Civic IQ
Contract AwardPublic WorksDetected Jun 9, 2026

Graham approved a $330,000 capital project ordinance for the Haw River Outfall Project to install a cured‑in‑place pipe (CIPP) liner in a terra‑cotta sewer outfall that discharges to the Town of Haw River’s Lang Street pump station. The outfall is in a low‑lying area and currently contributes significant infiltration and inflow, especially during heavy rainfall events. Funding is available from Water/Sewer transfers and assigned entirely to Professional & Contracted Services, indicating that specialized trenchless contractors and engineers will perform the work. This creates an opportunity for firms experienced in CIPP, sewer condition assessment, bypass pumping, and rehab design, and for follow‑on I&I reduction or SCADA/monitoring work tied to the outfall’s performance.

Scope explicitly calls for installing a CIPP liner in an existing terra‑cotta outfall; project addre...

City of GrahamHaw River Outfall CIPP lining and inflow/infiltration reduction project

Why this matters for vendors

Early signals like this typically surface 6–18 months before a formal RFP is posted. Vendors who engage during the planning window help shape requirements, build relationships with decision-makers, and position ahead of the competition before the solicitation goes public.

Public Works

Where this sits in the buying cycle

Now

Capital plan & early discussion

Next 1–2 Q

Scoping & vendor outreach window

6–18 mo

RFP / solicitation posted

Later

Award & contract

Related

Similar signals forming now

Opportunities from other agencies that match this category and scope.

Budget Planning

The Storm Drain Maintenance & Rehabilitation Program in Tiburon’s adopted FY 2026‑27 CIP funds $1.075 million in 2026‑27 and $2.775 million over five years for drainage projects, including an annual storm drain lining program, Railroad Marsh stormwater basin maintenance, Taylor Road Drainage Improvements, and ongoing design for future projects. The lining project alone has a five‑year cost of $1.9 million, and the design component is funded at $75,000 per year to plan future rehabilitations, all funded primarily from the Streets & Drainage and Drainage Impact funds. No specific engineering or construction vendors are named, and several projects are described as ongoing or to be designed. Drainage and stormwater engineering firms, as well as trenchless lining contractors, can help Tiburon prioritize failing assets, design rehabilitation projects, and deliver annual and one‑off capital drainage work under this program.

Specific sub‑projects include annual pipe lining, Railroad Marsh basin maintenance, and Taylor Road ...

Town of Tiburon
View signal
Pre-RFP

The Storm Drain Maintenance & Rehabilitation Program lists several FY 2026‑27 projects: a $500,000 annual storm drain lining project, $350,000 for Railroad Marsh stormwater retention basin maintenance, $75,000 for storm drain project design, and $150,000 for Taylor Road drainage improvements, totaling $1,075,000. Over five years, storm drain projects are funded at $2.775 million, mainly from the General Fund Streets & Drainage and the Drainage Impact Fund. The budget describes these as design and construction efforts but does not identify existing contractors, suggesting that detailed design, condition assessment, and construction contracts are still to be defined. Civil/environmental engineering firms and underground contractors can propose lining methods, basin rehab strategies, and localized drainage solutions, especially for Taylor Road and the Railroad Marsh facility, and help the town package these into competitive bids.

Railroad Marsh stormwater basin work ties into the separate Marsh Restoration Fund and open space/we...

Town of Tiburon
View signal
Budget Planning

Tiburon’s CIP programs a robust, ongoing pavement maintenance and rehabilitation effort, funding $1,990,000 per year over the next five years for construction plus additional design work. The FY2026‑27 annual pavement project focuses on slurry seal treatments rather than full reconstruction, leveraging Gas Tax, RMRA (SB1), County Measure A transportation, and Street Impact funds to preserve roadways cost‑effectively. Separate funding of $150,000 per year is programmed for design of future pavement projects, with a long‑term plan to maintain annual construction levels of nearly $2 million through 2030‑31. This represents a substantial, predictable pipeline for paving contractors, materials suppliers, and pavement management consultants to pursue annual bids, multi‑year task orders, or program‑level planning engagements.

RMRA (SB1) maintenance of effort obligations of 851000 per year are mentioned, indicating sustained ...

Town of Tiburon
View signal

Get alerts for similar opportunities

Get automatic alerts for signals in your industry — months before they become formal RFPs. No more searching.

Get Early Alerts

Platform Capabilities

How Civic IQ accelerates your sales

Uncover early buying signals, get real-time alerts, and push context-rich leads straight into your CRM.

Spot Demand Early

Detect the first hints of need in agendas, budgets, and strategic plans up to a year before formal procurement begins.

Real-Time Alerts & CRM Sync

Receive instant notifications and automatically enrich records in your connected CRM, keeping your pipeline current.

Connect with Stakeholders

Get current contact and contract details to reach the person running the project now, not someone who left months ago.

Monitor Competitors

Track competitor wins, contract expirations, and renewal timelines so you can perfectly time outreach.

1M+

Documents analyzed monthly

8M+

Vendors tracked

22M+

Documents indexed

24h

Max data refresh cycle

Bring us your territory.
We'll show you what is forming.

See live SLED buying signals, source docs, decision-makers, contract context, and the next step into your CRM or pipeline.

Try Civic IQ for free