Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District
Alex Moore, P.E. has extensive experience in civil engineering, currently serving as an Operations Engineer at the St. Louis Metropolitan Sewer District since December 2011. Previously, Alex worked as a Master Planner for IAP Worldwide Services, Inc. at Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan, where duties included producing the Master Plan for Forward Operating Base Salerno and ensuring compliance with military policies. As a Project Manager at Civil Engineering Design Consultants, Alex engineered construction plans for multiple projects, including educational and retail developments. Alex also held the role of Project Manager at Clayton Engineering, overseeing over 30 projects with a combined engineering fee of $1 million and $12 million in construction costs. Alex holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Civil Engineering from the University of Missouri-Columbia, completed in 1998.
Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District
The Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District (MSD) was formed on February 9, 1954, when voters approved the Plan of the District. MSD started operation and maintenance activities in January 1956 in an area roughly composed of the City of St. Louis and the portion of St. Louis County east of Interstate 270. Most of the remainder of St. Louis County was annexed by MSD in 1977. MSD is a public agency and is the only special district in Missouri created under a provision of the State Constitution. MSD's responsibilities include the interception, collection and treatment of wastewater, as well as stormwater management. MSD's current boundaries cover 525 square miles and encompass all of St. Louis City and approximately 90 percent of St. Louis County. MSD serves a population of approximately 1.3 million and has over 425,000 single-family residential, multi-family residential and commercial/industrial accounts. MSD currently operates seven wastewater treatment facilities, treating a combined average of 370 million gallons of sewage per day. MSD operates and maintains 9,790 miles of sewers. The age of sewers maintained by MSD ranges in age from less than a year old to 150 years old.