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City readies for next telecommunications trend — microtrenching

Harrisonburg City Council members deliberate during their meeting Sept. 24, 2019. (Photo by Holly Marcus)

By Randi B. Hagi, assistant editor

Harrisonburg could soon see cable and internet providers employ a new way of hooking up fiber optic lines to homes using a process called “microtrenching,” Tom Hartman, director of public works, told the City Council at Tuesday’s meeting. 

Microtrenching, Hartman explained, is a “new technology” associated with fiber optic cables that allows those cables to be laid in one-and-a-half inch wide, 14 inch deep trenches for along residential streets.

A public access permit, which already exists, is required for any contractor or private citizen doing work in the city’s right-of-way, such as installing or maintaining gas lines or building entrances. The updates Hartman presented on Tuesday include regulations pertaining to microtrenching and small-cell wireless facilities. 

Also new is a $100  application fee for each permit, with additional fees “based on the type of work that they’re performing,” Hartman said.  

He said the fees will cover staff time to review and approve applications and inspect work in the field.

The new permitting system will go into effect on Nov. 4. Hartman said companies interested in using microtrenching in the city could begin as early as November or December.

Shentel, a company based in Edinburg, Va., already has been installing fiber optic cable lines in parts of the city after expanding its telecommunications services in the city.

Storm water option

A Public Works project to address neighborhood stormwater issues earned unanimous approval from the council, establishing the Drainage Improvements Program Policy. Council member George Hirschmann was absent from the meeting. 

This policy allows for neighborhood groups, such as residents along the same street, or neighbors or businesses with adjacent properties, to formally request the city study and fund drainage improvements.

“This all started last May … when all of a sudden, the skies opened up,” Hartman said. City staff received 97 service requests for drainage issues last year, but 70 percent of the requests were for privately owned property – which the city had limited ability to address.

Hartman explained that this program is aimed at “larger scale problems,” as opposed to the Harrisonburg Conservation Assistance Program, which launched this summer to help individual property owners mitigate stormwater runoff.

Projects could include closed drainage systems, curb and gutter renovations and stormwater bioretention areas.

The approval process for the Drainage Improvements Program applicants will likely be arduous. Hartman said he anticipates a 5-to-10 percent acceptance rate, as projects will need to demonstrably improve a large area, should include multiple property owners who participate in the process and be feasible for the city to execute. 

And once an application gets through city staff, the Stormwater Advisory Committee and an engineering study, it will still need city council approval for funding.

The approval process “requires citizens to come together as a community,” Hartman said.

Hartman said the application process is based on similar programs in Minnesota, Washington and Washington, D.C.

“I think it absolutely addresses something that … slips through the cracks,” council member Richard Baugh said. He also serves on the Stormwater Advisory Committee. 

“We may be one of the few jurisdictions in Virginia that’s making this effort.”

Also at the meeting:

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