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Writing your Electric Cooperative Chapter July 7, 2011
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Project Background and Purpose Partnership through MACOG between SEMA, regional planning commissions, and the Association of Missouri Electric Cooperatives. Purpose of this project is to make all rural electric cooperatives (REC’s) eligible for funding through PDM, HMGP, and the 406 Stafford Act.
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How is this similar to county- level HM plans? The same requirements still apply. Planning process Public involvement Documentation Risk Assessments Mitigation strategies Must include “brick and mortar” projects Plan maintenance
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How is this different from county-level HM plans? The plan has been developed in two sections: Statewide information REC-specific chapters with local data, information, and mitigation actions. Each RPC has been assigned RECs which generally correspond to their geographic service area. REC chapters will NOT meet the requirements by themselves.
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How is this different from county-level HM plans? All chapters will be identical in layout and formatting. The process has been standardized across the state for: Public Involvement Risk Assessments Implementation and Maintenance
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Section 1 The first section is a statewide plan which includes: Introduction Planning Process Public Involvement Process Risk Assessment Hazard profiles Generalized Mitigation Strategies Plan Implementation and Maintenance
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Section 2 Series of 47 REC chapters following the same format. Cooperative-specific information including: Asset inventory by type Standardized Local Risk Assessment Historical hazard events Non-historical hazard event Mitigation Strategies
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What’s the deadline? Chapters must be completed by December 1, 2011. Includes time for quality control and review by the lead RPC. Project Schedule: Mapping and data collection: July/August 2011 Meeting 1: Early August 2011 Meeting 2: Late August 2011 Meeting 3: Early September 2011 Chapter composition: September-October 2011 First draft due October 15, 2011
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How do I get started?
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Step 1: Make contact Initial contacts between the RPCs and RECs were established during meetings in January/February 2011. During the month of July, re-establish contact via email or telephone. Schedule your first meeting as soon as possible. Follow public involvement process. Invite other local jurisdictions, critical facilities, non-profits, higher education, large industrial facilities, etc. Public review and commentary of plan.
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Step 2: Mapping Preparation Work to complete generalized mapping for the REC. Identify cooperative boundaries. Use selected sources for information. Maps must coordinate with the identified hazards.
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Step 2: Mapping, continued USGS Quadrangle Maps Population Density within the cooperative boundary Hazard-specific mapping by cooperative Tornadoes Floodplain Levee networks Dam Network Sinkhole occurrences/soil types Earthquake zones, fault lines, etc.
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Step 3: Meeting preparation Prior to your first meeting, gather data related to the following: Hazard types for the REC area Hazard event records for the REC area Sources to utilize: NCDC and NOAA CERI DNR MO State Hazard mitigation plan County-level plans
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Step 4: Meeting 1 During your first meeting, explain the purpose to all participants. Learn about the structure of your REC Business structure General customer information Critical facilities which receive service Review natural hazards which affect your REC. These will vary widely based on geographic location.
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Step 4: Meeting 1(cont.) Request help from your REC with gathering data related to the following: Asset inventory (see worksheet) Damage estimates by hazard event Outage estimates by hazard event Ask each committee member to consider ongoing and potential mitigation actions for their REC.
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Step 4: Meeting 1(cont.) Set a date for your 2 nd meeting. The 2 nd meeting will be your deadline for: REC data collection Identification of ongoing and potential mitigation actions.
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Step 5: Meeting 2 Collect information requested. Asset data, hazard event information, etc. Discuss the ongoing and potential hazard mitigation actions which were identified by the committee. Provide suggestions for potential actions if you feel the list is lacking. Create groups of actions which have similar characteristics, purposes, or intentions.
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Step 5: Meeting 2 Use these groups to identify overarching goals and objectives. Analyze each action for placement within the goals and objectives. Many actions may fit into more than one goal and/or objective!! Set date for meeting #3.
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Step 6: Meeting 3 Prioritization of actions is the goal of meeting #3. The prioritization process has been standardized for all RECs.
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Prioritization Process All action should be divided into three groups: Tier 1 Actions: Focus on physical infrastructure protection and improvements which ensure continued, quality service to reduce power outages. Tier 2 Actions: Create and maintain working relationship to reduce and prevent the impact of power outages. Tier 3 Actions: Potential projects for other system improvements.
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Cost-benefit analysis Ask group members to assign a cost ranking and benefit ranking to each of the identified actions. Include a short narrative concerning the capabilities of your REC. Do they have in-house engineering or GIS? What does their overall budget look like?
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Cost-benefit of actions Low Cost Mitigation actions which are included in regular business practice and do not require outside funding or resources. - Inspections - Minor system improvements (replacement and repair) - Vegetation management - Public education - Cooperative agreements with outside agencies - Research on potential system improvements Medium Cost Mitigation actions which would require additional budgeting by local cooperatives in conjunction with outside funding. - Intermediate system improvements (alternate source wiring, line conversion, back-up generators, etc.) - Planning tools (GIS, mapping, etc.) - Implementation of research High Cost Mitigation actions which are beyond the internal capabilities of the cooperative OR require sizeable costs upfront which the cooperative cannot achieve fiscally without outside funding. - Major system improvements (system wide pole and wiring upgrades, etc.) - Work which requires contracting with outside sources or firms - Implementation of new technology
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Benefit of actions Low Benefit - Actions which do not directly impact system preservation or improvements. - Actions which do not improve customer service and reduce outages. Medium Benefit - Actions which directly impact system preservation, but may not address improvements. - Actions which improve customer service and reduce response time to outages. High Benefit - Actions which directly impact system preservation and improvement. - Actions which prevent further asset loss or damage. - Actions which reduce system-wide outages.
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Writing your chapter All REC chapters will utilize the same template in order to ensure continuity. 7 sections Introduction Planning process Asset inventory Hazards and Risk Assessment Methodology Risk Assessment Mitigation Strategies Plan Implementation and Maintenance
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Sections 1-3 Introduction: Includes basic business information (customers, business policy, etc.) Planning process: Information on participants and meeting summaries Asset Inventory: Overview of all cooperative assets.
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Sections 4-5: Hazards and Risk Assessment Methodology Identifies hazards specific to the cooperative. Hazards divided into two types: Historical hazards: those with measurable previous impact upon the service area. Non-historical hazards: those with no previous record of impact.
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Sections 4-5: Hazards and Risk Assessment Methodology The risk for each Historical Hazard is based on two characteristics: Probability of occurrence Potential extent of damage
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Historical Hazards Probability of Occurrence: Formula 1: Total # of events/number of years of record = potential frequency Formula 2: Number of damage-causing events/total number of events = percentage of occurrences which cause damage
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Historical Hazards Potential Extent of Damage Formula 1- Total cost of damages / total number of events = Average damage cost per event Formula 2: Average cost per event / total assets affected = Percentage of infrastructure damaged. Formula 3: Number of outages reported / total number of customers services = percentage of customers affected.
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Sections 4-5: Hazards and Risk Assessment Methodology The risk for each Non-Historical Hazard is based on two characteristics: Probability of Occurrence Assumes less than 1% in any given year based on lack of data. Potential Extent of Damage – Base upon research or note data insufficiency.
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Chart examples Table 1.9AHEC Thunderstorm/High Wind Event Summary Event date Damage estimates Outages Reported Event date Damage estimates Outages Reported 7/19/96 $1,000 125 4/15/03 $50 6 6/21/97 $1,500 152 8/19/03 $50 8 7/23/97 $2,000 199 5/22/04 $300 12 4/14/98 $1,000 129 6/12/04 $500 17 5/15/98 $400 12 8/25/04 $1,500 150 5/20/98 $1,500 148 8/26/04 $1,000 127 4/5/99 $1,200 139 6/28/05 $50 5 4/8/99 $2,000 210 3/30/06 $1,200 136 6/27/99 $1,000 106 8/8/07 $500 18 7/30/99 $2,500 272 4/25/08 $500 16 6/13/00 $800 24 6/5/08 $2,000 204 6/23/00 $200 9 6/1/09 $50 7 8/19/00 $700 21 8/4/09 $500 16 4/11/01 $1,500 148 8/9/09 $50 4 5/10/01 $300 10 7/18/10 $500 18 7/18/01 $300 13 8/31/10 $1,200 131 8/17/02 $500 19 Data provided based on internal AHEC records which reflect cost from the referenced event year.
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Chart examples Table 1.10 Atchison-Holt Electric Cooperative Infrastructure Vulnerability Assessment Matrix Hazard: Thunderstorm/High Wind/Hail Probability of Hazard Occurrence Less than 1% in any given year 1-10% chance in any given year 10- 99% chance in any given year Near 100% probability in any given year Potential Extent of Damage Less than 10% of damage to system 10-25% damage of system 26-50% damage of system More than 50% damage of system
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Chart examples Table 1.5 Sample Atchison-Holt Electric Cooperative Service Interruption Vulnerability Assessment Matrix Hazard: _____________ Probability of Hazard Occurrence Less than 1% in any given year 1-10% chance in any given year 10- 99% chance in any given year > Near 100% probability in any given year Potential Extent of Impact Less than 10% of customers report outages 10-25% of customers report outages 26-50% of customers report outages More than 50% of customers report outages
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Section 6: Mitigation Strategies Section 6: Tiered actions, goals and objectives spelled out in this section. Cost-benefit score determines priority of the action. 9 is high; 1 is low Cost Ranking Benefit Ranking Scoring matrix LMH L321 M654 H987
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Section 7: Implementation and Maintenance Section 7: Statewide processes established in the first section. Exception in Other Local Planning Mechanisms Be sure to include any and all planning mechanisms relevant to your REC!
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Documentation Documentation is required for REC chapters as well. Sign-in sheets for each meeting. Meeting minutes or summaries for each meeting. Timesheets for all participants. Wage approval form for all participants. Participation letters and list of all solicited parties or jurisdictions.
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Questions?
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