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Prescott council hears update on failing SR 89 effluent line, three design alternatives advance to 15% plans

3176620 · April 9, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Gwen Roach, public works director for the City of Prescott, told the City Council on April 8 that the effluent pipeline running in the SR 89 right-of-way “has broken over a dozen times in the last 6 or 7 years,” and that the city contracted Kimley Horn and Associates last November to produce a 15% design concept report evaluating alternatives for the roadway and the two wastewater mains.

Gwen Roach, public works director for the City of Prescott, told the City Council on April 8 that the effluent pipeline running in the SR 89 right-of-way “has broken over a dozen times in the last 6 or 7 years,” and that the city contracted Kimley Horn and Associates last November to produce a 15% design concept report evaluating alternatives for the roadway and the two wastewater mains.

The consultant team presented collected traffic counts, origin-destination analysis, geotechnical borings, crash data, and a scored evaluation of 20 initial alternatives that produced three recommended options (and one additional alternative for study) to carry into 15% plans. Andrew Baird, project manager with Kimley Horn, said the firm is “about 2 thirds of the way through their process” and will return on July 8 with the 15% design concept report and plans and the start of the 60‑day public comment period.

Why it matters: the corridor is both a functioning regional highway and a scenic, residential area. The project exists to replace a failing pressurized effluent main and to upsize a gravity wastewater main; at the same time the city must address deteriorating pavement and rising traffic demand that the consultant says already exceeds some previous 2045 projections.

Key findings and data

- Extent: the study limits run from the existing Willow Lake Roundabout north to the existing Fippin Trail Roundabout (a little over 2 miles); effluent and wastewater mains run slightly less than the full roadway limit.

- Traffic counts: Kimley Horn reported about 22,000 vehicles per day measured in January 2025 on SR 89; detour conditions in December 2024 shifted roughly 36,000 vehicles onto Willow Creek Road during a closure, and Williamson Valley Road saw an additional ~5,000 during that detour. The consultant used those counts plus Streetlight origin-destination data to model regional travel patterns.

- Growth and capacity: the team used a planning growth rate of 2.75% (based on ADOT counters and historical counts) and projects…

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