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Utility and Infrastructure Projects

Background

As a Community Services District, the Town of Discovery Bay provides various services, including municipal water treatment and distribution, wastewater collection and treatment, landscaping and parks and recreation services. These services are vital to residents in the Town, and it is the Town’s priority to provide high-quality services for all. 

The Town maintains an Operating and Capital Improvement Program Budget and relies on customer water and wastewater rates as the revenue source to operate and maintain your water and wastewater services. Town administration costs are fully reimbursed by the County while funds for lighting and landscaping are provided by the Ad Velorem tax, community center program fees or an assessment rate approved by the Board of Directors. As a public agency, the Town cannot profit from what it charges to provide water and wastewater services and residents are only charged the actual cost of the services provided.

 

Capital Improvement Projects

Water Pipeline Replacement 

Over the next three years, the Town of Discovery Bay will replace roughly eight miles, about 44%, of asbestos cement pipe in the Town’s water system. The pipe segment is 50 years old and has deteriorated quickly due to corrosive soils within the Town. 

This project involves replacing the existing pipe with a more durable PVC pipe and updating related valves, fire hydrants, cathodic protection, paving, service connections, and more. Work will be completed along Willow Lake Road, Discovery Bay Boulevard and other streets in the northeast quadrant of the Town. Residents in these areas will be impacted by water main construction in the street, and each resident’s water service will be impacted for a few hours while water service is replaced. 

With the improved pipes, the Town will be able to continue providing high-quality water service to ratepayers.

Administrative Building 

Due to State regulatory requirements, the Town must maintain separate access to the Willow Lake treatment plant from the administrative building. Currently, the administrative building provides direct access to the treatment plant. To comply with these regulations, Discovery Bay will create a separate administrative building where ratepayers can inquire, pay water bills or attend meetings. 

This project involves purchasing land, completing site work, and constructing a new building, and is expected to be completed in 2026. The cost of the project will be $7.5 million.

Solar Project 

In May, 2024, the Town of Discovery Bay passed a resolution to apply for the California Energy Commission (CEC) Energy Conservation and Assistance Act (ECAA) Loan Program to install a solar renewable energy system. The ECAA program offers subsidized financing, allowing the Town to borrow up to $3 million at 1% interest over 17-20 years. 

If this funding is received, the Town is planning to develop an Energy Conservation and Renewable Energy Program in Discovery Bay that includes installing a 328 KiloWatt photovoltaic system, outdoor LED path and parking lot lighting at the Community Center, replacing gas-consuming equipment at the Community Center with electric technologies, scheduling the pump backwash process at Willow Lake Water Treatment Plant during off-peak hours and installing LED lighting in the Willow Lake Treatment Plant pump room. 

The CEC began reviewing the Town’s application in November 2024, and funding will become available beginning February 2025. Once funding is received, the project is anticipated to be completed by the end of 2026.

Well 8 Water Supply Capacity 

The Town is currently finalizing the design of the Well 8 pump station project. This project involves updating the well, pump and more to accommodate increasing water demands and provide new subdivisions in the Pantages development with improved water supply reliability. 

Homeowners who have moved into the Pantages development will see minimal traffic impacts during construction due to construction vehicles traveling to and from the site. Water service should not be impacted for these residents.

Newport and Sandpoint Underwater Crossing 

Beginning in 2026, the Town will replace the underwater crossing in Newport Bay from Sand Point Court to Newport Lane to increase the amount of water able to move through the crossing. 

To begin, the Town will perform a feasibility study to determine the logistics of the project. Once reviewed, the Town will replace the existing eight-inch asbestos cement pipe with a 12-inch high-density polyethylene (HDPE) pipe using horizontal directional drilling. 

Residents within Newport Lane Court, Sand Point Court and Sand Point Lane will see impacts once construction begins. Water service for residents within the project limits will be impacted for a few hours while water service is being replaced.

 

Rate Increase

Like many other public agencies, the Town is facing several challenges in its operations: aging infrastructure, new and increasingly restrictive regulatory measures, drought and more. The cost of operating, maintaining and replacing facilities exceeds the revenue from current rates. 

Just like most other services, utility costs rise over time. Furthermore, inflation has increased operational costs. Additional revenue is needed to fund critical operations, maintenance, repairs, debt payments, infrastructure costs and capital improvement projects.
 

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is the pipeline replacement necessary? Are there any alternatives? 

The current segment of pipe in the Town’s water system is 50 years old and has deteriorated quickly due to corrosive soils within the Town. The Town will replace the existing pipe with more durable PVC pipe to continue providing high-quality water service to ratepayers for years to come. 

Why is the administrative building necessary? 

Currently, the Town’s administrative building provides direct access to the Willow Lake Treatment Plant. To comply with State regulations, the Town must maintain separate access to the treatment plant from the administrative building. This will be done by creating a separate administrative building where ratepayers can inquire, pay water bills or attend meetings.

Has the Town considered/pursued any grant funding? 

The Town pursues additional funding for capital improvement projects when opportunities arise.

How can I learn more? 

Follow us on social media for updates, attend the upcoming community meeting, or contact the Town at (925) 634-1131 for details about upcoming projects.

 

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