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County Water Authority Opposes 5 Percent Wholesale Water Cost Increase

"... MWD's board continues to spend more than is necessary to provide a safe and reliable water supply."

officials criticized the budgets approved Tuesday by the board that include 5 percent in each of the next two fiscal years.

The San Diego County Water Authority is in the pretrial stage of a lawsuit against MWD over its 2011-12 rate increase. San Diego officials argue the authority is charging more to make up for a steep 30 percent decline in water sales since 2006.

The San Diego County Water Authority had proposed its own budget that would have capped rate increases at 3 percent and cut operational costs to preserve money to fix aging infrastructure.

"By its vote today [Tuesday], MWD's board continues to spend more than is necessary to provide a safe and reliable water supply," San Diego County Water Authority Board Vice Chairman Thomas V. Wornham said.

"We are deeply disappointed that MWD's board and staff did not give meaningful consideration to our proposal, which would have funded all of MWD's core needs and provided some much-needed relief to 19 million water ratepayers in MWD's service area."

San Diego County Water Authority Assistant General Manger Dennis Cushman said the 5 percent rate increases are an average. MWD's largest Tier 1 agencies like the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power and Orange County Water District, will pay 9.2 percent more for water next year.

Cushman said San Diego County will pass all of the increase on to consumers.

"Ratepayers are staring down the barrels all of it. There's simply no way for us to absorb those increases," Cushman said.

Bob Muir of MWP said the rate increases will amount to about $1 per month for the average customer.

The $3.67 billion, two-year spending plan also includes $20 million a year for conservation programs and $33 million annually for a program that provides incentives for local water agencies to recycle.

The MWD, which sells water to agencies that serve about 19 million people in Southern California, said the budget included funds for infrastructure maintenance and conservation but little else.

The board approved a $1.78 billion budget for the 2012-13 fiscal year and a $1.89 billion budget for the 2013-14 fiscal year.

The cuts include a $165 million, or 23 percent, decrease in the agency's capital program, said MWD General Manager Jeffrey Kightlinger. The district had eliminated 160 staff positions over the last three years, cuts included in the budget.

"For 70 years, we have delivered safe, reliable and affordable water to consumers and businesses throughout six Southland counties. That service continues to support the region's trillion dollar economy," Kightlinger said.

"However, like many basic services today, our . One of the biggest is the constant need to repair and upgrade our aging system to ensure the continued reliable delivery of water."

More than 40 percent of the agency's infrastructure is more than 60 years old. The 242-mile Colorado River Aqueduct was completed in 1939. The share of MWD's budget going to refurbishing aging infrastructure rose from about 30 percent in 1998-99 to more than 50 percent over the next two years, officials said.

The first 5 percent increase in MWD's water rates will go into effect January and the second in January 2014.

The agency will also contribute $25 million toward the study of an environmental conservation plan for the , where the agency gets about 30 percent of Southern California's water supply.

-City News Service

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Steven Bartholow (Editor) May 16, 2013 at 03:53 pm
Thanks for posting this. I also added this to our events list. In the future I suggest posting anRead More announcement and event for maximum exposure- http://santee.patch.com/posts/event/new Good luck with the fundraiser!
RainWaterSystems May 17, 2013 at 10:58 am
That's awesome! We wish you success and recovery. We suggest two books; A Purpose Driven Life byRead More Rick Warren and Think and Grow Rich by Napolean Hill. I hope to be in a position to hire a salesman this fall.
Steven Bartholow (Editor) May 16, 2013 at 10:34 am
Anyone else recommend a Santee family owned business that's outside the city?
Retha Knight May 17, 2013 at 11:05 pm
Where do you type what you want to view, like "Quail Brush"?
Steven Bartholow (Editor) May 17, 2013 at 10:01 am
No drop down menus, just click the header links for more options. For story categories click newsRead More and look on the left hand column. I know the redesign will take a bit to get used to, but I really think it will be a better site for community engagement, and easier to use. Feel free to post your feedback to the redesign on the boards, I'll check it out and respond, but you might also send your feedback straight to Patch headquarters with this form- http://feedback.aol.com/rs/rs.php?sid=patch Engineers will be furiously tweeking the new site based on your suggestions.
Retha Knight May 17, 2013 at 06:40 am
The new format from my iPad is very boring. Where are the drop down menus?
Mike Walker April 23, 2013 at 01:20 pm
this is why the battlefield has changed temporarily from the political arena to the Energy Arena.Read More Co Gen Tricks and the usual suspects are making their big money bet on two inevitable facts that will force the hand of the CPUC and CEC to place a new gas power plant somewhere in the area. 1) the Electric Vehicle Mandate. 2) voltage support (power factor) needed by the industrial wind and solar farms in the desert. There is more to what meets the eye with the aggressive push by the usual suspects to cover our open spaces in the East County with these poorly sited RE projects. More wind and solar farms means more gas power plants. There is only one way to fight the destruction of our open spaces, and that is with roof top solar, conservation, energy efficiency and community owned energy districts. The fisrt thing that needs to be done is the City of Santee exempt residential scale PV installs from needing a building permit. Australia, Germany and the State of Vermont do not require a Building Permit to install PV.
Retha Knight April 23, 2013 at 03:48 am
Well said Stephen! Knowledge is TRULY power! The fight is not over! Cogentrix is just onceRead More again playing their wait, wait, wait game in the public eye and playing their lobbying game behind closed doors.
just my opinion April 22, 2013 at 01:04 am
Stephen, well said!!!!!