reedy creek improvement district
Transcription
reedy creek improvement district
REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Reedy Creek Improvement District The History of Florida’s One of a Kind Improvement District It’s Diverse Environment, and Services Provided by RCID’s Environmental Sciences Laboratory Betsy Kent Quality Assurance Specialist REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT The Reedy Creek Improvement District The District encompasses approximately 40 square miles. RCID has built and maintained134 miles of roadways and 67 miles of waterways. REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT History The Reedy Creek Improvement District was created on May 12, 1967. That was the day Florida Governor Claude Kirk signed legislation creating a special taxing district to govern a 25,000-acre area of Central Florida that locals considered remote and uninhabitable. REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT The desire to grow, experiment and innovate without encumbering neighboring residents and businesses, inspired Walt Disney to purchase 25,000 acres of remote property that sat in Orange County (approximately 18,800 acres) and Osceola County (6,200 acres). REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT It took a real visionary to see a future for the project, if for no other reason than basic necessities – power and water – were nowhere to be found. The nearest high-voltage power line was more than 15 miles away. There wasn’t even a discussion about a water line since neither Orange nor Osceola counties had the capacity to supply the water needed. REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT The question everyone asked was: Where are they going to get power and water …and who is going to pay for it? ???????? REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT The legislature came up with some innovative solutions and RCID was born. The District was given authority and responsibilities to provide government services such as land use regulation and planning, building codes, surface water control, drainage, waste treatment, utilities, roads, bridges, fire protection, emergency medical services and environmental services. REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT All of the necessary basic services were in place when the Magic Kingdom opened on Oct. 1, 1971 REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT RCID Systems & Services • • • • • • • • • Water Supply Electric Generation Fire Protection Emergency Services Environmental Sciences Wastewater Solid Waste Chilled Water Hot Water REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Water Supply The water supply for RCID comes from the Upper Floridan Aquifer. The water is of consistently high quality; therefore, no treatment other than chlorination is required. RCID’s water system processed an average of 16.8 MGD for public use in 2013. An additional 5.7 MGD of reclaimed water was used for irrigation and non-potable uses. REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Electric Generation The District operates and maintains an electrical generation, transmission and distribution system. The system includes a state-of-the-art cogeneration facility currently aggregating 55,000 kW of net capability. RCID purchases the remainder of its needs from other utilities. REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Energy Garden Harvest Power’s Energy Garden was unveiled in February 2014. The facility began by collecting food waste from Walt Disney World’s table-service restaurants and has quickly drawn additional customers in central Florida. REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Fire Protection REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Emergency Services Reedy Creek Fire Department’s emergency response team is anchored by a communications center that dispatches help to a caller on Disney property within 45 seconds of the incoming call. That call-to-dispatch efficiency is enhanced with high-tech equipment that targets the location of the 911 caller. REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Environmental Sciences REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Agency Interaction • • • • • • • • • Lake County Orange County Osceola County Polk County FL. Dept. Env. Protection FL. Dept. of Health FL. Dept. of Transportation Water Management Districts US EPA REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Purpose and Goals: • Water Quality Monitoring • Pollution Control • Data Assessment • Environmental Planning REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Permit/Compliance Monitoring •1,650 Sample Sites Monitored •12,700 Samples /Year •90,450 Analyses/Year REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Major Pollutant Activities: Sediment From Construction Stormwater Runoff REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Impacts & Options REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Impacts & Options REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Sample Locations •Outside Drainage •Final Discharge •Development Areas •Natural Areas Major Drainage Basins: • Reedy Creek • Bonnet Creek REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Field Operations Department •Observe and Document Site Conditions •Measure Field Parameters •Collect Environmental Samples •Operate 4x4 Vehicles, boats, pumps, computers REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Chemistry Department • Organic chemistry: VOC’s, SOC’, & Pesticides • Metals: Trace & Minerals • General Chemistry REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Microbiology Department • Bacteriological Analysis • Surface water • Drinking water • Effluent • Marine water REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Pollution Control Department • Investigate pollution sources • Compliance with Federal & State water quality rules • Develops special water quality & aesthetic improvement projects • Education REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Aquatic Biology/Watershed Management • • • • Monitor Watershed Conditions Assess Trends Interpret Environmental Changes Fisheries Management REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Macroinvertebrate Biology • Biological Diversity Monitoring • Indicator organisms: • macroinvertebrates • Permits REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Quality Assurance Department •Standards and Procedures •Certification •Audits & Assessments •Precision & Accuracy •Reporting •Document Control •LIMS Data Base REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Solid Waste The solid waste system consists of a fleet of vehicles for the collection and transfer of recyclables and solid waste, a solid waste transfer station, and a recyclable collections facility. The highly successful recycling system processes over 24,000 tons annually of aluminum, paper, steel cans, food waste, cardboard, and plastic containers each year. The District has been a pioneer in the use of sustainable technology to reduce the amount of waste requiring landfill disposal. Its programs extend beyond traditional paper, steel and aluminum recycling to include innovative programs such as food waste collection and concrete debris recycling. District policies emphasize the importance of efficient and environmentally sound waste collection and disposal. REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Chilled Water The chilled water system provides chilled water for air conditioning through portions of the District. Chilled water is generated utilizing 22 centrifugal chillers and one absorption chiller located at three facilities. The District has a five million gallon chilled water thermal storage facility. REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Hot Water The hot water system provides hot water for heating and food preparation purposes through portions of the District. The heat generated by the electrical cogeneration plant is used to heat the water for a portion of the system, and the remainder is heated by three gas-fired hot water generators. REEDY CREEK IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT Questions? Betsy Kent Quality Assurance Specialist RCID Environmental Sciences [email protected]