Bell County W.C. & I.D. No. 1

Keeping our waters safe

Water Quality Report

We are committed to providing you with information because informed customers are our best allies. Below you can get details about where your water comes from, what it contains, and how it compares to standards set by regulatory agencies. The reports are snapshots of each year’s water quality.

February 7, 2024 Meeting

Annual Water Conservation
and Planning

Below are documents used in the most recent Annual Water Conservation and Planning Meeting, including the WCID No 1 Drought Contingency Plan.

January 2023

WCID 1 Water Supply Status

Bell County Water Control & Improvement District #1 (WCID 1) is the largest municipal customer of the Brazos River Authority, contracting more than 62,000 acre-feet of water annually (approximate annual usage is 31,000 acre-feet of water) from Lake Belton and now Lake Stillhouse Hollow. The District contracts 100% of the water provided to its customers from the Brazos River Authority. Currently, the District does not have any ground water supplies. Groundwater or well water is pumped from underground water bearing formations called aquifers. Most aquifers in Central Texas are many hundred to many thousand feet deep. Much more information regarding groundwater can be found at the Clearwater Underground Water District website at www.cuwcd.org.

There are two surface water contracts; one dating back to 1966 and reissued in 1992 for election/option water and the other dating back to July 2006 for 13,000 acre feet of “system” water. “System” water is water that was made available through the Brazos River Authority’s system operations plan that’s over and above the prior election/option contracts. The cost of this water is assessed annually based on Authority Operations and Capital costs. The district has 49,509 acre-feet of election/option water under contract until 2042. The “system” water contract, which includes 13,000 acre-feet expires in 2031.

The last master plan update revealed that some additional supply is needed in the planning horizon, even with some redistribution of contracted water. Additionally, more treatment capacity will be needed by some entities within the next 10 years to support their growth. The current drought accentuates the need for water users to begin maximizing conservation efforts. As a supplier, it’s obvious from usage records that more people are conserving. The peaking factor from the drought of 2011 was 2.13 for the combined customers served by WCID 1. This past summer we experienced a very similar intensity drought yet our peaking factor was 2.13 for the combined customers served. A more direct metric is the monthly gallons sold. The gallons sold in August 2022 topped the old record from August 2011. 1,665,164,880 gallons sold compared to 1,641,928,875. The summer 2022 number is 1.4% higher despite the fact that our population served is 1.8% higher. This trend needs to continue as conservation measures are earmarked to help close the gap in water demand versus water available in the decades to come.

For more information regarding the WCID 1 Master Plan, click here.

To see how your city or water supplier is situated for the planning horizon in the state water plan, click here.

To see more about the planned Brazos River Authority projects visit www.brazos.org.

Lake Stillhouse WTP

The need for more water capacity for Killeen was recognized and documented in the 2009 WCID 1 (District) Master Plan as well as the 2012 City of Killeen Master Plan. Initially the District attempted to purchase capacity through Central Texas Water Supply Corporation or Kempner Water Supply Corporation since both entities have treatment plants on Lake Stillhouse. However, those attempts failed and it was agreed the new capacity should come from a new water plant constructed on Lake Stillhouse Hollow.

The initial plan called for 10 million gallon per day facility to meet Killeen’s needs. However, during the course of planning, the District’s other customers requested capacity in the new plant. Copperas Cove, Harker Heights, Bell County WCID 3 and 439 Water Supply Corporation all purchased capacity in the plant and transmission main. A preliminary engineering report was completed which established the budget for the permitting, easement acquisition, engineering and construction of the new water plant and transmission main.

Capacity Interest

Entity Capacity (MGD) Debt Allocation
Killeen 10.0 $25,895,000
Copperas Cove 2.5 $8,670,000
Harker Heights 2.0 $6,920,000
439 WSC 1.5 $5,210,000
Bell County
WCID 3
1.0 $3,450,000
TOTALS 17.0 $50,145,000
Since plant capacity is fully allocated, a new entity could only be added by purchasing capacity from a current participant or pay for a plant expansion. The plant footprint is such that it can double in capacity on the existing site with an expansion project. The plant will be a WCID 1 asset with capacity interest as shown above. Any proceeds remaining from the bond funds are restricted to: improvements to the District water system, assist with bond reserve requirements, or to pay debt service.

Stay Up-to-date

Drought Watch

We frequently make updates to the state of the water supplies for Bell County WCID No. 1. Visit our Drought Watch page to learn more.

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