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©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
City
to purchase sewer truck In the
face of plugged dry wells and dirty catch basins, the City of Sisters is
purchasing a long-awaited sewer truck. The truck will speed up many tasks,
including flushing sewer lines and cleaning dirt, cinders, leaves and pine
needles out of the city's catch basins and dry wells.
The City of Sisters has over
200 catch basins and dry wells in the streets and most of them have never
been cleaned, Gary Frazee, public works director, said in a staff report
for the City Council in its meeting on Thursday, December 11.
The public works department
has been casually looking for a sewer truck since construction began on
the new sewer in 2000. In the last three months, Frazee received three
proposals for trucks.
Frazee is recommending the
city purchase one of two trucks, depending on the price.
"Both trucks would do the
job City of Sisters needs to do, so we had to weigh the pros and cons
of both," Frazee said.
One truck, a Vac Con on a
1993 International Chassis, was previously owned by the City of Salem
and recently sent to state surplus, to be sold to the highest bidder.
Frazee said he is waiting to see if the truck will be sold at a price
below $50,000.
The other truck is a newly-painted
Vactor on a 1989 Ford Chassis from Ben Ko Matic in Portland, at a price
of $67,000.
While the Vac Con truck will
most likely be cheaper, Vactor trucks have additional features which would
help routine work at the city.
Frazee said a Vactor could
be used to clean the water feature at Barclay Park.
"Last week, I had to drain
the water to clean the pond," he wrote in his report. "The water was getting
dirty from all the leaves. It took over four hours to drain the pond with
a little submersible pump, but with the Jetter/Vactor truck, we could
drain that pond in minutes."
Frazee said in the staff report
Jetter/Vactor trucks are multi-task capable and can use high pressure
water and vacuum to locate water leaks and utilities.
Prineville, Redmond and Bend
all use Vactor sewer trucks for their sewer maintenance.
The City of Sisters currently
rents a water truck from Barclay Contractors every three months for $55
an hour to flush the sewer lines, according to the staff report. Last
time, the flushing cost $660 for 12 hours, which would total $2,640 per
year.
A sewer truck would also be
used to pump out the main pump station on Rope Street, according to the
report. The city currently pays George's Septic over $2,000 annually to
perform the task every four to six weeks. |
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