Rates, Rates, and More Rates

Similar documents
Rates, Rates, and More Rates

Session Objective. Topics. Financial Capacity and Rates!

Future of Pricing.

Utilities Finance.

Introduction to Public Enterprise Finance

Water and Wastewater Rates and Rate Structures in North Carolina

Designing Water Rate Structures that Support Your Utility s Objectives

How Did the Drought Affect Long-Term Residential Water Use in NC? Implications for Utility Financial Management

Financial Tools for Small Drinking Water Systems

Setting the Right Rates for Your (Small) Water System

Water Rates in Hawai i

Introduction to Financial Management and Rate Setting

WEBINAR: Achieving Revenue Stability through Your Water Rate Structure

Water and Wastewater Rates and Rate Structures in North Carolina

Smart Management for Small Water Systems.

Water Rate Structures and Revenue Resiliency

Logistics. At the top right corner of your screen: Control Panel: Attendee List

Water and Wastewater Service Pricing in Arizona: Rates Survey Results

The Role of Asset Management in Rates and Finance of Small Drinking Water Systems

Water and Sewer Rates and Rate Structures in Georgia December 2014

Logistics. At the top right corner of your screen: Control Panel: Attendee List

Frequently Asked Questions About Water and Wastewater Rates (FY )

Meeting Other Objectives

Water and Wastewater Rates and Rate Structures in Alabama

Reassessing Our Rate Structures: Including Conservation Rates & How to Make it All Work

Benchmarking Utilities Rates and Finances for Decision and Policy Makers

Water System Revenues

Senior Project Director Environmental Finance Center at the University of North Carolina

Webinar: Benchmarking Water and Wastewater Rates in Illinois

How to Succeed in Water Utility Operational Transitions

DRAFT. Recycled Water Cost of Service and Rate Study Report. Napa Sanitation District

Jeff Hughes and Richard Whisnant UNC School of Government

M A R C H 7, KC Water Cost of Service Task Force Meeting #10

How Much Does it Cost to Connect to a Water and Wastewater Utility in North Carolina? Residential Water and Wastewater Connection Fees as of January

City Council Public Input Session Water / Sewer Rate Study. March 19, 2014

Driving Efficiency Through Price

Paying for Watershed and Stormwater Management Programs

2017 Arizona Water & Wastewater Rates Report

An Overview of Clean Water Access Challenges in the United States

Techniques for Developing a Rate Structure. Water & Wastewater Utility Operation and Management for Tribes

System Development Fee Analysis. Prepared for. Brunswick Regional Water and Sewer H2GO

An Overview of Public Enterprises (with a focus on Water and Wastewater)

Strategic Plan. A public, non-profit agency providing water, sewer and reclaimed water services to the Carrboro-Chapel Hill community.

Association of Regional Water Organizations Regional Utility Leadership Workshop

Overview of Local Facilities. Integrated Resource Planning Advisory Committee

Rates as of January Current rates may be different. Wastewater Residential rate structure

Dale Barrie Training & Technical Assistance Specialist. Iowa Rural Water Association - Dale Barrie 1

Manatee County Utilities. Water/Wastewater Rates Public Hearing February 7, 2017

ckly STAFF REPORT Trish Rhay, Assistant Director of Public Works Caitlin Sims, Senior Management Analyst

Residential Customer Water and Wastewater Sales Analyses and Profiles

William Murray Jr., P.E. Public Works Director Katie Victoria, MPA Sr. Administrative Analyst

Does this scenario sound like Wall

2017 University Park Rate Filing

UTILITY RATE INCREASE FAQ

Combining Price and Non-Price Programs: A New Business Model for the Water Utility

Rates as of January Current rates may be different. Holly Springs. Utility offers unique rates for reuse irrigation meters, not modeled here.

Illinois Water Audit and Loss Control Training Workshop

Communicating Revenuesheds: A User Guide

Understanding Customer Billing Data

WATER AND WASTEWATER CAPACITY FEES REPORT PROPOSED

Sustainable Urban Water Use. Engaging leaders in the Southeast to integrate water conservation into the utility business model

THE ENVIRONMENTAL FINANCE CENTER AT THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA, CHAPEL HILL SCHOOL OF GOVERNMENT REPORT 7

WATER AND WASTEWATER RATE STUDY

County of Sonoma Agenda Item Summary Report

2016 Hawai i Water Rates Report

ORANGE WATER AND SEWER AUTHORITY Quality Service Since 1977

CENTRAL DAVIS SEWER DISTRICT

Understanding Demand for Energy Efficiency in Your Community

WATER AND WASTEWATER RATES. July 24, 2017 Public Works Commission Meeting

Planada Community Services District Municipal Service Review

AGENDA DOCKET FORM. RECOMMENDED ACTION: Receive update on the rate structure analysis and provide direction.

City of Markham 2018 Proposed Water/Wastewater Rates. General Committee November 6, 2017

CHART EXAMPLES OF WATER RATES AND CHARGES OF MWD MEMBER AGENCIES AND THEIR SUBAGENCIES

CHAPTER SEVEN: UTILITIES

CERTIFICATION AND FINANCING PROPOSAL

Rates as of January Current rates may be different. Holly Springs. Utility offers unique rates for reuse irrigation meters, not modeled here.

City of Benicia Water and Sewer Rate Questions and Answers September 5, 2017

Rates as of January Current rates may be different. Jasper Waterworks and Sewer Board

Strategic Plan Progress Report

SOFTER DEVELOPMENT PATHS: ASSESSING THE POTENTIAL FOR MUNICIPAL WATER CONSERVATION TO FORESTALL SUPPLY EXPANSION UNDER UNCERTAINTY.

TASK IV: ANALYSIS OF MILLBROOK SEWER AND WATER SYSTEM CONSUMPTION CHARGES AND SEWER CAPITAL ASSESSMENTS

SALT LAKE CITY DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC UTILITIES. Comprehensive Water, Sewer, and Stormwater Rate Study

CITY OF ST. HELENA AD HOC REVENUE SOURCE TASK FORCE WATER & WASTEWATER RATE STUDY MEETING 2

An Overview of NC Water Service Providers

Water Rate Study 2015

County of Sonoma Agenda Item Summary Report

Water and Energy Conservation Programs and Partnering

Rates as of January Current rates may be different. Lake Lure

Rates as of January Current rates may be different. Lake Lure

Water Conservation: The SAWS Way

City of Flushing. Water and Sewer Rates

Water Rate Study. South Weber City March 27, 2018

Notice of Public Hearing on Proposed Water Service Rates, Fees and Charges. How to Submit a Protest

Water Pricing, Customer Usage: It s Complicated..

How to Read Your Water Bill and related topics. Tom Heikkinen, General Manager

Sustainable Watershed Finance: Models, Tools, and Tricks

Water Resources Utility Rates Review

Water Resources Utility Rates Review

Water Development Commission 6920 YELLOWTAIL ROAD TELEPHONE: (307) CHEYENNE, WY 82002

Water Affordability John Rich, Executive Director Mid-America Assistance Coalition. June 28, 2017

Transcription:

Rates, Rates, and More Rates Jeff Hughes David Tucker February 10-11, 2015 Chapel Hill, NC www.efc.unc.edu

Draft 2015* by the Numbers (Based on data submitted as of 2/1/15) Operating revenues collected by governmental utilities (FY 2014) Highest (SUBMITTED TO DATE) (FY 2014) Lowest (FY 2014) Median charged by NC utility Average number of blocks 4 Median multiplier for out-of-city rates (Among 83% percent of municipalities) Percent of utilities that raised rates (376 water + 318 sewer rate structures) Median increase for those that increased bills >$2.2 billion $197 million (Raleigh) $1,178 (Boiling Springs Lakes) $31.32 Water $38.42 Sewer $67.80 Combined 1.84x Water 1.92x Sewer 53% Water 52% Sewer 4.6% Water 4.9% Sewer

Draft 2015* by the Numbers (Based on data submitted as of 2/1/15) Highest rate per 1,000 gallons at 5,000 gallons/month Median base charge Highest base charge $20.00 Water $21.00 Sewer $15.00 Water $16.00 Sewer $31.00 Combined $94.37 Water $65.21 Sewer $90.07 Combined Lowest non-zero base charge $2.47 Water $1.97 Sewer $6.14 Combined Median percentage of customer bill due to base charge at 5,000 48% Water 43% Sewer

Annual NC Water and Wastewater Rates Survey NC League of Municipalities Environmental Finance Center at the School of Government Collaboration since 2005 2015 survey just completed. 496 utilities included. Free, online information: tables, summary report, Rates Dashboard, rate sheets at http://www.efc.sog.unc.edu and http://www.nclm.org

Factual Report and Data Tables http://efc.sog.unc.edu Find it in Programs / Drinking Water Or http://nclm.org

Which Rates were Studied? January 2015 rates for 496 utilities across NC Rates for water, irrigation, and wastewater services Rates for residential and for non-residential (small commercial) customers Rates for inside and outside customers Including base charges and allowances

Rates Dashboards Interactive tool to compare water & sewer rates (bills) among all utilities, or utilities with similar characteristics: System size (number of accounts or revenues) Technology (water source type or river basin) Location (regional council, 25 / 50 / 100 miles) Same rate structure (uniform, incr. block, etc.) Demographics (median household income) County economic development tiers Available online at http://efc.sog.unc.edu

New Features -- New Technology!!! Much faster load and response times Access it on tablets (e.g. ipad) Type in your utility's name to select Click on and select any utility on the map Edit your utility's data (temporarily and locally) View your rates at 500 gallon/month increments Simulate raising rates up to 100%

NC Rate Setting Resources Call the EFC / SOG Guide to Billing and Collecting Public Enterprise Utility Fees for Water, Wastewater, and Solid Waste Services (by Kara Millonzi, SOG) NC Rates Dashboard (EFC web) Do-it-yourself Excel tools for rate scenarios and capital planning (EFC web) Designing Rate Structures that Support Your Objectives guide (EFC web) 2010 NCLM/EFC Financial Practices & Policies Survey (EFC web) Other EFC web resources (blog posts, data, guidelines/reports, tools) at http://efc.sog.unc.edu LGC Fiscal Analysis Dashboard Painful Art of Rate Setting article in Popular Government AWWA M1 Manual, EPA Rate Setting workbooks, etc. Rural Water Association, Consultants, etc. EFC s blog: http://efc.web.unc.edu

Webpage on NC Rates (with report, tables, Dashboards, more) http://efc.sog.unc.edu Find it in Programs / Drinking Water The 2015 Rates Dashboard, report, and tables are now posted on the EFC website, and an email will be sent to utility managers, finance directors and town clerks/administrators.

Subscribe to Keep Up-to-Date with the Environmental Finance Blog http://efc.web.unc.edu Examples of relevant blog posts: Declining demands in NC Increasing rates in NC Operating ratios in NC Water debt in NC What s wrong with %MHI Financial strategies And much more!

Public Enterprise Challenge Utility has lost several large customers and has significant capital needs and prices that do not generate any extra funds for capital investments. The utility realizes that they need at least an extra 50% in revenues on a yearly basis to stop the bleeding. The town has a fairly high median household income but many people live in serious poverty and are out of work.

What s Your Rate Challenge 1. Changing business model (selling less water) 2. Affordability 3. General revenue shortfalls 4. Funding depreciation 5. Communication 6. Wholesale rates

What is biggest challenge to setting rates in your utility? 1. Falling consumption trends/ difficulty with projections 2. Governing board s unwillingness to raise rates 3. Communities ability to pay more for water and wastewater service 4. Pressure to keep rates comparable to other water utilities 5. Rising cost of other governmental taxes and fees 6. Other? 24% 29% 24% 14% 5% 5% 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

What is biggest challenge to setting rates in your utility (2014 Participants)? 1. Falling consumption trends/ difficulty with projections 2. Governing board s unwillingness to raise rates 3. Communities ability to pay more for water and wastewater service 4. Pressure to keep rates comparable to other water utilities 5. Rising cost of other governmental taxes and fees 6. Other? 29% 29% 21% 8% 8% 4% 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

How satisfied are you with the rates you have today? 1. Not at all need an overhaul 2. Not very they need a lot of work 3. Somewhat tweaks needed 4. Very no changes needed 67% 13% 10% 10% 1. 2. 3. 4.

How satisfied are you with the rates you have today (2014 Participants)? 1. Not at all need an overhaul 2. Not very they need a lot of work 3. Somewhat tweaks needed 11% 15% 52% 22% 4. Very no changes needed 1. 2. 3. 4.

How satisfied are you with your rates and the revenue they generate? (2011) 1. Not at all need an overhaul 2. Not very they need a lot of work 3. Somewhat tweaks needed 4. Very no changes needed

REVENUE SUFFIENCY

Do Water and Wastewater Rates Cover System Costs? n = 438 (FY 2014) Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

FY 2014 Rates and Operating Ratios Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

CHANGING USAGE PATTERNS

What happens at your utility when customers reduce their use from 10,000 to 5,000 gallons/ month? 287 Uniform Rates 161 Increasing Block Rates 38 Decreasing Block Rates Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

Are revenue increases keeping pace with rate increases? Revenue increases Rate increases Two-thirds of the utilities had lower revenue increases than rate increases (points below the 1:1 line), and almost every utility that raised rates by more than 50% had relatively lower revenue increases. Reported in Defining a Resilient Business Model for Water Utilities, Water Research Foundation Report #4366. Data analyzed by the Environmental Finance Center at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Revenues are total operating revenues as reported to the Local Government Commission.

AFFORDABILITY CONCERNS

Rates as Percent of Income Medians: 1.01% Water, 1.26% Sewer 2.60% Combined The average North Carolinian pays $71.50/ month for 5,000 gallons of water and wastewater, if everyone is charged at the inside rate Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

Percent of Annual Income Spent at 5,000 gal./mo: Median & Low Income Customers 506 Water Bills, 419 Wastewater Bills, and 384 Combined Bills Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

ADJUSTING RATES

When did you last increase your rates? 49% increased rates last year 62% changed rates within the past 2 years Only 11% of rate structures have not changed since 2009 531 total rate structures Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

Increases to the 5,000 Gallons/ Month Water Bill by Utilities that Raised Rates out of the Same 196 Utilities Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

Changes in Rates Since Last Year Median increase to monthly bill for 5,000 gallons: $1.19 water, $1.51 sewer Half of the rate increases were for more than 4.6% (water) and More than 4.7% (wastewater) Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

Anticipated Rate Increase Request for Next Year 1. No change 2. 0 to 2.99% 3. 3 to 5.99 4. 6 to 9.99 5. 10 or above 25% 29% 36% 7% 4% 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Anticipated Rate Increase Request for Next Year (2014 Participants) 1. No change 39% 39% 2. 0 to 2.99% 3. 3 to 5.99 4. 6 to 9.99 5. 10 or above 7% 11% 4% 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Cumulative Percent Change for 5,000 gal./mo. Water Bill, 2005-15 Inflation Rate (323 Rate Structures) Inflation from 2005-2015 is 21% (1.92%/yr.)

Median Charge for 5 kgal / mo. by Water Supply Type Water Rate Structures Total Median Number of Monthly Water Structures Bill All Rate Structures 507 $31.26 By Water Supply Type Groundwater 163 $29.40 Surface Water 129 $27.81 Purchase 215 $34.80 Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

Inside/Outside Billing ~62% of utilities (83% of municipalities) have different outside rates Median differential: 1.84 water, 1.92 sewer Median combined bill for 5,000 gallons: Inside $73.82 Outside $129.30 Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

CURRENT RATE STRUCTURES (JANUARY 1, 2015)

Base Charges Median combined: $31.00 Low Bills for Low Consumption Amount vs. Revenue Stability Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

Median Base Charge for Utilities that Vary Base Charges by Meter Size 23% of Rate Structures Have Varying Base Charges By Meter Size Meter Size Water Wastewater 5/8" $12.92 $13.59 3/4" $12.93 $13.59 1" $21.09 $22.84 1 1/2" $34.35 $38.25 2" $56.42 $63.54 3" $110.29 $112.00 4" $167.63 $169.81 6" $264.89 $347.25 8" $309.48 $485.82 10" $357.57 $537.85 Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

Residential Rate Structures Water Wastewater Rate structures applicable to residential customers for consumption up to 15,000 gallons/month only Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

Volumetric Rates at 5,000 gallons/month Medians: $4.31/1000 gallons water $5.50/1000 gallons sewer $9.68/1000 gallons combined Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

Residential Monthly Bills Across 384 Water Rate Structures Across 319 Wastewater Rate Structures 5000 gallon median: $31.32 5000 gallon median: $38.42 5000 gallon median combined: $67.80 Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

Pricing Different Services 27% use separate rate structures for non-residential customers 22% use separate rate structure for residential irrigation water Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

CHANGING RATES

Median Increase Utilities Changing Rates over the Same 196 Utilities in North Carolina Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report

Utilities that Raise Rates Frequently Have Lower Rate Increases Each Time Average rate adjustment by frequency of raising rates Reported in Defining a Resilient Business Model for Water Utilities, Water Research Foundation Report #4366.

But they Also Accumulate Greater Rate Increases in the Long-Run Average 5-year cumulative rate increase by frequency of rate adjustments Reported in Defining a Resilient Business Model for Water Utilities, Water Research Foundation Report #4366.

Rates Rising Faster than Inflation Reported in Defining a Resilient Business Model for Water Utilities, Water Research Foundation Report #4366.

Median Monthly Water Charge at Different Levels of Consumption for the Same 196 Utilities Source: 2015 NCLM/EFC North Carolina Water & Wastewater Rates Survey Report