Board Approves LADWP Water Rate Increase

Proposal now goes to the LA City Council for consideration.

The board that oversees the Department of Water and  Power today unanimously approved a plan to raise customer water rates over the  next five years to help pay for upgrades on the city's aging pipe system.

The Board of Water and Power Commissioners voted 4-0 in favor of the  rate hikes, with one member absent. The proposal now goes to the Los Angeles  City Council for consideration.

The typical single-family household could see bills go up by 4.76  percent, or $3 per month, each year, for the next five years, under the rate  hike plan.

A monthly bill of $57.79 for the typical residential water user would  increase to an average rate of $72.90 at the end of the five years, according  to an example in a staff report.

Residential water customers who use less water could see smaller hikes,  while heavier water users could see bigger increases. Residential water users  could see annual monthly rate hikes of between $1 and $11.

Commercial water users would see monthly bills go up between $3 and $60  annually.

The rate increases have been billed as a way to raise money to replace  or fix DWP's aging system of water pipes.

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Mayor Eric Garcetti backed the plan this week, saying that while "no  one likes to raise rates," the "price of inaction will be much higher for all  of L.A.'s residents."

Garcetti said the average increase for the typical water user would be  minimal over five years and keep the DWP's rates among "the lowest in the region."

He also pointed to provisions that would create a measuring stick for  whether the rate increases result in the promised improvements, with a formal  review in two years to see if changes need to be made.

Garcetti's backing of the plan came a few days after the Office of  Public Accountability, headed by ratepayer advocate Fred Pickel, issued a  report expressing the opinion that the LADWP's water rate proposal is "just  and reasonable."

The report noted that most of the revenue will go into capital projects,  while some of the revenue will also go toward higher operating costs and the  unfunded employee pension liability.

The report also found that while the purpose of the rate increase is to  help upgrade aging pipelines, "the pace is too slow for the desired long-run  replacement cycle."

The report also raised a concern that "staffing levels will be  inadequate for the growing levels of planned capital project expenditures, in  part due to the anticipated personnel retirements and constraints on  outsourcing."

The average or low water user is likely to see bills grow 4 percent each  year, while heavy water users could see bills go up by 7 percent per year,  with the biggest increase in the first of the five-year plan, the report said.

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