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HomeMy WebLinkAboutResolutions - 1983.02.03 - 11512February 3rd, 1 983 Misc. Resolution 83014 By: Planning and Building Committee -Anne M. Hobart, Chairperson In Re: Southeastern Oakland County Sewage Disposal System To the Oakland County Board of Commissioners Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen: WHEREAS, by agreements dated November 1, 1962 and Decem- ber 1, 1962, the City of Detroit, by its Board of Water Commissi- oners and the County of Oakland, by its Drain Commissioner entered into the Wastewater Disposal Agreement for the Southeastern Oak- land County Sewage Disposal District, and WHEREAS, the City of Detroit, acting through its Board of Water Commissioners, filed with the U. S. District Court a Motion for Order to Show Cause why all suburban contract customers of the Board of Water Commissioners of the City of Detroit should not be required to enter into contract amendments containing provisions mandated by the Settlement Agreement, dated July 19, 1978; the Amended Consent Judgment, dated August 26, 1980; and by the pro- visions of Public Law 92-500 and Public Law 95-217, applicable to user charge systems and sewer use ordinances, and a proposed amended contract having been attached to said Petition, and WHEREAS, on April 15, 1982 the U. S, District Court ordered the City of Detroit, acting through its Board of Water Commissioners to draft contract amendments for each suburban customer of the sys- tem consistent with the exhibit attached to the aforesaid Motion, and WHEREAS, the U. S. District Court also ordered that the duly authorized legislative body or agency of each suburban customer of the City of Detroit shall implement the requirements of the Amended Judgment and Rate Settlement Agreements by adopting and approving such amendments as binding and lawful contractual obligations of each suburban customer, and that such action shall be taken so that the amendments shall be in full force and effect on or before July 1, 1982. NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the "Amendment No. 2", "Amendment No 3", and "Amendment No 4" "to sewage agreement, City of Detroit - County of Oakland (Southeastern District)" are hereby approved and the Oakland County Drain Commissioner be and he is hereby authorized and directed to sign said amendments on behalf of the County of Oakland. MR. CHAIRPERSON, on behalf of the Planning and Building . Committee, I move the adoption of the foregoing resolution. PLANNING AND BUILDING COMMITTEE AMENDMENT NO 2 TO SEWAGE SERVICE AGREEMENT CITY OF DETROIT - COUNTY OF OAKLAND (SOUTHEASTERN DISTRICT) THIS AMENDATORY AGREEMENT is made this day of , 1982, between the CITY OF DETROIT r a municipal corporation organized under the laws of the State of Michigan, by its Board of Water Commissioners (hereinafter referred to as the "BOARD"), party of the first part, and the COUNTY OF OAKLAND, a public body corporate under the laws of the State of Michigan (hereinafter referred to as the "COUNTY"), party of the second part. WITNESSETH: WHEREAS, the BOARD operates a wastewater treatment works which is composed of a sewage treatment plant, located in the City of Detroit at 9300 West Jefferson Avenue, along with certain appurtenant interceptors and pumping stations, located principally at various places within the City of Detroit, but some of which are located outside the City of Detroit, which are necessary to transport the sewage to the treatment plant, and WHEREAS the BOARD has at various times entered into contracts with a number of suburban communities whereby the BOARD has agreed to make available its treatment works to pro- vide sewage treatment and disposal service to the suburban com- munities, and the suburban communities have agreed to pay rates established by the BOARD for providing such service, and WHEREAS these sewage service contracts are for the protection of the public health, safety and welfare of the people in the community, in the county, in the state, in the nation and neighboring nations, and WHEREAS, the calculation and allocation of costs of providing sewage treatment and disposal service, including transportation of the sewage, have been the subject of some disagreement between the BOARD and the suburban communities, and the rates and charges resulting from the calculation and allocation of costs have been the subject of litigation, and WHEREAS, in an effort to avoid further litigation about rates and charges for sewage treatment and disposal ser- vice, including transportation of the sewage, the BOARD and all of the suburban communities then under contract for such ser- vice, entered into a Settlement Agreement which was filed in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan on July 19, 1978, (hereinafter referred to as the 1978 Settlement Agreement) and WHEREAS, the 1978 Settlement Agreement contains rate making principles which shall govern the methods of calculating and allocating costs and the resultant rates and charges, and the Settlement Agreement also requires that all service con- tracts shall be amended to incorporate these rate making prin- ciples therein, and WHEREAS, an Amended Consent Judgment was entered in United States District Court Civil Action Numbers 77-71100 and 80-71613 which required all communities and agencies under con- tract with the City of Detroit for sewage treatment services to enact and diligently enforce sewer use and industrial waste control ordinances consistent with and at least as stringent as those of the City of Detroit, and 2 WHEREAS, a Settlement Agreement filed with the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan on August 26, 1980 resolved matters of rates, allocation of the costs of the interceptor collapse at the intersection of Hayes and 15 Mile Road, User Charge System, Industrial Cost recovery and other matters related to rates effective January 17, 1980, (hereinafter referred to as the 1980 Settlement Agreement) and WHEREAS, a Settlement Agreement filed with the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan in May, 1982 resolved matters of rates, allocation of the costs of the interceptor collapse in the Edison Corridor, Sterling Heights, Michigan; amended in part, paragraph 5B of the 1978 Rate Settlement Agreement dealing with the principle of maximum debt financing in connection with application of the additional bond test required by Section 10 of Ordinance 517-E of the City of Detroit, and other matters related to rates effective during the fiscal year July 1, 1981 through June 30, 1982 (hereinafter referred to as the 1982 Settlement Agreement), and WHEREAS, the United States Environmental Protection Agency has given the Board approval under the Step 3 grants provisions of Public Law 92-500 and Public Law 95-217 condi- tioned upon the signing of the service agreements between the Board and each contract customer providing for implementation of satisfactory user charge systems, sewer use ordinances or regulations and the Board's Industrial Cost Recovery System by each community served by the WHEREAS, the Court in Civil Action No. 77-71100 issued an Order Re Service Contract Amendments dated April 15, 1982 requiring the parties to amend their contracts as aforesaid, BOARD, and 3 NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the promises and the covenants herein made, the parties hereto agree that the existing contracts between them dated November 1, 1962 and December 1, 1962 shall be amended as follows, but except as provided herein the existing contracts remain in full force and effect: 1. The COUNTY shall pay the BOARD for sewage treatment and disposal service at such rates as the BOARD may establish from time to time. The BOARD shall review the rates annually and shall adjust them as may be necessary to maintain a proportionate dis- tribution of costs among user classes, and to generate sufficient revenue to pay the total costs of the sew- age system. Rate adjustments shall be determined according to the following principles: A. Revenue Requirements. Revenue requirements shall be based upon the finances required to meet all operating, maintenance, capital requirements including debt financing and coverage, and any obligations imposed by law, and shall reflect not only recent cost experience but also a recognition of the reasonably, estimated future cost levels dur- ing the period for which the rates are being established. (1) Operating and maintenance expenses of the system. (a) Operating and maintenance expenses shall include replacement of pro- cess equipment, accessories, or appurtenances which are necessary 4 to maintain the capacity and per- formance for which the treatment works is designed and constructed. (b) The rate for operation and mainte- nance expenses, including replace- ment, shall include a factor to be applied to the volume of sewage delivered by the COUNTY, and shall also include surcharges to be. applied to the discharges of indi- vidual users whose loadings of specified pollutants exceed normal loadings. The BOARD shall specify the pollutants to be surcharged, and shall define normal loadings of these pollutants. The rate shall conform to Section 204(b)(1) (A) of Public Law 92-500, as amended, and regulations of the United States Environmental Pro- tection Agency (hereinafter refer- red to as the U.S. EPA), being 40 CFR, 35.929 through 35.929-3. (2) Maximum Debt Financing. The BOARD shall obtain capital funds for the expansion, renewal and reconstruction of common use or solely suburban use major capital assets or improvements from the issuance of revenue bonds, to the maximum extent possible together with maximum use of coverage monies generated thereby. "Coverage" means the excess of revenues required to meet the coverage test over revenue require- ments determined without respect to the coverage test. "Coverage Test" means the requirement imposed by Section 10 of Ordinance 517-E of the City of Detroit which provides that in the year of issuance of revenue bonds of stand- ing equal to those presently outstand- ing, estimated net revenues shall be equal to at least one and one-half (1 1/2) times the largest amount of com- bined principal and interest to fall due in any future operating year on any bonds then payable out of the net reve- nues of the system, including such additional bonds then being issued. Detroit shall apply the principle of maximum debt financing set forth herein consistent with an interpretation of the additional bonds test which incor- porates the following principles: (a) Estimated investment income of the DWSD will not be included in determining revenues. (b) Future operating and maintenance expenses estimated to result from the addition of capital facilities for which bonds are issued, shall be included as an expense in 6 determining net revenues only with respect to the periods in which it is reasonably estimated that they will be incurred. The parties acknowledge that Detroit can comply with the additional bonds test by setting future rates suf- ficient to defray estimated future operation and maintenance expenses in the periods in which they will be incurred. (3) Depreciation. User charges shall not reflect a charge for the depreciation of physical assets, which together with a rate of return and provision for operation and maintenance expense would generate revenues in excess of system revenue requirements including coverage. B. Uniform Allocations of Costs Incurred. The recovery of costs incurred by the system shall be accomplished through the institu- tion of rates which assign, allocate and apportion such costs to all. ratepayers on the basis of principles uniformly applicable to all, it being the intention of the par- ties that such rates (whether designed on the utility or cash basis) will, as nearly as is practical, recover from each customer class the respective costs of providing ser- vice regardless of the ratepayer's loca- tion. In particular: (1) If rates are based upon a system of charging a percentage rate of return on net asset or capital structure rate base, (through the use of the so-called utility basis of rate making) there shall be no differential in the rate of return charged to customers residing or located within the City of Detroit and customers residing or located without the City of Detroit. Nothing herein contained shall prohibit the BOARD from designing its rates on the so-called cash basis. (2) If rates for the transportation charge to customers served by the Oakland- Macomb interceptor are based upon the utility basis with a percentage rate of return, such rate of return shall be the same as the rate of return charged to other customers of the system. Nothing contained herein shall prohibit the BOARD from employing the cash basis • of ratemaking, including ratemaking for customers served by the Oakland-Macomb interceptor. "Transportation Charge" means the aggregate of all costs assigned or allocated to contracting parties served by the Macomb-Oakland interceptor which are not costs incur- red for service in common with other customers, including all costs of oper- ation and maintenance, depreciation, and, to the extent rates are based on a .rate of return or other charge based on plant value, the cost resulting from application of such charge or rate to the inceptor and related equipment. (3) Should the cash basis be used in any fUture rate study, the allocation of debt service costs to all customers or facilities shall be based upon the sys- tem weighted average interest rate at the time. (4) Surcharges shall be utilized to recover incremental operating, maintenance and replacement costs incurred in treating sewage which, at the point of dis- charge, contains specified pollutants in concentrations exceeding those of .normal domestic sewage, as defined by the BOARD. (5)• All costs other than those costs recov- ered by surcharges as herebefore set forth, may he recovered by volume alone, or by volume and surcharges, or by any method which provides a distri bution of costs reasonably related to the service provided. C. • Following the computation of rates for cus- tomers residing or located within the City of Detroit and customers residing or located without the City of Detroit liursuant to the principles set forth in this contract, such rates shall be further adjusted by deducting from the revenues to be charged customers within the City of Detroit and adding to the revenues to be charged customers without the City of Detroit, and making appropriate adjustments of the rates for sewage service to be charged to such customers, an amount determined as follows: (1) For the fiscal year 1981 (July 1, 1980 through June 30, 1981), such amounts shall be the sum of $1,102,500. For each fiscal year thereafter, such amount shall be increased by 5%, deter- mined upon a compounded basis. For example, the amount for fiscal 1982 shall be the sum of $1,157,625. For fiscal 1983, this amount shall be the sum of $1,215,506, and similarly for succeeding fiscal years. (2) This payment shall be made, and rates so adjusted as a payment to reflect the cost of indirect benefits or services provided by the City of Detroit to the BOARD for common use facilities within the City of Detroit, such as police and fire protection, the risk of tort lia- bility, the loss of tax base that the City loses as a result of the BOARD's tax exemption, and the fact that the 10 suburbs receive sewage treatment with- out having to devote any of their land to a tax free utility. (3) In the event that the City of Detroit shall at any time hereafter render billings or accounting statements for indirect services to the BOARD such as police and fire protection, risk of tort liability, loss of tax base or any other type of contribution in lieu of taxes with the effect that such bill- ings or statements become part of the BOARD budget for ratemaking purposes, then the amount of such charges allo- cated or apportioned to the contracting customers shall be deducted from the amount determined pursuant to subsec- tion 5.C.(1) above, and shall in no event exceed the amount determined pur- suant to subsection 5.C.(1) above. D. The amount charged to the suburbs for pay- ment for indirect benefits and services set forth in Paragraph 5.(c) above shall be allocated among suburban customers in the same manner in which treatment costs are allocated. E. The BOARD may continue to include in its rates charges for direct services which the City currently renders and bills to the BOARD. Such "direct services" shall be 11 limited to the kind of services historically provided by offices, departments or agencies of the City of Detroit such as various kinds of licenses and permits, electricity, steam, water, paving, vehicles, and rubbage pickup; the Ombudsman, the cost of which will be allocated between the customers within the City of Detroit and the customers without the City of Detroit based upon the propor- tionate number of complaints or inquiries by each such class of customers; and those which were included in the BOARD's budget for fiscal 1978. No additional charges may be made for *direct services" provided by other or addi- tional City offices, departments and/or agencies without the prior agreement of the contracting parties. Such agreement shall not be unreasonably denied or delayed should it appear that the particular service or services result in a legitimate, direct benefit to the system and its customers. F. Whenever the BOARD shall undertake any study which may result in the revision of rates, including any study relating to industrial cost recovery charges, user charges, or other matters relating to the requirements of P. L. 92-500, 33 U.S.C.A. 1251 et seq. as amended, it shall notify the appropriate 12 agents of Oakland, Wayne and Macomb Coun- ties, and its other contract customers of such study, and shall, during the course of any such study, make available, upon request, to such contract customers, their agents, consultants and attorneys, any interim or preliminary reports and final reports prepared in the course of such study. In conjunction with furnishing the aforesaid reports, the City of Detroit and its consul- tants at the request of the contracting par- ties will have a conference with the con- tracting parties and representatives in order to explain and discuss the reports being provided. The requesting party shall reimburse the BOARD for any out-of-pocket costs incurred in meeting such request. Nothing contained herein shall require the City of Detroit to undertake any activity which may impede it in complying with the requirements of the consent judgment dated September 14, 1977 or other orders of the Court entered pursuant to P. L. 92-500, 33 U.S.C.A. 1251, et seq, as amended. In addi- tion, such presentation will be done in a manner, place, and time mutually convenient to all of the parties involved including the City of Detroit's consultants. 2. The COUNTY agrees that it shall adopt and enforce, and shall cause each of the local governmen- tal units within its jurisdiction for sewage treatment and disposal service as provided by the BOARD to adopt and enforce, rules and regulations to implement and maintain a revenue system whereby, as a minimum, the operation, maintenance and replacement portion of the BOARD's rates are distributed proportionately to each user or user class that is tributary to the BOARD'S treatment works. In particular, these rules and regu- lations shall provide that surcharges established by the BOARD for the recovery of incremental operation, maintenance and replacement costs of treating extraor- dinary concentrations of sewage, shall be billed to and collected from individual firms as identified by the BOARD in its billings. These rules and regula- tions shall conform to Section 204(b)(1)(A) of Public Law 92-500, as amended, and regulations of the United States Environmental Protection Agency (hereinafter referred to as the U.S. EPA), being 40 CFR, 35.929 through 35.929-3, and shall achieve a proportionate User Charge System which is effective throughout the BOARD's service area. The rules and regulations shall provide for monitoring of commercial, governmental and industrial users and shall be consistent with the mon- itoring rules and regulations of the City of Detroit. The Board shall have the right under said rules and regulations to audit all monitoring activities includ- ing the right to perform monitoring tests itself to verify the accuracy of monitoring results. 14 3. The COUNTY agrees that it shall adopt and enforce, and shall cause each of the local governmen- tal units within its jurisdiction for sewage treatment and disposal service as provided by the BOARD to adopt and enforce, rules and regulations pertaining to the use, design and construction of sewers, and the dis- charge of industrial or commercial wastes into sewers, where such sewers are tributary to the BOARD's treat- ment works. Such rules and regulations shall be con- sistent with and at least as stringent as all appli- cable provisi3ns of the pertinent ordinances adopted by the City of Detroit, these being the 1979 amend- ments to Chapter 56, Article 1, and Chapter 56, Article 6, of the Municipal Code of the City of Detroit as they may be adopted and amended from time to time. In the event any municipality or other gov- ernmental unit shall fail to adopt an ordinance as required herein, or shall fail to diligently enforce the same, the BOARD shall take appropriate action which may include suit in an appropriate court of gen- eral jurisdiction alleging such municipality's failure to adopt or enforce an ordinance, and following a hearing on the merits, should the court find that the allegations in the BOARD's petition are true, it is agreed that such court may, in such instance, grant appropriate injunctive relief against said municipal- ity or any individual discharger there; terminate the municipality's contractual right to discharge waste waters into the BOARD's system and/or to grant the BOARD such other relief as may be appropriate under the circumstances. These actions shall enable the BOARD to: 15 A. Deny or condition new or increased contribu- tions of pollutants or changes in the nature of pollutants, to the waste collection sys- tem by Industrial and Commercial Users. The terms "Industrial and Commercial" user shall mean those users defined in Section 56-6-3(H) and (P) of Detroit Ordinance No. 353-H of Chapter 56 of Article 6 passed on November 7, 1979 and as may be amended from time to time. B. Require compliance with applicable current and future National Pretreatment Standards and other more restrictive requirements as may be imposed by the BOARD promulgated by the U.S. EPA under the Federal Water Pollu- tion Control Act, 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq. C. Control, through permit, contract order, or similar means, the contribution to the waste collection system by Industrial and Commer- cial Users to ensure compliance with para- graph B above. D. Require the development of compliance sched- ules by Industrial and Commercial Users for the installation and facilities required to meet applicable National Pretreatment Stan- dards and other more restrictive require- ments as may be imposed by the BOARD. E. Require the submission of notices and self- monitoring reports from Industrial and Com- mercial Users to assess and assure compli- ance with National Pretreatment Standards and other more restrictive requirements as may be imposed by the BOARD. F. Carry out all inspection, surveillance and monitoring procedures necessary to deter- mine, independent of information supplied by Industrial and Commercial Users, compliance or noncompliance with applicable National Pretreatment Standards and other more restrictive requirements as may be imposed by the BOARD. It being further understood that the BOARD may contract with qualified parties to carry out the inspection, sur- veillance and monitoring procedures of this paragraph. G. Seek injunctive relief for noncompliance with National Pretreatment Standards and other more restrictive requirements as may be imposed by the BOARD. H. Require Industrial and Commercial Users to install containment facilities to protect the treatment works from accidental spills of critical or hazardous materials. 4. This amendment shall inure to the benefit of and be binding upon the respective parties hereto, their successors and assigns. 17 5. This amendment shall take effect upon its adoption and execution by the respective parties here- to, its approval by the City Council of the City of Detroit, and its approval by the appropriate authori- ties of the County of Oakland. 18 OAKLAND COUNTY (Southeastern District) A Michigan Municipal Corporation Witness (Oakland County) (signed) (typed) By (signed) (typed) Title Witness (Oakland County) Address (signed) (typed) Telephone Number THE CITY OF DETROIT A Michigan Municipal Corporation, by its Board of Water Commissioners Witness (Board of Water Commissioners) (signed) By (signed) (typed) (typed) Title Witness (Board of Water Commissioners) Address (signed) (typed) Telephone Number FINANCE DEPARTMENT LAW DEPARTMENT No. Date I here- Approved as to form and execution by certify that an appropriation has subject to approval by the Purchasing been made to cover the expense to be Director and the City Council incurred under this contract. Corporation Council Chief Accounting Officer Purchasing Department for the City of Detroit The original and copies of this contract have been duly executed. Purchasing Director This contract was confirmed by the Detroit City Council Date Page AMENDMENT NO. 3 SEWAGE SERVICE AGREEMENT CITY OF DETROIT - COUNTY OF OAKLAND (SOUTHEASTERN DISTRICT) This amendatory agreement is made this day of , 1982, between the City of Detroit, a municipal corporation organized under the laws of the State of Michigan, by its Board of Water Commissioners (hereinafter referred to as the "Board"), party of the first part, and the County of Oakland, a public body incorporated under the laws of the State of Michigan (hereinafter referred to as the "County"), party of the second part. WITNESSET H: WHEREAS, on November 1, 1962, the Board and County entered into a written agreement providing for the terms and conditions under which the Board would accept and treat sewage from the Southeastern Oakland County Sewage Disposal District, and WHEREAS, on December 1, 1962, the Board and the County entered into amendment number 1 to the written agreement of November 1, 1962, and WHEREAS, the Board and County have agreed to enter into a written amendment, amendment number 2, to the November 1, 1962, agree- ment to comply with an order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan dated April 15, 1982, issued in Civil Action Number 77-71100, which amendment number 2 will be executed by the parties contemporaneous with the execution of the present document, and WHEREAS, the Board and County have further agreed to enter into an amendment, to be known as amendment number 3, to the November 1, 1962, agreement, which amendment number 3 shall identify the terms and conditions of the November 1, 1962, agreement which are rendered ineffective by virtue of amendment number 2, and which amendment number 3 shall further serve to revise certain paragraphs of amend- ment number 2 which have been identified by the parties to require clarification, NOW, THEREFORE, IN CONSIDERATION OF PROMISES AND COVENANTS HEREIN MADE, IT IS HERETO AGREED that the existing contracts between them dated November 1, 1962, and December 1, 1962, and , 1982, shall be amended as follows, but except as provided herein the existing contracts remain in full force and effect: 1. By virtue of amendment number 2 to the November 1, 1962, agreement, paragraphs 3, 4, and 5 of the November 1, 1962, agreement are deleted and rendered ineffective. 2. Amendment number 2 to the November 1, 1962, agreement is hereby revised in the following particulars: A. Paragraph 1. A. (1) (b) is hereby revised to read as (b) The rate for operation and maintenance expenses, including replacement, shall be applied to the volume of sewage delivered by the County, and shall also include sur- charges to be applied to the discharges of follows: individual users whose loadings of specified pollutants exceed normal loadings. The Board shall specify the pollutants to be surcharged, and shall define normal loadings of these pollutants. The rate shall conform to Section 204(b) (1) (A) of Public Law 92-500, as amended, and regulations of the United States Environ- mental Protection Agency (hereinafter referred to as the "U.S. EPA"), being 40 CFR, 35.929 through 35.929-3. B. Paragraph 1. B. (5) of amendment number 2 to the November 1, 1962, agreement is hereby revised to read as follows: (5) All costs other than those costs recovered by surcharges as herebefore set forth, may be recovered by volume alone, or by volume and surcharges, or by any mutually agreeable method which provides a distribution of costs reasonably related to the service provided. 3. This amendment and amendment number 2 to the November 1, 1962, agreement shall be construed as complimentary to one another and not as being in conflict except as expressly stated herein. 4. This amendment shall inure to the benefit and be binding upon the respective parties hereto, their successors and assigns. 5. This amendment shall take effect upon its adoption and execution by the respective parties hereto, its approval by the City Council of the City of Detroit and its approval by the appropriate authorities of the County of Oakland. AMENDMENT NO. 4 SEWAGE SERVICE AGREEMENT CITY OF DETROIT - COUNTY OF OAKLAND (SOUTHEASTERN DISTRICT) This amendatory agreement is made this day of 1982, between the City of Detroit, a municipal corporation organized under the laws of the State of Michigan, by its Board of Water Commissioners (hereinafter referred to as the "Board"), party of the first part, and the County of Oakland, a public body incorpo- rated under the laws of the State of Michigan (hereinafter referred to as the "County"), party of the second part. WITNESSETH: WHEREAS, on November 1, 1962, the Board and County entered into a written agreement providing for the terms and conditions under which the Board would accept and treat sewage from the Southeastern Oakland County Sewage Disposal District, and WHEREAS, on December 1, 1962, the Board and the County entered into Amendment Number 1 to the written agreement of November 1, 1962, and WHEREAS, the Board and County have agreed to enter into a written amendment, Amendment Number 2, to the November 1, 1962, agreement to comply with an order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan dated April 15, 1982, issued in Civil Action Number 77-71100, which Amendment Number 2 will be executed by the parties contemporaneous with the execution of the present document, and WHEREAS, the Board and County have further agreed to enter into an amendment, to be known as Amendment Number 3, to the November 1, 1962, Agreement, which Amendment Number 3 shall clarify the terms and conditions of the November 1, 1962, agreement which are rendered ineffective by virtue of Amendment Number 2 and which revises certain provisions of Amendment Number 2. NOW, THEREFORE, IN CONSIDERATION OF PROMISES AND COVENANTS HEREIN MADE, IT IS HERETO AGREED that the existing contract be- tween them dated November 1, 1962, and December 1, 1962, shall be amended as follows, but except as provided herein the existing contracts remain in full force and effect: 1. Paragraph 2 of the November 1, 1962 agreement is hereby deleted and replaced by the following new paragraph number 2; 2. The County shall pay the DWSD for any and all sewage accepted by the DWSD for disposal hereunder in the manner set forth below: A. The annual charge for sewage disposal shall be composed of two elements: (a) Sanitary flow - The actual reported water sales for the 14 municipalities within the district. (b) Estimated non-sanitary or residual flow - A figure determined by the simple arithmetic average of the annual residual flow for each of the most recent 10 years. The annual residual flow results from subtracting the annual reported water sales from the annual actual sewage volume as measured by the master sewage meter serving the district. B. The charge for sewage disposal services shall be formulated in the following manner: (a) The sanitary flow element - The district will report water sales within the district for the 14 municipalities each quarter. The reported water sales multiplied by the metered suburban sewage rate, as determined by the rate model, will be the quarterly charge. The total of the four quarterly charges will represent the total amount due from the district for sanitary flow for the rate year. Remittance and report of quarterly water sales would be submitted to the DWSD 45 days after the end of each quarter. (b) Estimated non-sanitary or residual flow - The simple arithmetic average of the ten year non-sanitary or residual flow multiplied by the metered suburban sewage rate as determined by the rate model will be the annual amount due from the district for the estimated non- sanitary or residual flow. Remittance of one-fourth of the annual amount will be sub- mitted to the city 45 days after the end of each quarter. C. The DWSD shall determine the rate for sewage disposal services utilizing projections of sanitary and esti- mated non-sanitary or residual flow in a rate model for cost allocation. The projections for sanitary flow and estimated non-sanitary or residual flow will be based upon the following: (a) Sanitary flow - DWSD will project sanitary flow based upon a projection of the volume of water sales within the district determined in a manner consistent with that employed for all unmetered suburban customers. (b) Estimated non-sanitary or residual flow - DWSD will project the estimated non-sanitary or residual flow based upon the simple arith- metic average of the annual non-sanitary or residual flow for the most recent ten year period. D. Adjustments - The County and the City agree that they will cooperate and work together in attempting to agree upon an appropriate adjustment, if any, to the County's estimated non- sanitary or residual flow representing an estimate of the volume of such flow which, when during storm events flow exceeds the capa- city of the system, is discharged into the Detroit River as storm- water overflow, and, therefore, does not receive treatment at the DWSD treatment plant. Such adjustment, if any, and if reasonable and agreeable to the County and the City, shall be implemented commencing with the fiscal year 1983 - 1984." 2. This Amendment, Number 4, Amendment Number 3, and Amendment Number 2, to the November 1, 1962, Agreement shall be construed as complimentary to one another and not as being in conflict. 3. This amendment shall inure to the benefit and be binding upon the respective parties hereto, their successors and assigns. 4. This amendment shall take effect upon its adoption and execution by the respective parties hereto, its approval by the City Council of the City of Detroit and its approval by the appro- priate authorities of the County of Oakland. #8 301 4 February 3, 1983 day of 983 February LYN/. ALLEN, C"ount'53 —Cl 'er;JRgi"ster oF Moved by Hobart supported by Fortino the resolution be adopted. Discussion followed, Vote on resolution: AYES: Fortino, Gosling, Hobart, Jackson, R. Kuhn, S. Kuhn, McDonald, Moffitt, Moore, Nelson, Olsen, Perinoff, Pernick, Rewold, Wilcox, Caddell, Doyon, Foley. (18) NAYS: Lanni, Law, McConnell, McPherson, Calandro. (5) A sufficient majority having voted therefor, the resolution was adopted. STATE OF M1CHICAN) COUNTY OF OAKLAND) I, Lynn 0. Allen, Clerk of the County of Oakland and having a seal, do hereby certify that I have compared the annexed copy of Miscellaneous Resolution #83014 adopted by the Oakland County Board of Commissioners at tfteir meeting held on February. 3, 1583 with the original record thereof now remaining in my office., and that it is a true and correct transcript therefrom, and of the whole thereof. In Testimony Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said County at Pontiac, Michigan this 3rd Deputy Clerk