Legislation Details

File #: 26-203    Name:
Type: Resolution Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 4/20/2026 In control: City Council
On agenda: 6/3/2026 Final action:
Enactment date: Enactment #:
Title: Adopt a Resolution Authorizing Interim City Manager to Execute Amendment No.1 with West Yost & Associates, Inc., of Davis, for Monitoring Well Network Modification Support at White Slough Water Pollution Control Facility ($76,840) (PW)
Attachments: 1. Attachment 1 - Amendment No. 1 West Yost & Associates, 2. Attachment 2 - Resolution
Date Action ByActionResultAction DetailsMeeting DetailsVideo
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AGENDA TITLE:
title
Adopt a Resolution Authorizing Interim City Manager to Execute Amendment No.1 with West Yost & Associates, Inc., of Davis, for Monitoring Well Network Modification Support at White Slough Water Pollution Control Facility ($76,840) (PW)
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MEETING DATE:
June 3, 2026

PREPARED BY:
Interim Public Works Director


recommendation
RECOMMENDED ACTION:
Adopt a Resolution Authorizing Interim City Manager to Execute Amendment No.1 with West Yost & Associates, Inc., of Davis, for Monitoring Well Network Modification Support at White Slough Water Pollution Control Facility ($76,840).

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BACKGROUND INFORMATION:
The City's 2024 Report of Waste Discharge (ROWD) requested permission from the Regional Water Quality Control Board (RWQCB) to modify the White Slough Water Pollution Control Facility (WPCF) monitoring well network. The City's monitoring well network consists of eleven compliance wells and three background wells. This network is relatively extensive compared to similar agencies and supports long-term groundwater elevation and water quality monitoring, with data collection dating back to 2008 and earlier.

The RWQCB subsequently approved modifications to the monitoring network, including removal of select wells (WSM-2, WSM-10, WSM-11, WSM-13, WSM-19, RMW-2, and RMW-3) and replacement of a damaged well (WSM-17R). West Yost is providing management and oversight of the well destruction and replacement work, including coordination with regulatory agencies and preparation of required documentation.

During implementation, an additional effort was necessary due to regulatory requirements and site-specific conditions that were not fully defined at the time of the original agreement. These included securing access agreements with the California Department of Water Resources (DWR), addressing County permitting requirements such as construction bonding, complying with prevailing wage requirements for subcontracted work, and coordinating w...

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