Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Directors discuss drainage issues for major city watershed

- THOMAS SACCENTE Thomas Saccente can be reached by email at tsaccente@nwadg.com.

FORT SMITH — The city is considerin­g spending millions of dollars buying property as a way to address flooding problems.

Stan Snodgrass, director of the Engineerin­g Department, provided city Board directors an overview of drainage issues in the May Branch watershed earlier this month, as well as efforts by the city to address them spanning multiple decades.

The board discussed spending about $12 million to buy about 230 properties that have flooded in the watershed. The idea is to convert the properties into parks or ballfields, which could hold water better than a land with a structure, Snodgrass said.

Jarred Rego, director from Ward 1, said the issues Snodgrass described struck him as a “textbook example” of why residents become frustrated.

“You’re talking about three decades’ worth of recognitio­n of the problem, three decades’ worth of money being spent to the tune of hundreds of thousands of dollars hopefully in service of helping the problem, hundreds of homes impacted, thousands of people,” Rego said.

Snodgrass in a memo defined a watershed — also known as a drainage basin — as an area of land “that drains all the rainfall to a common outlet or discharge point.”

The May Branch watershed is Fort Smith’s fourthlarg­est drainage basin at about 4,000 acres, or 6.3 square miles, Snodgrass said. Its southern limit extends to Southside High School, with water that drains on the north part of the school generally running about 5 miles and dischargin­g at North P Street before going into the Arkansas River. Water flows into an undergroun­d storm sewer system at Park Avenue, which extends nearly 3 miles to the river. The system was built in 1910 as a combined sanitary and storm sewer system, according to Snodgrass.

FEASIBILIT­Y STUDY

Snodgrass said the city asked the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to study the flooding problems along the May Branch area in January 1991. A Reconnaiss­ance Report issued the following year recommende­d proceeding to a joint corps-city feasibilit­y study for a flood reduction project.

A feasibilit­y study and conceptual design agreement between the two entities was approved in 1998. The estimated cost was $1.4 million, with the city paying $700,000 of that amount.

The study proprosed building a large open drainage channel extending 2.75 miles from Park Avenue to the Arkansas River. The channel would follow a path similar to the storm drain already in place.

However, Snodgrass said a project must have a “benefit to cost ratio” greater than 1 to be eligible for federal funding.

COST ESCALATES

The May Branch Drainage Project was federally authorized in November 2007 at |$31 million, Snodgrass said. However, federal funding was unavailabl­e. The city executed a design agreement with the Corps of Engineers in 2008, contributi­ng $554,000 for project design at that time. It provided another $500,000 in 2013 in the wake of no federal funding in the intervenin­g years.

Snodgrass said the Corps of Engineers informed the city in 2016 that it estimated an overall cost of about $32 million to construct just Reach 1. Extrapolat­ing this to the total project cost led the Corps to estimate a revised overall cost of about $65 million. That would kick the benefit-to-cost ratio below 1, meaning federal funding is no longer an option, Snodgrass said.

Snodgrass said the city retained the Little Rock-based firm FTN Associates in January 2017 to revisit the Corps’ channel design and look for possible cost reductions, as well as consider alternativ­e methods to reduce flooding. They found the most cost-effective option would be to buy properties.

Snodgrass said a flooded residence buyout program was approved by the city in 2019 at an annual amount of $250,000. This is a voluntary program through which the city could purchase residentia­l properties that have experience­d structure flooding if the cost of the residence/ property is less than the cost of public drainage improvemen­ts to reduce the flooding. No properties in the May Branch area have been purchased to date.

City Director Lavon Morton suggested trying to do a survey of the homes there that flood frequently and discussing buyouts with the owners.

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