Water users tapped to cover rising costs
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- The Mesa Consolidated Water District board on Thursday
approved an energy surcharge of 10 cents per unit for city residents, the
first rate increase in more than five years.
“I think we all agree on the surcharge,” board President Trudy
Ohlig-Hall said at the meeting. “We didn’t do that; that came to us.
Staff has worked hard on this budget and there’s no doubt we are long
overdue for a rate increase, but we’re hurting right now and it’s a bad
time. I would not like to see a rate increase [other than] the energy
surcharge. Maybe by next year things will be better and we will do what
we need to do and what we have to do.”
The district found itself an estimated $868,600 short this year
because of increased electricity rates, according to a staff report, and
needed to find a way to pay its bills.
The board had been considering several options, including combinations
of adding an energy surcharge, increasing the rates on top of the energy
cost to compensate for inflation since its last hike in 1995, cutting
other parts of the budget and using the district’s reserves.
The decision was to add an energy surcharge, which will pay for only
the raised cost for electricity and will fluctuate directly in relation
to energy prices, to cut parts of the proposed budget and to use reserves
to pay for other expenses not covered by the current rates.
Parts of the proposed budget that the board cut include reducing the
amount set aside for part of the colored-water treatment facility and
holding off on purchasing some new equipment until next year.
The board is now expected not to raise rates to replace equipment
until after electricity prices stabilize.
Board member Fred Bockmiller expressed concern about the district’s
reserve.
“It would be akin to someone with a $129,000 home having $9,000 in the
bank,” he said. “It is out of proportion in that person’s ability to
replace the home. Our reserves are small in relation to our capital
assets.”
The district’s reserve is $9.1 million, 47.9% of its $19-million
budget but only a small percentage of the value of its water lines and
other equipment that the district maintains and replaces.
The board approved the energy surcharge in a vote that included the
district’s annual budget.
Bockmiller, the single dissenting vote, said he opposed part of the
budget that he thinks does not allow enough money for capital expenses,
which would include replacing water lines.
His dissenting vote did not have anything to do with the energy
surcharge, he said.
The average Costa Mesa resident’s bill, now $54.56 every two months,
will rise to about $60.76 starting July 1 because of the energy surcharge
of 10 cents per unit.
No residents spoke at the meeting. At a previous workshop, Costa Mesa
resident Ernie Feeney asked the board to approve only the energy
surcharge and no additional rate increase.
The surcharge will appear as a separate line item on the water bill.
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