Public Utilities 2024/07/24CITY OF ANAHEIM
PUBLIC UTILITIES BOARD
MINUTES
July 24, 2024
The agenda having been posted on Thursday, July 18, 2024, the Regular Meeting of the Public Utilities
Board (Board) was called to order by Chairperson John Seymour at 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday, July 24,
2024, in the Gordon Hoyt Conference Center, 2nd floor, Anaheim West Tower, 201 S. Anaheim Blvd.,
Anaheim, California.
Board Members Present: Chairperson John Seymour, Vice -Chairperson A. Abdulrahman, M. Lee,
A. Pham, T. Bilezikjian
Board Members Absent: A. McMenamin, T. Ibrahim
City Staff Present: D. Lee, P. Starr, B. Beelner, C. Parker, J. Lonneker, J. Lehman,
M. Avelino -Walker, P. Bogdanoff, T. Castaneda, H. Nielsen,
S. Whitlock, M. Roberts, M. Seifen, J. Fano, T. Chen
Guest(s) Present: P. Javier, Savanna High School; Y. Saavedra, Katella High School;
V. Rodriguez Cano, Loara High School; D. Pham, Loara High School
AGENDA ITEM ACTION TAKEN
1. RECOGNITION: 2024 STUDENT SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS.
M. Avelino -Walker, General Services Officer, introduced S. Whitlock,
Resource Programs Specialist, to provide an overview of the selection
process of the High School Scholarship Recipients. S. Whitlock
thanked the Board Members on the ad hoc Scholarship Selection
Committee for their contributions during the selection process.
S. Whitlock shared that the evaluation process identified the top
scholarship finalists, who were then interviewed by the selection
Committee and added that the scholarship opportunity includes a paid
internship through the partnership with Workforce Development and
Hope Builders, which allows the scholarship recipients to obtain
firsthand experience in the workplace.
S. Whitlock introduced P. Javier, Savanna High School; Y. Saavedra,
Katella High School; V. Rodriguez Cano, Loara High School; and
D. Pham, Loara High School, as the 2024 Recipients of the High
School Student Scholarships. The students then gave a brief
presentation about their internship experience.
The Board recognized and congratulated the 2024 High School Student
Scholarship recipients.
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2. PUBLIC COMMENTS.
3. APPROVE THE MINUTES OF THE REGULAR MEETING OF
JUNE 26, 2024.
4. PRESENTATION: GROUND WATER TREATMENT PROGRAM
UPDATE.
P. Bogdanoff, Water Engineering Manager, provided a presentation on
Anaheim Public Utilities' (APU) Groundwater Treatment Program.
P. Bogdanoff gave a brief overview of the history and regulation of per -
and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) compounds in California and
shared APU's actions related to PFAS compounds in the local
groundwater basin, including APU's Phase A and B Groundwater
Treatment Projects.
P. Bogdanoff also provided an overview of the United States
Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) recently promulgated
Primary Regulation for PFAS in drinking water and impacts to the City
of Anaheim (City). An overview of APU's ongoing efforts and its
Phase C Groundwater Treatment Project in response to the EPA's
regulations were shared with the Board.
The Board asked if there is land available for purchase next to one of
the well sites that has limited space. Staff explained there are various
options being evaluated, including relocation, but no determination has
been made at this time. The Board inquired about the cost of
maintenance, and staff explained that PFAS adds approximately $150
per acre-foot to the cost of groundwater supplies; however, 50% of the
costs are reimbursed through OCWD. The Board asked if the regional
Groundwater Replenishment System has evidence of PFAS, and staff
replied that due to the extensive filtration process, no evidence of PFAS
has been detected.
The Board asked what the lifespan of a well is, and staff replied that a
well can last 50-70 years. The Board inquired if PFAS is completely
removed, and staff responded that the treatment system can remove
down to the non -detect level, but that there are still traces at extremely
There being no electronic or
oral public comments,
Chairperson J. Seymour
closed the public comments
portion of the meeting.
M. Lee moved the Approval
of the Minutes of the Regular
Meeting of June 26, 2024.
T. Bilezikjian seconded the
motion.
MOTION CARRIED: 4-0.
ABSTAINED: 1.
[Chairperson J. Seymour]
ABSENT: 2.
[A. McMenamin and
T. Ibrahim]
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low levels beyond what current instrumentation can measure. The
Board inquired what the pumping percentage was prior to treatment,
and staff explained that prior to taking wells offline, the pumping
percentage was 77%, and got down to as low as 25%.
5. APPROVAL OF INFORMATION SYSTEM AGREEMENTS
RELATED TO THE WORK AND ASSET MANAGEMENT
SYSTEM UPGRADE, INCLUDING (1) A CLOUD SERVICES
AGREEMENT WITH ORACLE AMERICA, INC. FOR
SUBSCRIPTION AND SUPPORT SERVICES FOR WORK AND
ASSET CLOUD SERVICE (WACS) AND ORACLE FIELD
SERVICE (OFS) FOR A 10-YEAR TERM, AT AN ANNUAL
AVERAGE OF $475,000 FOR FIVE YEARS, SUBJECT TO AN
ANNUAL INCREASE UP TO 4% FOR THE SUBSEQUENT FIVE
YEARS, AND A 5% CONTINGENCY; (2) A PROFESSIONAL
SERVICES AGREEMENT WITH RCC GLOBAL, LLC FOR
WACS AND OFS IMPLEMENTATION SERVICES FOR A
THREE-YEAR TERM WITH AN OPTION TO EXTEND ONE
TIME FOR TWO YEARS, AT AN ANNUAL AVERAGE OF
$1,690,600 FOR THE ENTIRE TERM (INCLUDING ANY
EXTENSION), AND A 15% CONTINGENCY; AND (3) THE
FIRST AMENDMENT TO THE AGREEMENT WITH SDI
PRESENCE, LLC TO EXTEND THE TERM FOR THREE
YEARS WITH THE OPTION TO FURTHER EXTEND ONE
TIME FOR TWO YEARS, FOR AS -NEEDED PROGRAM
MANAGEMENT AND TECHNICAL SUPPORT SERVICES FOR
THE WACS AND OFS UPGRADE PROJECT, AT AN AVERAGE
AMOUNT OF $400,000 ANNUALLY FOR THE TERM
(INCLUDING ANY EXTENSION) AS EXTENDED BY THIS
FIRST AMENDMENT, AND A 10% CONTINGENCY;
AUTHORIZE THE PUBLIC UTILITIES GENERAL MANAGER
TO EXECUTE EACH AGREEMENT, ORDERING
DOCUMENTS, AND RELATED DOCUMENTS, AND TO TAKE
THE ACTIONS NECESSARY OR ADVISABLE TO
IMPLEMENT AND ADMINISTER THE AGREEMENTS,
INCLUDING ANY EXTENSIONS; AND AUTHORIZE DE
MINIMIS CHANGES THAT DO NOT SUBSTANTIALLY
CHANGE THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE
AGREEMENTS, AS DETERMINED BY THE CITY
ATTORNEY' S OFFICE. *
H. Nielsen, Enterprise Information Technology Manager, briefed the
Board on the proposed Work and Asset Management Upgrade Project
to a Work and Asset Cloud System. H. Nielsen provided an overview
of the current system, and the benefits with replacing this mission
critical system and described how APU uses the system to procure
equipment, build and maintain assets, track costs, and prepare financial
and regulatory reports.
A. Abdulrahman moved the
Approval of the Asset
Management System Upgrade
with Oracle, RCC Global,
LLC and SDI Presence, LLC.
T. Bilezikjian seconded the
motion.
MOTION CARRIED: 5-0.
ABSTAINED: 0.
ABSENT: 2.
[A. McMenamin and
T. Ibrahim]
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The current system is a legacy system that has become out of date and
does not meet APU's current needs in the complex utility industry.
H. Nielsen indicated that the Work and Asset Cloud System upgrade is
a cloud -based solution utilizing modern technology and is configurable
to support new functionality as business needs evolve. The system
provides mobile capabilities to view assets and update work orders in
the field, which APU currently does not have. The cloud -based solution
provides improved security features, service continuity and disaster
recovery.
The Board asked if the cloud -based platform is protected from
ransomware attacks. H. Nielsen informed the Board that the cloud -
based infrastructure supported by Oracle prevents ransomware attacks.
Oracle supports Fortune-500 companies and constantly provides
monitoring services. Oracle is secure with extensive capabilities of site
security, badging and cameras. Oracle provides constant and evolving
monitoring of suspicious activities.
H. Nielsen mentioned that three agreements are being proposed. The
first is a Cloud Service Agreement with Oracle for a 10-year term to
host the new solutions and provide subscriptions to allow access to
APU staff at a cost of $475,000 annually for the first five years. A 5%
contingency is included for future changes requiring hosting and
subscription services.
H. Nielsen mentioned that for the second proposed agreement, APU
issued an Request for Proposals (RFP) for a primary system integrator
in December 2023 and RCC Global, LLC was selected from the
proposals received based on Council Policy 4.1 criteria. The agreement
is for a three-year term with an option to extend one time for two (2)
years for an average of $1,690,600 per year. A 15% contingency is
included for unanticipated needs requiring additional professional
services. As the primary system implementor, they would be
responsible for the implementation, configuration, data conversions,
and other related tasks required for the upgrade.
The third agreement is an extension of the current professional services
agreement with SDI for a three-year term with an option to extend it
one time for two (2) years for an average of $400,000 per year, and a
10% contingency. The City Council approved the original agreement in
2019, and they will assist with program management and provide
technical expertise.
The Board asked if the Oracle solution would require backups.
H. Nielsen informed the Board that backup, redundancy and failover to
other systems are included in the hosting and subscription costs. The
Board asked if there will be any workstation or physical hardware
required since they would be 20 years old. H. Nielsen explained that the
server hardware would not be required since this is a cloud solution. For
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desktop hardware, the city has a lease cycle, so computers are updated
every few years.
The Board inquired about the CrowdStrike Outage. H. Nielsen
confirmed that CrowdStrike is a security partner with Microsoft. The
outage was due to a CrowdStrike update and not an external attack. The
City will apply any updates to test environments before applying them
to the working production environment to ensure there are no issues.
The Board asked about relational databases and querying capabilities.
H. Nielsen indicated that queries can be done through technical support
service requests. The Board asked if field staff has remote devices to
access the cloud -based system. H. Nielsen indicated that field staff have
ruggedized laptop computers to support remote work.
The Board asked about system continuity. H. Nielsen informed the
Board that Oracle has service level agreements with system up times
based on contracts in place. The only issue will be if you do not have
internet access since it is cloud -based.
H. Nielsen introduced M. Roberts, Business Information Systems
Administrator, as the project manager and J. Fano, Business
Information Analyst, as a technical resource assisting with the
configuration and implementation of this project.
6. QUARTERLY STATUS REPORT FOR PRE -QUALIFIED
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES, CONSTRUCTION, AND SPOT BID
ELECTRIC MATERIAL PURCHASES FOR THE QUARTER
ENDING ON DUNE 30, 2024.
J. Lonneker, Assistant General Manager — Electric Services, informed
the Board that the last quarter had two instances where a Design -Build
Master Agreement (DBMA) was awarded with a single bidder. J.
Lonneker shared that APU and the Public Works Department are
working to qualify additional Design -Build firms to increase the
number of bids on these mid -size capital projects up to $3 million to
foster competition and provide competitive pricing. The additional
firms are being reviewed for their qualifications and staff expects new
firms to be added by the second quarter of this fiscal year. J. Lonneker
added that capital expenditures to date are in line with the budget. She
explained that although the percentage of budget spent for cable
replacement is low for this time period, APU has entered into the
construction phase for these multi -year projects which will increase the
expenditure rate.
C. Parker, Assistant General Manager — Water Services, stated that
water did not utilize the design -build master construction agreement
last fiscal year. The groundwater treatment program used most of the
funding in the capital improvement program. APU decided to upgrade
the wells at the same time as the treatment for PFAS and Orange
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County Water District only provided reimbursement for the treatment
facilities. To ensure well sites will be operational for a long period after
treatment was completed, rehabilitation work was included in the
project. Next fiscal year the pipeline replacement program will
continue. The water capital improvement program was completed as
planned last fiscal year.
7. UPDATE ON ELECTRIC SYSTEM ITEMS.
J. Lonneker informed the Board of a recent tour of the construction site
for the Cerritos Avenue and Nutwood Street underground conversion
project with Council Member Leon. Crews were trenching and
installing conduit along Ball Road in front of Magnolia High
School. Council Member Leon appreciated the planning that goes into
the project such as doing the work in front of schools during
summertime and minimizing traffic impact by covering the trenches
before rush hour or shifting to nightwork.
J. Lonneker updated the Board on the transformer replacement projects
including work on Priscilla Avenue and Virginia Street. This was a
planned eight -hour outage on a warm day, and Council Member Faessel
and Board Member M. Lee arranged provisions for a cool center at a
nearby library and treats for the crews.
J. Lonneker shared photos of the Fourth of July event at Peralta Park.
This event allows the community to see a different side of APU and
gives employees a chance to engage with customers through bucket
truck rides. J. Lonneker shared that it was a good opportunity for the
crews to use the new all electric bucket trucks to learn how best to
operate and maximize battery usage and the different control features.
After eight hours of continuous use, APU crews reverted to the diesel
truck to finish out the day of rides, as the battery was getting low.
8. UPDATE ON WATER SYSTEM ITEMS.
C. Parker presented an update on the water supply condition, stating
that the rain season was about average this year. The Orange County
Groundwater Basin (Basin) is in good shape. The Basin is working on a
Resilience Plan, which will include evaluation of new recharge
possibilities, improving water quality, and other areas to improve the
resilience of the Basin. The State Water Project (SWP) is in good
condition as well. The allocation this year is 40%, so that means that
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (MWD) can put
water in storage. The Delta Conveyance Project, which will move water
around the delta to mitigate environmental effects and bring water to
the state during wet periods so it can be stored for future use, will be
coming for a vote at MWD to proceed with the design this fall. The
Colorado River Basin (CRB) has not degraded this last year and
negotiations continue with the seven states to solve the structural
demand deficit on the system. C. Parker shared that APU will present to
the Board on the new Water Use Efficiency Standards that were
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recently completed by the State Water Resources Control Board, which
will mandate permanent lower water use by water districts.
C. Parker shared that staff completed the valve turning metric year,
which includes turning over 8,100 valves. The valve turning program is
needed to ensure isolation of the system for emergencies and planned
work to lesson impact to customers. It also assists with flushing the
system periodically to improve water quality to the customers.
The Board asked why the storage in the SWP system has been reduced
by 2 1 % from last year. C. Parker explained that last year was a wet year
and this year is an average year, so storage will reduce with those
circumstances. However, the storage in the system is still above the 30-
year average, so storage is in good condition. The Board inquired if
evaporation plays into the reduction of the SWP storage. C. Parker
stated yes, but it is only 2-3% of evaporation for reservoirs in the state.
The Board asked if we think the negotiations will be successful on the
CRB. C. Parker shared that he does not think they will complete the
negotiations by the goal, which is end of the calendar year, but believes
the overall negotiations will be successful.
9. UPDATE ON FINANCE AND ENERGY RESOURCES ITEMS.
B. Beelner, Assistant General Manager — Finance and Energy
Resources, discussed the monthly Finance Dashboard with the Board
through June 2024. B. Beelner mentioned that year to date electric
revenue was 4% ($11.8M) below budget due primarily to lower than
projected retail demand. B. Beelner shared that the drop in revenue was
more than offset by operating costs, which ended the year under budget
by 20.0% ($84.8M). The lower than expected operating expenditures
were due to two main factors; APU spent $53.9 million less on power
supply costs than budgeted due to lower coal, transmission, and natural
gas prices, and lower retail demand, secondly APU spent $30 million
less than budgeted on supplies and equipment with $27 million of that
variance expected to be carried over to fiscal year 2025. B. Beelner
then mentioned that the year-to-date water revenue was 4.6% below
budget ($4.6M) due to the drop in water consumption by APU's
customers as a result of milder temperatures and wetter than normal
weather. Water costs for the fiscal year were below budget by 9.4%
($8.OM) net positive budget variance $3.4M.
B. Beelner then informed the Board that the City Council approved the
water and electric revenue bonds that the Board recommended to the
Council at its May meeting. B. Beelner plans to price the water bonds
on July 31st and will price the Electric Bonds on August 6th and will
update the Board at the next meeting.
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10. UPDATE ON ADMINISTRATION AND RISK SERVICES
ITEMS.
J. Lehman, Assistant General Manager, Administration and Risk
Services, provided the Board with an update on the global CrowdStrike
outage that occurred Friday, July 21, 2024, which impacted a multitude
of businesses including airlines, mass transit, hospitals and some
financial institutions. Two of the customer -facing systems were briefly
impacted by the outage. J. Lehman provided an overview of the actions
taken during the outage including messages that were placed on social
media to keep customers informed on the status of the systems. Overall,
the impacts of the global CrowdStrike outage were mitigated.
J. Lehman provided an update on the Administration and Risk Services
Dashboard and shared that the legislature has been on recess since July
3rd and would not return until August 5th, and that the key issues
discussed last month were the same for July:
• SB 308 — Carbon Dioxide Removal Targets: this bill is being
opposed by APU;
• SB 1255 — Water Rate Assistance Program: this bill is being
opposed by APU; and
• AB 1834 — Energy Market Design Clean -Up: this bill is being
supported by APU.
J. Lehman then reviewed the safety metrics and shared that there had
been a back strain injury during the reporting period. APU continued to
meet its safety metrics, and training and job site inspections were
conducted regularly to help raise attention to safety matters and to
ensure proper techniques were employed when working.
11. ITEMS BY SECRETARY.
D. Lee shared agenda items for next month:
• Alternative procurement strategy to address ongoing supply
chain issues;
Transmission analytics service agreement; and,
• Power supply agreements for separate wind and solar.
D. Lee shared the following updates:
• Community meetings and safety walks were provided in
collaboration with the Anaheim Police Department and
Anaheim Planning and Building's Code Enforcement Division,
to identify safety issues and address lighting concerns;
• Dusk to Dawn Lighting program assisted a storage facility who
was experiencing security issues;
• The second annual Bright Girls program where the students
participated in STEM activities, which included assembling
solar car kits, and a tour of Lenain Water Treatment facility;
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Anaheim Union High School District held a ceremony to
recognize summer interns. M. Avelino -Walker was invited to
speak at the event and highlighted different programs that APU
provides to support students; and,
Commercial electric vehicles (EV) are starting to proliferate
within the City. Examples include a FedEx electric van and an
Amazon electric van. D. Lee expressed the need to ensure the
grid is prepared for commercial EVs as they come online.
T. Bilezikjian thanked APU for all the support and care that is provided
to the residents.
A. Pham thanked staff for providing community events and supporting
the residents and businesses in the City.
M. Lee thanked staff for providing student engagement opportunities.
J. Seymour thanked the Board for the strong discussions during his
absence.
13. ADJOURN: (NEXT REGULAR MEETING ON AUGUST 28, 2024,
AT 5:00 P.M.)
Respectfully su itted,
Dukku Lee
Public Utilities General Manager
M. Lee moved to Adjourn the
Regular Meeting in the
Gordon Hoyt Conference
Center at 6:55 p.m. to the
Board's Regular Meeting date
of August 28, 2024, at 5:00
p.m. A. Abdulrahman
seconded the motion.
MOTION CARRIED: 5-0.
ABSTAINED: 0.
ABSENT: 2.
[A. McMenamin and
T. Ibrahim]
* Indicates item(s) that will be forwarded to City Council for action upon recommendation by the Board.
** Indicates item(s) that will be forwarded to the City Clerk and City Council for informational purposes.
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