HomeMy WebLinkAbout2018 Rate Increase Notice - Residential Water ServiceNOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
In Connection with Proposed
CHANGES TO RATES, FEES, AND CHARGES FOR RESIDENTIAL WATER SERVICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Otay Water District (the
“District”) will hold a Public Hearing on October 4, 2017, at 3:30 p.m. in
the Board of Directors MeeƟng Room located at 2554 Sweetwater
Springs Blvd., Spring Valley, CA 91978, to consider: (1) the adopƟon
for rates, fees, and charges that apply to water billed beginning January
1, 2018; (2) the authorizaƟon, for a period of five years, for all future
pass‐through increases or decreases to cover changes to rates, fees,
and charges from the District’s water suppliers; and, (3) the
authorizaƟon, for a period of five years, overall average increases to
rates, fees, and charges, in addiƟon to the pass‐through increases, not
to exceed 10 percent per year, for all costs other than pass‐through
costs. These rates, fees, and charges apply to property for which you
are shown as the record owner or customer of record. The purpose of
the hearing is to consider all wriƩen protests against the proposed
rates, fees, and charges that, if approved, will be imposed on properƟes
served by the District. The changes in the proposed rates, fees, and
charges and the basis upon which they were determined is described in
more detail as follows.
PROPOSED RATE CHANGES
As part of the annual budget review process, the District’s Board of
Directors typically proposes an overall rate increase to be implemented
for January. This year the Board of Directors is proposing no overall
rate increase on January 1, 2018.
Even though there is no proposed overall rate increase for January 1,
2018, the District is proposing changes to the rate structure, rates, fees,
and charges based on a comprehensive cost of service study completed
in April 2017. These changes may cause your bill to change. The
changes are reflected on page 3 of this noƟce. If adopted aŌer the
public hearing noƟced above: for a typical single‐family residenƟal
water customer using 12 units per month, your water bill will decrease
by ($6.08) per month; for a single‐family residenƟal water customer
using five units per month, your water bill will increase by $4.65 per
month; and for a single‐family residenƟal water customer using 18
units per month, your water bill will decrease ($4.03) per month. This
study was conducted by an independent firm and proposes changes
that reflect the District’s esƟmated cost of providing water service. If
adopted, the proposed changes to rates, fees, and charges would take
effect for water billed on or aŌer January 1, 2018, and may apply to
water used as early as the beginning of December 2017.
The rate structure has two basic components: (1) fixed monthly
charges and (2) variable monthly rates, fees, and charges which are
based on water consumpƟon. The fixed fees and charges are calculated
to recover the cost of operaƟng and maintaining the public water
system and are based on the customer class and size of the water
meter serving the record owner or customer of record. Fixed charges
include the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (MWD)
and San Diego County Water Authority (CWA), and the District’s System
charges. The variable rates, fees, and charges are consumpƟon based
and include, but are not limited to, supply, treatment, and
transportaƟon costs. Variable rates, fees, and charges generally impose
greater charges as the level of consumpƟon increases. Variable
components of the bill include the Water Rate and Energy Charge. The
fixed and variable components are calculated to recover the
proporƟonate cost of providing the service aƩributable to each class of
customer.
The District will also consider authorizing, for a period of five years,
passing through to customers the increased or decreased costs imposed
by the District’s water suppliers including, but not limited to, MWD,
CWA, and the City of San Diego. If adopted, the average customer’s
water rates, fees, and charges will be adjusted annually for all increased
or decreased costs and charges from the District’s wholesale water
suppliers. The purpose of the hearing is to consider all wriƩen protests
against the proposed rates, fees, and charges that, if approved, will be
imposed on properƟes served by the District. Any changes to rates,
fees, and charges subsequently imposed by the District will be subject
to a 30‐day prior wriƩen noƟce, but will not be subject to addiƟonal
hearings or protests.
In addiƟon to the wholesale pass‐through costs, the District will
consider authorizing, for a period of five years, average increases in
rates, fees, and charges not to exceed 10 percent per year, for all costs
related to labor, benefits, materials, energy, maintenance,
administraƟve expenses, and other operaƟonal costs of providing water
service including, but not limited to, amounts required to meet bond
covenants and to maintain adequate reserves.
WHY ARE YOU RECEIVING THIS NOTICE?
As the record owner or customer of record of a property idenƟfied to
be subject to the imposiƟon of proposed rate, fee, or charge increases,
you may submit a wriƩen protest against the proposed acƟons.
Provided, however, if the idenƟfied property has more than one record
owner and/or customer of record, only one wriƩen protest for the
property will be counted. Each protest must be in wriƟng and include:
(1) the specific rate, fee, and/or charge for which the protest is being
submiƩed in opposiƟon; (2) the locaƟon of the idenƟfied property (by
assessor’s parcel number or street address); and, (3) the original
signature of the record owner or customer of record submiƫng the
protest. Protests submiƩed by email, facsimile, or other electronic
means will not be accepted. WriƩen protests may be submiƩed by mail
to the Board Secretary, Otay Water District, 2554 Sweetwater Springs
Blvd., Spring Valley, CA 91978, or in person at the public hearing, as
long as they are received prior to the conclusion of the public hearing.
Please idenƟfy on the front of the envelope for any protest, whether
mailed or submiƩed in person to the Board Secretary, that the
enclosed leƩer is for the Public Hearing on the Proposed Changes to
Rates, Fees, and Charges for ResidenƟal Water Service.
At the conclusion of the public hearing, the Board of Directors will
consider adopƟng the proposed acƟons as described in this noƟce. Oral
comments at the public hearing will not qualify as formal protests
unless accompanied by a wriƩen protest. If, at the close of the public
hearing, wriƩen protests against the proposed rates, fees, and charges
are not presented by a majority of the record owners or customers of
record of the idenƟfied properƟes upon which they are to be imposed,
the Board of Directors will be authorized to adopt the proposed acƟons.
If adopted, the rates, fees, and charges will apply to water billed on or
aŌer January 1, 2018 and may apply to water used as early as the
beginning of December 2017. This leƩer serves as a 45‐day noƟce of
the hearing on the proposed rate changes, and as noƟce of the
changes for water billed on or aŌer January 1, 2018, if adopted.
This noƟce is being provided to you by the District pursuant to the
California ConsƟtuƟon ArƟcle XIII D (known as “ProposiƟon 218”).
Under terms of ProposiƟon 218, the District is required to noƟfy the
record owner or customer of record of proposed changes to property‐
related fees such as water services. This leƩer serves as noƟce that the
District will hold a public hearing to consider changes to its current
water rates, fees, and charges.
WHY ARE WATER RATE CHANGES NECESSARY?
The proposed rate structure will provide water service at rates, fees,
and charges that are equal to the reasonable cost of providing water
(Continued on page 2)
Si requiere asistencia en español con referencia a esta notificación, favor de llamar al 619-670-2222.
service. Recent California law suggests that Ɵered water rates, fees, and
charges designed solely to encourage water conservaƟon, may violate
the California ConsƟtuƟon as amended by ProposiƟon 218. The new
structure is designed to meet all applicable legal requirements and to
fairly and equitably spread the District’s costs to provide water service
among all customer classes based on the costs to serve those
customers. The major proposed changes to the rate structure are: (1)
eliminaƟng the residenƟal conservaƟon Ɵer; (2) eliminaƟng Ɵered rates
for all rate classes except residenƟal and mulƟ‐residenƟal water service;
and (3) modifying the system fee from one based solely on meter size
to one based on meter size and customer type. AddiƟonally, the District
is a revenue‐neutral public agency that provides water service to your
community. “Revenue‐neutral” means that water bills reflect only those
rates, fees, and charges sufficient to support water service.
WHAT DO WATER RATES FUND?
In the District, each end user pays his or her fair share of the cost of
purchasing water, energy or pumping costs, labor and benefits,
materials, chemicals used in water treatment, administraƟve expenses,
operaƟons, construcƟon and maintenance of the public water system
and faciliƟes. This also includes amounts required to meet bond
covenants and to maintain adequate reserves and rate stability. The
District is a non‐profit public agency, it does not make a profit from
providing water service and it cannot operate at a loss.
WHY ARE WHOLESALER WATER SUPPLIERS RAISING THEIR RATES?
Wholesale suppliers raise their rates as they work to obtain new and
more reliable supplies of water. This includes more reliable emergency
supplies, agricultural to urban water transfers, expansion of exisƟng
reservoirs, pipeline relining projects, new water treatment plants, and
new supplies. In addiƟon, rate increases cover the cost of acquiring
water from the Colorado River, northern California, and desalinaƟon.
In 2016, for instance, the CWA increased rates, fees, and charges in
anƟcipaƟon of the Carlsbad Seawater DesalinaƟon Project becoming
operaƟonal. The Carlsbad project, while providing San Diego County
with a new locally controlled, drought‐proof supply of water, increased
water rates for all San Diego County water customers.
The District works conƟnually to reduce internal costs to absorb rate
increases from suppliers. The District recognizes and is sensiƟve to the
impact the higher cost of water has on its customers. In its effort to
minimize the impact of these costs increases the District has reduced its
number of full‐Ɵme equivalent (FTE) employees by 23 percent since
2007. The District is commiƩed to becoming as efficient as possible,
providing the services its customers expect and rely upon, while
conƟnuing to be one of the lower cost water service providers in San
Diego County.
RELIABILITY AND SUPPLY DIVERSIFICATION
Water is essenƟal to our region’s quality of life. Our economy
depends on it. Families and businesses cannot survive without it.
Unfortunately for San Diego County residents, our region does not
benefit from an abundant natural supply of water. The county receives
an average of 10 inches of rainfall per year, meeƟng only five percent of
local demand. Because of our semi‐arid climate, approximately 85
percent of the water used locally is imported from Northern California
and the Colorado River. Not only is the cost of imporƟng water
becoming increasingly costly, but populaƟon growth, drought,
environmental regulaƟons, liƟgaƟon, compeƟƟon for a scarce resource,
and increased power costs are driving the price we pay higher.
San Diego County’s wholesale and retail water agencies recognized
the region was highly dependent on imported water during a severe
drought that occurred in the late 1980s and early 1990s. They have
conƟnued to diversify the region’s water supply and ensure a reliable
system, increasing water independence, providing for future populaƟon
and economic needs, and reducing the likelihood of a future water
shortage. Since then, major iniƟaƟves have been undertaken to develop
both new supplies and improved reliability.
At the regional level, in 2003, the CWA signed a milestone agreement
to address decades of water disputes over the allocaƟon of water from
the Colorado River. As part of that agreement, San Diego County
residents paid to have old, leaky earthen canals in Imperial County lined
to save water. This “saved water” is now used by customers in the San
Diego region. The CWA also started producing desalinated seawater
from the Carlsbad DesalinaƟon Plant in late 2015, producing
approximately 50 million gallons per day, enough to serve seven to 10
percent of the region’s demand. AddiƟonally, the District is acƟvely
supporƟng the development of a seawater desalinaƟon facility in
Rosarito Beach, Mexico. If completed, the water from this facility could
replace up to two‐thirds of the water the District receives from
Northern California and the Colorado River.
A result of these major projects, such as the canal linings, water
transfers, seawater desalinaƟon, and reservoir construcƟon and
expansion efforts, is that the wholesale cost of water has gone up
dramaƟcally in recent years, and it is an expense being borne by all
water users. Rising costs are financially difficult for everyone, but having
made these investments in new supply and improved reliability, the
region is beƩer able to ensure that families, businesses, and the local
economy will have the water they need.
WHAT CAN I DO TO SAVE MONEY?
Customers interested in learning ways in which they can reduce their
water usage and therefore minimize the effects of the rising cost of
wholesalers’ water supplies on their family’s budget, can visit the
District’s conservaƟon web page at otaywater.gov. AddiƟonally, the
Water ConservaƟon Garden located on the campus of Cuyamaca
Community College in Rancho San Diego is open to the public and offers
various conservaƟon exhibits, programs and classes. For more about
the Garden, visit thegarden.org. For informaƟon about the District,
please visit otaywater.gov , contact us via email at info@otaywater.gov,
or call us at 619‐670‐2222.
(Continued from page 1)
Page 2
SURVEY OF MEMBER AGENCY WATER RATES
Projected water bill—12 unit water use and 3/4” meter
EffecƟve Fiscal Year 2017‐2018
*At the Ɵme of the survey in May 2017, the member agency’s FY 2018 rate was unavailable.
The esƟmated increase is an average of the agencies FY 2018 rate increases.
Si requiere asistencia en español con referencia a esta notificación, favor de llamar al 619-670-2222.
Page 3
Footnotes
1. The Fixed System Charges, based on meter size and customer class, ensure
that customers pay their proporƟonate share of the water system
replacement, maintenance, and operaƟng expenses. The MWD & CWA
Charges are based on meter size and match, in total, the cost charged by
wholesale water suppliers. The changes in the fixed charges are based on the
results of the cost of service study.
2. This cost varies based on water usage and can be calculated using the
consumpƟon block tables. One unit of consumpƟon equals 748 gallons of
water or one HCF (hundred cubic feet). The changes in the Water Charges
and Water Rates are based on the results of the cost of service study.
3. The ConservaƟon Tier discount applies toward the first five units of water
when overall consumpƟon is 10 units or less.
4. The Energy Charges represent the cost of the energy required to pump or liŌ
each unit of water 100 feet in elevaƟon. This is charged proporƟonately for
every foot of elevaƟon over 450 feet. The increase is due to increased power
costs charged by the District’s power supplier.
5. Charges collected through the property tax role (availability fees and general
obligaƟon debt) are not included in this total.
6. There is no proposed overall rate increase for January 1, 2018. However,
based on a comprehensive cost of service study, there are changes in the rate
structure, rates, fees, and charges. Projected rates (2019‐2022) are for
informaƟonal purposes only, and use an inflator factor of four percent.
7. Your bill will vary based on meter size, water consumpƟon in units, and
geographic locaƟon.
8. Fire Service requires a separate meter and is a monthly charge based on
meter size. There is no proposed rate increase for fire service on January 1,
2018.
This informaƟon reflects changes to the rate structure, rates, fees, and charges. For a comprehensive lisƟng of rates,
fees, and charges please see the Otay Water District’s Code of Ordinances at otaywater.gov.
ConsumpƟon Blocks in Units2 and Water Rates2 ‐ 2018 Proposed and 2019‐2022 Projected6
ConsumpƟon Blocks
(in Units)
2018
Proposed Current 2018
Proposed
2019
Projected
2020
Projected
2021
Projected
2022
Projected
ConservaƟon Tier3 ‐ $2.53
6 ‐ 10 1 – 10 $3.95 $3.05 $3.17 $3.30 $3.43 $3.57
11 ‐ 22 11—22 $5.13 $5.44 $5.66 $5.88 $6.12 $6.36
23 or more 23+ $7.90 $7.03 $7.31 $7.60 $7.91 $8.22
Otay Fixed System Charges1 ‐ 2018 Proposed and 2019‐2022 Projected6
Meter
Size Current 2018
Proposed
2019
Projected
2020
Projected
2021
Projected
2022
Projected
3/4" $15.91 $17.38 $18.08 $18.80 $19.55 $20.33
1" $22.47 $24.56 $25.54 $26.56 $27.63 $28.73
1 1/2" $38.88 $42.49 $44.19 $45.96 $47.80 $49.71
2" $58.55 $64.00 $66.56 $69.22 $71.99 $74.87
MWD & CWA Charges1 ‐ 2018 Proposed and 2019‐2022 Projected6
Meter
Size Current 2018
Proposed
2019
Projected
2020
Projected
2021
Projected
2022
Projected
3/4" $15.00 $15.45 $16.07 $16.71 $17.38 $18.07
1" $27.84 $28.68 $29.83 $31.02 $32.26 $33.55
1 1/2" $62.96 $64.85 $67.44 $70.14 $72.95 $75.87
2" $107.08 $110.30 $114.71 $119.30 $124.07 $129.04
Other Charges7 ‐ 2018 Proposed and 2019‐2022 Projected6
Other Charges Current 2018 Proposed 2019 Projected 2020 Projected 2021 Projected 2022 Projected
Energy Charges4 $0.044 $0.053 $0.055 $0.057 $0.060 $0.062
Fire Service Monthly
Charge8
≤3” Meter
$20.77
≤3” Meter
$20.77
≤3” Meter
$21.60
≤3” Meter
$22.47
≤3” Meter
$23.36
≤3” Meter
$24.30
≥4” Meter
$27.98
≥4” Meter
$29.10
≥4” Meter
$30.26
≥4” Meter
$31.47
≥4” Meter
$32.73
≥4” Meter
$27.98
5 Units 12 Units 18 Units
Current Rates:
MWD/CWA Fixed Charges1 $15.00 $15.00 $ 15.00
Otay System Charges1 $15.91 $15.91 $ 15.91
Water Charges2 $12.65 $49.76 $ 80.54
Energy Charges4 $ 0.67 $ 1.90 $ 2.85
Total Current Bill5 $44.23 $82.57 $114.30
Proposed Rates: 6
MWD/CWA Fixed Charges1 $15.45 $15.45 $ 15.45
Otay System Charges1 $17.38 $17.38 $ 17.38
Water Charges2 $15.25 $41.38 $ 74.02
Energy Charges4 $ 0.80 $ 2.28 $ 3.43
Total Proposed Bill5 $48.88 $76.49 $110.28
Increase (Decrease) $ 4.65 ($6.08) ($ 4.03)
TYPICAL BILL IN HCF (OR WATER UNITS) PER MONTH
Si requiere asistencia en español con referencia a esta notificación, favor de llamar al 619-670-2222.