middleton Plummer

Amy Uniacke

Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority

Hannah Leppla Plummer

Ana Pena-Tijerina Plummer

Who’s on First? What’s on Second?

The Pathway to a Prioritized CIP

Robert Hoffman HDR

Marc Cottingame

Dallas Water Utilities

Eva Gorgi

Dallas Water Utilities

Canyon Regional Water Authority: The Strengths and Challenges of Regional Cooperation

Chris Ekrut

NewGen Strategies & Solutions

Humberto Ramos

Canyon Regional Water Authority

Continuous Improvement

Results: Austin Water’s Success Using Effective Utility Management Framework

Matthew Saragosa

Austin Water Utility

Evening the Playing Field: Modeling Carrier Water to Optimize Chemical Diffusion

Corey Smith

KIT Professionals

Smart Utility: What it Means for Planners and Operators? A Case Study of Houston Water!

Satish Tripathi

City of Houston

Jassim Jaf

City of Houston

PFAS Treatment at Cape Fear Public Utility Authority: Design and Commissioning of the Largest GAC Facility in North Carolina

Adam Feffer

Black & Veatch

Xi Zhao

Black & Veatch

Nicholas Burns

Black & Veatch

Optimizing Filter Backwash Flow Control by Minimizing Cavitation and Modifying Control Technique

Tyler Hudson

Hazen and Sawyer

Mariana Anguiano

Trinity River Authority of Texas

Sid McCain

Trinity River Authority of Texas

Does Your Utility Need a Resiliency Check? Don’t Forget to Give Backup Disinfection a Reality Check

Gail Charles

Arcadis

Derek Littlejohn

Arcadis

Emily Hannon

City of Arlington

Overview of Treatment Technologies Commonly Utilized by Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plants in Texas for Total Phosphorus Removal

Baltazar Lucero-Ramirez

TCEQ

Is Digital Cloning (TWIN) a Reality: Future of Nutrient Removal Optimization and Operation in WRRFs

Raj Chavan Atkins

Bringing Westbank to Central Texas: Expansion and Upgrade of City of Austin Walnut Creek WWTP for Biological Nutrient Removal

Xiaohong He, AECOM

Keith Sears, AECOM

Rebecca Vento, Austin Water

Charles Celauro, Austin Water

AGS – (Another Great Solution) (Aerobic Granular sludge)

Perran Hutton

Plummer

My Nitrifiers are Better Than Yours - Low DO Nitrification

Eric Redmond

Black & Veatch

Raudel Juarez

Trinity River Authority of Texas

Monica Ramirez

University of Houston

Mike Young

Trinity River Authority of Texas

Twice the Lift Station, Half the Space: Lessons Learned from Wastewater Infrastructure

Expansion in a Constrained Site

Rami Issa

AECOM

Matthew Abbe

AECOM

Roshan Thapa

North Texas Municipal Water District

Demonstration of a Laser-Focused Utility Diagnostic Tool, Developed for Senior Leadership Training and Work Prioritization

Ben Stanford

Hazen and Sawyer

Two for the Price of One –Dual-Purpose Centrifuges

Rajeev Datta Kamalampet

CDM Smith

Kenneth Dement

City of Houston

Steve Lynk

CDM Smith

Nutrient Removal OperationsA Compilation of Lessons

Learned Over 30 Years

Randall Wirtz

Strand Associates

Kelly Hajek

Strand Associates

Mark Rudolph

Strand Associates

Wastewater Collection Utility Management Water Treatment & Operations MRRDC (Wastewater Treatment) 8:309:00 am
9:05
9:35
-
am
9:40
10:10 am
Break in Technical Session Area • 10:10 - 10:20 AM 10:2010:50 am
Networking
10:55
11:25
-
am
11:30Noon
32 | TEXAS WATERTM 2023 Gloyna Breakfast ● 7-8:30 am ● Friday, April 14 ● Tickets Sold Separately

TENTATIVE

The Goose that Laid the Golden Egg: Enhancing Non-Potable Water to Improve Flexibility and Resiliency at the Dallas Water Utilities Central

Wastewater Treatment Plant

Alexander Zuniga, LAN

Greg Vaughn, LAN

Lance Phillips, Dallas Water Utilities

Tim O’Brien, Gresham Smith

Out of Space for All Your Waste?

Pressure Cook Your Way Out of Anaerobic Digester Capacity

Issues: Two Case Studies on Thermal Hydrolysis

Manuel Moncholi

Stantec

Nicole Stephens

Stantec

Anaerobic Digesters Operations –Tricks and Traps

Adam Parmenter HDR

Stressed out Because of Your Clarifier’s Performance?

Try our 5-point Plan

Behnaz Jalili Jalalieh

Ardurra

Michael Rodgers

City of Laredo

Ignacio Hinojosa

Ardurra

Tye Jordan

Ardurra

Houston we Have a Problem! We are Ready for Another Harvey!

Sam Irrinki

Weston Solutions

Don’t get Caught with your Pumps Down… Using Analytics to Improve Pump

Reliability and Performance

Mike Bernard

Specific Energy Pumping Asset Management & Optimization

SCHEDULE

TECHNICAL SESSIONS FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 14

City of Houston’s Large Diameter Pipe Experience: The Northeast Transmission Line

Shah Rahman

Austin Water’s Asset Management Maturity Model

Martin Tower

Austin Water

Your Blood Work Came Back, and We Found an Issue with your Babbitt Bearing – Predictive Maintenance for Slow Rotating Equipment

Daniel Halter City of Dallas

Over 10-years of Houston’s Digital Transformation Journey Led by Domain SpecialistsLessons Learned

Fazle Rabbi

Houston Public Works

Pratistha Pradhan Houston Public Works

KCI Technologies

Kevin Tran

City of Houston

Ram Chakradhar

City of Houston

Denis Atwood

KCI Technologies

The Importance of Corrosion Analysis, Sampling, and NonDestructive Testing as Part of a Complete Condition Assessment

Jerry Snead

HDR Engineering

Beyond the Winter Storm: Using Post-Winter Storm Assessments to Address Broader Risks to Facilities

Keller Drozdick Merrick & Company

Networking Break in Technical Session Area

Fort Worth Water Proactive Leak Survey Program - How We Found Success and What We Learned

Adam Farguson

City of Fort Worth

Billy Coffelt

City of Fort Worth

Technology in Practice. How the City of Galveston Used Pressure Monitoring to Increase Visibility and Make Operational Changes on their Water Network

Trino Pedraza

City of Galveston Water Department

Alex Forbes Syrinix

Houston’s Intelligent Planning Tool for Prioritizing and Optimizing Rehabilitation of Gravity Pipe

Jobair Alam

IMSEngineers

Fazle Rabbi

Houston Public Works

Pratistha Pradhan

Houston Public Works

Austin Water’s Cyanotoxin

Monitoring and Response Plan: Proactive Approach to Safeguard Public Health

Caroline Russell, Carollo Engineers

Stephanie Sue, Austin Water

Kasi Kasi, Austin Water

Claire Sembera, CAS Consulting & Services

Blending Chlorinated and Chloraminated Water: Introduction to Disinfection Water Chemistry, TCEQ Exception Requirements, Testing/monitoring Best Practices, and Lessons Learned

Green

LCRR Compliance: Best Practices in Lead Service Line Inventories and Replacements – Trenton Water Works Case Study

Kristin Epstein CDM Smith

• 10:10 - 10:20 AM

Flanged Up: How Houston Prepared Transmission & Distribution Systems for Receiving 320 MGD from the Expansion to the NEWPP

Jasmin Zambrano

City of Houston

Venus Price

City of Houston

Paul Walker Carollo Engineers

Infrastructure for a “City within a City”: Designing Water and Sewer

Infrastructure to Serve the Fields Development in Frisco, Texas

Julio Olvera

Kimley-Horn and Associates

Alec Pollok

Kimley-Horn and Associates

Jason Brodigan

City of Frisco

Taking Care of 44 Tanks: Austin’s Strategies for Managing its Water Storage Infrastructure

Charles Kucherka

Freese and Nichols

Ryan Baxter

Austin Water

Clean Water on a Dime - City of Houston’s Emergency Filter Repairs

Ranjit Jail

Freese and Nichols

Yong Wang

City of Houston

Roberto Amezquita

City of Houston

Somnath Chilukuri

Freese and Nichols

Comprehensive Tools to Develop Service Line Inventories Both Upstream and Downstream of Customer Meters

Emily Baca, Arcadis

Vishakha Kaushik, Arcadis

Ashley Evans, Arcadis

Gail Charles, Arcadis

Wine, not Water, Improves with Age: Using Hydraulic Modeling to Evaluate Solutions to Water Age

Sherif Mabrouk

HDR

Heather Lindner

HDR

Ivan Langford

Galveston County WCID #1

am

-

am

-

am

& Maintenance Asset Management Water Distribution
Water Quality
Wastewater Operations
Drinking
8:30
9:00
-
am
HR
HR
9:05
9:35
Keval Satra
Green Scott Landers
-
am
9:40
10:10
-
10:20
10:50
10:55
11:25
11:30
Noon
-
WWW.TXWATER.ORG | 33 Gloyna Breakfast ● 7-8:30 am ● Friday, April 14 ● Tickets Sold Separately
Samco Advanced Services include: Pro-Active Leak Detection Preventive Maintenance Programs System-Wide Water Accountability Assessments GIS Mapping and Asset Management Services Drinking Water Regulatory Support Benefits of Utilizing SAMCO Services Reduce water production and distribution costs Improve overall efficiency and gain knowledge of your distribution system Improve water quality and assure adequate pressure to help safeguard public health Improve public water system compliance with State and Federal regulations FULL SERVICE LEAK DETECTION I GIS MAPPING I DRINKING WATER REGULATORY SUPPORT Water is a Precious Resource. How Much Are You Losing? 901 Mopac Expressway South, Suite 300 Austin, TX 78746 512-263-7043 (Office) 512-751-5325 (Mobile) sgodfrey@samco-leakservice.com www.samco-leakservice.com SAMCO

TEXAS WATERTM 2023 SCHOLARSHIP GOLF TOURNAMENT

Tuesday, April 11 • Memorial Golf Course

7 am check-in w/breakfast. 8 am Shotgun Scramble w/lunch, prizes & awards following. No on-site registration. Limited to 32 teams.

In 2019, the Astros Golf Foundation pledged to refurbish Memorial Park Golf Course to make it a world-class playing field for all Houstonians and now the course hosts the PGA Tour's Cadence Bank Houston Open The new course is designed by Tom Boak and four-time major winner Brooks Koepka and even playing from the regular tees, it is a great challenge for all golfers. With the renovations, Memorial Park Golf Course is known as one of the best municipal courses in the nation and tee times are hard to come by. The course does not host tournaments often and we are lucky to have been able to command the entire course in the prime golf season in Texas. The PGA players love this course and we invite you to chase your PGA dreams on this course too! There are 5 par 3’s and 5 par 5’s, so lots of birdies and hole in one opportunities.

As you play, check out one of the most intriguing features of the course in the state-of-the-art storm water irrigation system that was designed to capture and retain 80 million gallons of storm water for irrigation purposes removing the golf course's irrigation from the city's potable water system. Water and golf coming together!

TEAM & SPONSORSHIP PACKAGES

(Multiple sponsors available at each level):

PLATINUM: TWO Team registrations, Lunch Sponsorship and company name on towel for every golfer.....$5,000

GOLD: ONE Team registration, Breakfast Sponsorship and closest to the Pin Sponsorship.....4,000

SILVER: ONE team registration and all 5 Hole in one sponsors.....$2,500

BRONZE: ONE team registration.....$1,700

PUBLIC AGENCY INDIVIDUAL: ONE individual.....$200 (limit of 8)

TEAM CAPTAIN OR INDIVIDUAL

NAME:

Firm Name:

Address: City:

State: Zip: __________________

Cell Number:

Email:

#2:

#3: #4:

TEAM GOLFER NAMES

THE EASIEST WAY TO REGISTER IS ONLINE! www.txwater.org

Or mail form with payment to: TW23 Golf Tournament P.O. Box 676 Pflugerville, TX 78691 Or fax to 512-251-8152

PAYMENT METHOD:

CALCULATE FEES

Public Agency Individual (limited)..$200. $

Platinum Package...............$5,000........ $

Gold Package.....................$4,000........ $

Silver Package....................$2,500........ $

Bronze Package..................$1,700........ $

Sponsorship Opportunities

(Multiple sponsors available at each level; sponsorship sign to be given to sponsor):

Tee Box......................... x $1,000... $

Hole in One Grand Prize Sponsor (a New Truck) .............$2,000... $

Hole in One Holes

Prize Sponsor...........................$500..... $

Closest to the Pin.....................$250..... $

Longest Drive, Men..................$250..... $

Longest Drive, Women..............$250..... $

Ball Sponsor (company name on a sleeve of balls for every golfer)................$2,000.. $

Ball Launcher Sponsorship........$500..... $

Tournament Extras Mulligans ($20/each)........ x $20......$

(Mulligan tickets are also raffle prize tickets)

TOTAL (add column at right) $

Tournament Co-Chairs:

Chris Canonico, 713-540-5512, canonico@ardurra.com

JD Leffingwell, 832.418.5797, jd.leffingwell@sciphyn.com

Christian Annexy, 832-520-4560, cannexy@mccarthy.com

#: Expiration:

Cardholder Name: Security Code:

Credit Card Billing Address:

Signature:

! Check Payable to “Texas Water” CHARGE MY: ! AMEX ! VISA ! MasterCard ! Discover
Card
cp

TEXAS WATER 2023 REGISTRATION

Early Registration Deadline: March 20, 2023

April 11-14, 2023

Houston, Texas

Payment must accompany this form or registration cannot be processed REGISTER ONLINE: www.txwater.org. PLEASE PRINT OR TYPE

EMAIL (REQUIRED FOR PROCESSING)

Full Registration includes Wed. Awards Lunch, Thurs. Women of Water Breakfast, Thurs. Box Lunch and Thurs. Night Out tickets

❑ Full Registration - MEMBER ....................... $395 ......... $445 .......

❑ Full Registration - NON MEMBER .............. $635 ......... $685 .......

NON MEMBERS ONLY. Full registration at the non-member rate also includes a free one-year membership in either AWWA/TAWWA or WEF/WEAT. With full, non-member registration, please indicate which organization you wish to join (new members only - no renewals): ❑ AWWA/TAWWA ❑ WEF/WEAT

❑ Student ........................................................ $50 ........... $60 ......... (no meals/tickets included, must register with .edu email)

❑ Wednesday Only - MEMBER (includes Awards Lunch ticket) .................. $225 .......... $265 .......

❑ Wednesday Only - NON MEMBER (includes Awards Lunch ticket) .................. $285 .......... $325 .......

❑ Thursday Only - MEMBER (includes Box Lunch ticket) ........................ $175 ......... $215 .......

❑ Thursday Only - NON MEMBER (includes Box Lunch ticket) ........................ $235 ......... $275 ....... ______

❑ Friday Only - MEMBER $110 ......... $120 .......

❑ Friday Only - NON MEMBER $120 ......... $135 .......

❑ Exhibit Hall Only (4/12, 4/13) ........................ $65 ........... $65 ......... (Sorry: No one-day passes available)

❑ I plan to participate in the Curtis Smalley Environmental Event (Tuesday)

❑ I plan to attend the Awards Celebration Lunch (Box lunch ticket required; included in Full Registration or Thursday Only. Or purchase ticket below.)

FRIDAY FACILITY TOURS

Select One Tour Below: ................................. $35 ........... $40 ........ ______

❑ Tour 1: City of Houston Northeast Water Purification Plant Expansion

❑ Tour 2: City of Sugar Land WTP/Constellation Field

❑ Tour 3: Gulf Coast Authority WW Treatment Plant/Bayou Nature Center

ADD ONS QUANTITY

*1 ticket included with Full Registration

❑ *Awards Lunch (Wed.) ................... x $75 ........... $85 ........

❑ *Women of Water Breakfast (Thurs.) _____ x $50 ........... $60 ........

❑ *Box Lunch (Thurs.) ....................... _____ x $40 ........... $50 ........

❑ *TW23 Thursday Night Event ........ x $100 ......... $110 ......

❑ Gloyna Breakfast (Fri.) ................. x $50 ........... $50 ........

❑ Guest Badge ................................................... $110 .......... $130 ...... (must accompany a full or one day registration; includes access to exhibit hall and ticket to Thurs. Night event) Badge Name: __________________________________

❑ Donation to Water For People - Optional

TOTAL PAYMENT (add right column) .....................

❑ This is my first time attending the Texas Water Conference

TCEQ Operator License #___

I have special dietary needs: ❑ Vegetarian

❑ Other

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___________________________

(Put “Same” if same as above; necessary to process)

For more information, contact: Texas Water 512-251-8101

info@txwater.org

Register online at www.txwater.org or mail form with payment to: Texas Water 2023 Registration c/o GCP Association Services PO Box 676 Pflugerville, TX 78691 or fax to 512-251-8152

No refunds will be granted after March 20, 2023. A $60 cancellation fee will be assessed to all refund requests made prior to March 20, 2023. Substitutions allowed. Substitutions may incur a $25 processing fee. All refunds must be requested in writing. Send refund or substitution requests to Texas Water at info@txwater.org

Early registration deadline: March 20, 2023

Received on/ before 3/20/23
FIRST NAME______________________________________LAST NAME________________________________________ COMPANY________________________________________TITLE_____________________________________________ ADDRESS__________________________________________________________________________________________ CITY/STATE/ZIP____________________________________________________________________________________ PHONE_________________________________MEMBER #_______________________ ❑ AWWA/TAWWA ❑ WEF/WEAT
Received after 3/20/23
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