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Engineers identify inflow as main source of extra wastewater; Bellaire staff recommends targeted rehabilitation program

3859316 · June 16, 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

Friese & Nichols presented a sanitary sewer evaluation showing inflow — not groundwater infiltration — is the primary driver of peak wastewater in several basins. Staff recommends an 8-year, basin-by-basin sanitary sewer evaluation and rehabilitation (SSES) program and budgeting tied to the city's CIP and bond funds.

Friese & Nichols presented results of a year-long sanitary sewer flow monitoring study to the Bellaire City Council on June 16, 2025, finding that inflow (stormwater entering the system) accounted for most excess wet-weather flow and recommending a prioritized sanitary sewer evaluation and rehabilitation (SSES) program.

The study installed 12 flow meters and four rain gauges and monitored flow for more than 100 days to identify wet- and dry-weather flow characteristics across the system. Friese & Nichols reported inflow as the dominant component of I&I (inflow and infiltration), with infiltration representing roughly 10% of the measured I&I. The firm ranked basins by gallons per day per 1,000 linear feet; the basin around FM 11 near the…

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