TEAMWORK
Cities, Rural Water Systems, Others + KRWA = Results that make the difference!
Water is the essential ingredient for every Kansan's life. And for 54 years, the Kansas Rural Water Association has been dedicated to helping public water systems provide the quality and quantity of water needed by their customers and their communities. Since 1993, KRWA has also been providing technical assistance to wastewater utilities.
KRWA offers cities, rural water districts and investor-owned utilities these benefits:
- common sense technical and management know-how; KRWA staff have more than 500 years of experience operating, maintaining, regulating and managing water and wastewater systems
- up-to-date training and seminars - presented by people who work in the industry
- referrals to agencies, organizations and industry professionals
- timely advice on public policy issues
- needed information and publications for boards/councils, managers, operators, administrators, field staff and others
- the Midwest's most respected water/wastewater industry conference
- partnerships with state organizations so more small systems get help
Helping cities and rural water districts
KRWA provides assistance that systems need. When someone calls KRWA, someone answers! Help is on the way ASAP with leak detection, smoking of a sanitary sewer, water or sewer rate studies or policy questions on regulations. In 1998, the Association began providing services to water utilities on source water and wellhead protection. In 1999, KRWA contracted with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment to provide assistance to systems using surface water treatment and to systems with compliance problems. In 2001, KRWA began an initiative to help utilities implement GPS mapping.
In 2001, KRWA began providing assistance to KAN STEP projects. Funded through the Kansas Dept. of Commerce & Housing, KAN STEP projects involved local volunteers to construct the project. KAN STEP provided funding for design/engineering, machine rental, and purchase of materials. KRWA provided the assistance with the inspection services and construction. Until the program was terminated by the Kansas Department of Commerce in 2019, local communities constructed 87 water systems, fire stations, community buildings, etc.