Alliance Secures 4.1 Million Dollars for Communities to Train the Next Generation
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March 2022 InfoLine

March 2022 InfoLine

March edition of the Alliance monthly membership newsletter! 

January 2022 InfoLine

January 2022 InfoLine

January edition of the Alliance monthly membership newsletter! 

Ben Davis Conservancy District - WWTP Updates

Ben Davis Conservancy District - WWTP Updates

Letter from BDCD

For additional information, please visit: Ben Davis Conservancy District – Reliable and Affordable Sanitary Sewer Service (bdconservancy.com)

 

Citizens Energy Group issued a letter to freeholders throughout the Ben Davis Conservancy District. The district was established in 1958 with the Indiana Conservancy Act to provide sewer service to our community. However, the Conservancy only pipes sewage from properties to a treatment plant owned and operated by Citizens Energy Group.

Citizens Energy Group has raised its rates in recent years with a projected increase of 900% from 2017 to 2025. So when the Conservancy announced that it would build a treatment plant to save money, Citizens responded with a $10 million offer to acquire the Conservancy––amounting to a few thousand dollars per property owner.

The acquisition would cost residents more throughout the years, particularly elderly residents with fixed incomes and low-wage families, as Citizens Energy Group would recover its $10 million investment through rate increases for residents. This is not without evidence. For example, Citizens acquired the sewer system in Westfield as a for-profit company and attempted to raise rates by 25%.

Residents of the Ben Davis community are apprehensive about the offer. In a recent online survey, residents overwhelmingly supported construction 13 to 1. Further, MSD Wayne Township Schools and multiple organizations throughout the community have committed their support, including the Indiana Rural Water Alliance.

The Ben Davis Conservancy District advocates for a treatment plant, promising to control costs for residents. The proposed facility is a 4.0 MGD extended aeration treatment plant with an aerobic sludge digestion process.

Aerobic sludge digestion is a non-chemical process and uses oxygen for treatment. No noxious odors are produced as a result, such as methane or hydrogen sulfide. The plant will discharge into the Neeld Ditch with stringent effluent limits as determined by the Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM).

Take Their Survey

They want to know what you think. Should the Ben Davis Conservancy District construct a treatment plant? Use this link to complete the survey: Survey – Ben Davis Conservancy District (bdconservancy.com)

2022 Leadership Summit Recap

2022 Leadership Summit Recap

Monroe County Convention Center - Bloomington, IN

This year's Leadership Summit was on July 27 & 28 in beautiful Bloomington, Indiana.

2022 Operator Expos Recap

2022 Operator Expos Recap

Southern - Huntingburg, IN / Northern - Akron, IN

Our Southern Expo was held on May 19, in Huntingburg, Indiana and our Northern Expo held on May 26, in Akron, Indiana. Both Expos were both big successes!  We had over 250 people in attendance at each!

Alliance Secures 4.1 Million Dollars for Communities to Train the Next Generation

The Alliance of Indiana Rural Water, a local non-profit organization supporting Indiana’s rural water industry, has secured a total of 4.1 million dollars in reimbursement grants from the Indiana Finance Authority (IFA) for rural communities across the state to utilize in order to gain more licensed water and wastewater operators.

2022 Spring Conference Recap

2022 Spring Conference Recap

French Lick Resort - French Lick, Indiana

A huge THANK YOU to everyone who participated in the Spring Conference at the beautiful French Lick Resort in March!

2022 Award Recipients

2022 Award Recipients

The best of the best in the water and wastewater industry were honored at our 2022 Spring Conference.  Each recipient was presented with their award prior to the conference, then recognized throughout the event on a slideshow displaying on the event center's tv monitors throughout the venue! 

2021 Best Tasting Water in Indiana Named!

Auburn Water Department’s Water Named Best Tasting Water in Indiana during State Finals Competition!

Officials at the Alliance of Indiana Rural Water have found the best-tasting water in Indiana.  On October 20th, 2021, Auburn Water Department was announced as the winner of a state-wide competition to identify the tastiest rural water in the state...

2021 Award Recipients

2021 Award Recipients

The best of the best in the water and wastewater industry were honored at our 2021 Spring Conference.  Each recipient was presented with their award prior to the conference, then recognized throughout the event on a slideshow displaying on the event center's tv monitors throughout the venue! 

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Alliance Secures 4.1 Million Dollars for Communities to Train the Next Generation

Friday, June 3, 2022

(Franklin, IN) The Alliance of Indiana Rural Water, a local non-profit organization supporting Indiana’s rural water industry, has secured a total of 4.1 million dollars in reimbursement grants from the Indiana Finance Authority (IFA) for rural communities across the state to utilize in order to gain more licensed water and wastewater operators. Access to this grant funding began in 2018 and will continue through December 2023. With over 50% of the water industry workforce retiring in the next five years, communities will fail to prosper or eventually even exist if replacements aren’t put in place and properly trained. Water and Wastewater Operations Specialists are imperative to our communities for access to clean drinking water and to ensure wastewater effluent is returned to the environment properly. The IFA, whose mission is “to oversee state-related debt issuance and provide efficient and effective financing solutions to facilitate state, local government and business investment in Indiana (in.gov),” has offered this grant opportunity to help subsidize utilities’ participation in the Alliance of Indiana Rural Water’s Apprenticeship Program, as approved by the U.S Department of Labor, Office of Apprenticeship. 

In response to the industry’s need to train the next generation of skilled workers and standardize training across the state of Indiana, the Alliance of Indiana began taking on apprentices through the National Rural Water Association’s Apprenticeship Program. Once an Apprentice completes this 2-year program and passes an aptitude test given by the State of Indiana, he or she is considered a journey worker and can complete tasks unsupervised, making this person employable as a Systems Operations Specialist in the Water or Wastewater Industry. The Alliance was the very first state rural water association in the country to graduate an apprentice and has since become nationally recognized and a leader in combating future industry employment shortfalls.

The following Indiana towns, cities, or corporations have participated or are currently participating in the Alliance’s Apprenticeship Program: Albany Waterworks/Sewage Dept., BBP Water Corp., Bremen, Chalmers, Clay City, Colfax Water Works, Hartford City, Kingsford Heights, Lagro, Lewisville, Montezuma, New Castle, North Liberty, Oxford, Paoli, Plainville, Reynolds, Salem, Scottsburg, Silver Lake, South Harrison, Tennyson, Van Buren, Milford, Montpelier, Oakland City, Otterbein Water & Sewage Utilities, Pike-Gibson Water, Inc., Roann, Sullivan-Vigo Rural Water Corporation, Windfall Valley Rural Water Corp., and West Terre Haute Water & Wastewater.

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