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HomeMy WebLinkAbout6/6/2023 Item 7a & 7b, Smith bobbie <zeemema@gmail.com> Sent:Friday, To:Colunga-Lopez, Andrea Cc:CityClerk Subject:Re: Grossly unfair water rates in SLO Hello Andrea and Michelle, Thank you for your reply. Just to clarify: the issue here is the inequity of charging each customer the same BASE amount for consumption of water in SLO. Folks using the least amount of water are being charged MORE per unit of water. The BASE rate (if needed) should depend on the amount of water consumed. This needs to be corrected. As Richard Schmidt's explanation explains, the BASE cost charged for water is just WRONG because it costs the same for everyone no matter how much water they consume. Please carefully look at his explanation and let us know that changes can be made to make these costs more equitable.. We understand that water is not free and that perhaps the overall cost cannot be reduced. But sharing the cost based on the actual amount of water consumed should be the guiding factor. Even for the sewer usage base: a single person who may not even be home all day flushes the toilet much less than a family of four. Bobbie Smith 954 Tarragon Ln SLO On Fri, Jun 2, 2023 at 9:47 AM Colunga-Lopez, Andrea <AColunga@slocity.org> wrote: BCC: Council All Hi Bobbie, Thank you for your input, it has been sent to the City Council members. It is now placed in the public archive for the upcoming meeting. To address the Council during the 6/6/2023 meeting, I’ve attached a screenshot of the website with details on how to do this in person, in written communication and/or verbal communication. You can also click here to be taken directly to the City of SLO website – scroll down to the section titled “How can I express my opinion on an upcoming Council Agenda Item?”. If you haven’t had a chance to fill out the protest form, I’ve attached a PDF copy that you can fill out and return to the City Clerk’s office by email at cityclerk@slocity.org, by mail or in person at 990 Palm St., San Luis Obispo, before the Council Meeting on Tuesday 6/6/2023 at 5:30 pm. The City Clerk’s office is open 1 on Monday 6/5 and Tuesday 6/6 from 8am – 5 pm. If you have further questions, please feel free to contact me. Kind regards, Andrea Colunga-Lopez pronouns she/her/hers Administrative Assistant II City Administration 990 Palm, San Luis Obispo, CA 93401-3249 E AColunga@slocity.org T 805.781.7105 slocity.org Stay connected with the City by signing up for e-notifications From: Sent: Thursday, June 1, 2023 4:58 PM To: E-mail Council Website <emailcouncil@slocity.org> Subject: Grossly unfair water rates in SLO This message is from an External Source. Use caution when deciding to open attachments, click links, or respond. Dear Council, I understand that you've seen this request for review of water rates before. It's from our neighbor Richard Schmidt, a resident of SLO. Please read it again and let us know what we (customers) can do to officially present this to the Council. I'm a senior on fixed income; like MANY folks in SLO. We'er being penalized PAYING the most for using the least amount of water. The "base" water fees are grossly unfair and inequitable. ----------------------------------------------------------------- Grossly unfair water rates in SLO. “Grossly unfair” is a good description of SLOcity’s water rates, which charge those practicing water conservation nearly twice the rate of water wasters. 2 June 6 the city council plans to raise water rates, making the unfairness even greater. This unfairness concerns me, and I hope it concerns others as well. Here is an explanation of the issue. (The city bills water by the “unit,” which is 100 cubic feet, or about 750 gallons.) Let’s look at per unit water charges for four “typical” users: • The “conservation user” who is able to get along on 2 units per month. This is likely a very thrifty conservation-minded householder performing conservation the city asks of her, or someone living in a small rental unit who is possibly economically disadvantaged. • The “low user” who scrapes by on 4 units per month. • The “moderate user” with a family who consumes 8 units per month. • The “water hog” with a large house, pool or spa, and likely a wasteful lawn or moss garden, who consumes 16 units and for whom cost is no matter. Under the rate schedule staff proposes, 2024 effective costs per unit are: • “conservation user” = $23.67 per unit. • “low user” = $16.10 per unit. • “moderate user” = $12.81 per unit • “water hog” = $13.11 per unit. (Methodology for above: sum the per unit water charges per 2024 rate chart, add to “base” $30.25 and divide total by number of units.) This is Regressive pricing, not Progressive pricing. How is this pricing equitable? How does this promote the city’s desire users be conservation conscious? Clearly there are major problems in the city’s water pricing model. How did the city’s water pricing get this far off base? The city used to just charge customers for the water they consumed. Then a new fad in pricing got introduced, an additional fixed “base” fee. We were told it would be “just $5” and would not be raised. But once the camel’s nose was in the tent, the fixed fee was raised every year till now staff proposes one that’s six times the promised “forever” $5 fee. In fact, the proposed increase alone is more than the “forever” $5. It’s the 2024 fixed $30.25 “base” fee that distorts water charges so that they harm the frugal and poor and bless the rich and careless. There are countless better ways to charge for water. I’ll suggest a couple that occur to me, merely to get some thoughts rolling. First, there need not be any “base” fee at all. We didn’t used to have a fixed base fee, and got along just fine. Charge people a fair price for what they use, and no more, and 3 problems solved. If those rates must be adjusted year to year due to consumption and cost changes, so be it; at least the charges will make sense, which the current charges don’t. However, there are also fairer “base” rate methods than the city’s fixed $30.25 charge. Here is one idea: • A variable/graduated base rate indexed to how much water one consumes would promote Equity, fairness, and conservation. An example of how this might work: for the first unit, a $1 “base”; for the second unit, $1.50; for the third, $2; etc., in this example using 50-cent increments for each additional unit of water consumption. The incremental per unit charges would be summed to find the “base” at any particular consumption level. Of course one would not go through this math for every bill: a published “base” rate table would make explicit the “base” for each consumption level. So, for example, for our four hypothetical users, this is how things would play out: • “conservation user” $2.50 “base” producing an effective unit price of $9.79 instead of the proposed $23.67 per unit. • “low user” $7.00 “base” with effective unit price $10.29 instead of proposed $16.10. • “moderate user” $22 “base” with effective unit price $11.78 instead of proposed $12.81. • “water hog” $76 “base” with effective unit price of $15.97 instead of proposed $13.11. Those are illustrative numbers only and I don’t pretend they are the “right” ones; analysis would be needed to create a rate schedule. The point is fairer models for charging are possible. The key takeaway is all charges would be related to actual water use. In a letter to the city council I asked them to use the June 6 rate setting meeting to fix the inequities in city water pricing. Specifically, I asked them to take action instead of kicking the can down the road. “ A good action, in my mind, would be “ 1. to reject the proposed water rate changes, “ 2. give staff direction to return in 90 days with a rate system that corrects the Inequity and anti- Progressive features of the present system and which also promotes genuine Conservation Pricing, and “ 3. continue present water charges in the interim. “This is doable despite the 10,000 reasons staff is likely to tell you it’s not. ::Author credit to Richard Schmidt Roberta Smith 954 Tarragon Ln. 93401 4