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PROTEST WATER TAX!

Late yesterday, we received this press release from New York City Comptroller Bill Thompson :

Thompson_NYC_Comptroller_nyreblog_com_.JPG 

THOMPSON: NEW YORKERS SHOULD SPEAK OUT AGAINST WATER RATE HIKE

 

New York City Comptroller William C. Thompson, Jr. is calling on New Yorkers to speak out against a proposed 14% rate hike at a series of public hearings sponsored by the New York City Water Board.

 

"Rising water and sewer rates are gouging New York City families and small businesses precisely at a time when they can least afford it," Thompson said. "It is vitally important that we make our voices heard and urge the Water Board to protect ratepayers who are feeling the squeeze of the current downturn."

 

If the Water Board moves forward with a 14% rate increase starting on July 1, an average single family homeowner's rates will have risen from $571 to $913 in just four years - a whopping 60 percent increase, over five times the inflation rate.

 

The Water Board hearings will take place during the last week in April in each of the five boroughs. All hearings are open to the public and there is no requirement that one must attend the borough hearing in which they reside or in which their property is located. The schedule is as follows:

 

QUEENS:                Monday, April 27th at 10 AM

                                    Department of Environmental Protection

                                    Lecture Room, 6th Floor

                                    59-17 Junction Boulevard

                                    Flushing

 

STATEN ISLAND:    Monday, April 27th at 7 PM

                                    College of Staten Island

                                    Center for the Arts, Recital Hall

                                    2800 Victory Boulevard

                                    Staten Island

BRONX:                  Tuesday, April 28th at 2 PM

                                    Bronx Library Center

                                    310 East Kingsbridge Avenue

                                    Bronx

 

BROOKLYN:           Wednesday, April 29th at 6 PM

                                    Brooklyn College

                                    Student Center - Alumni Lounge

                                    (opposite Whitehead Hall)

                                    East 27th Street and Campus Road

                                    Brooklyn

 

MANHATTAN:        Thursday, April 30th at 5:30 PM

                                    St. John's University - Manhattan

                                    Auditorium

                                    101 Murray Street

                                    New York

Earlier this month, Thompson testified before the Water Board and offered five key recommendations to address escalating rates:

 

  • The Water Board must complete and make public a promised million-dollar study of alternative rate structures. That study was intended to help the Water Board set rates this year.
  • Excess rent now being paid by the Water Board to the City -to exceed $200 million by 2012 - should be rebated back to the water system to be used for pay-go capital spending and rate reductions.
  • Governor David Paterson must support direct granting of all the federal stimulus money that is dedicated to clean water and drinking water projects in New York State - nearly $500 million.
  • The City's Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) should be required to cut its operating budget by 5%, as other City agencies have been required to do.
  • We must ensure that the New York City water supply west of the Hudson River is protected from proposed gas drilling that could necessitate the construction of a $10 billion filtration plant.

 

During his remarks, Thompson faulted the DEP for failing to produce its study of the rate structure. In May 2008, the Water Board committed a million dollars of ratepayer money to review how other utilities across the country structure their rates and to examine ways to inject a greater degree of fairness into our system. Then-DEP Commissioner Lloyd promised that the Fiscal Year 2010 water and sewer rates would take into account the results of this study.

 

"By not producing the study as promised, the DEP is trying to keep the public out of the rate-setting process."  Thompson said. "That is an outrageous breach of responsibility. The Board must produce this study so that we may take actions to avoid new rate increases next year."

The Water Board leases the water and sewer infrastructure from the City. Rental payments are based on a formula that, until recently, reimbursed the City for water-related debt service on bonds issued before the Water Authority was created.  Since 2005, however, the formula has led to rental payments in excess of the underlying City expense.

Thompson charged that this formula is forcing water ratepayers to subsidize the City's General Fund, because "excess rent" flows into that fund and is used as general revenue. In Fiscal Year 2009, such "excess rent" will total nearly $123 million, and this is predicted to swell to more than $200 million by Fiscal Year 2012.

Over the last two years, Thompson proposed rebating the "excess rent" back to the Water Board to offset the cost of running the water system. In Thompson's plan, the "excess rent" would have been split equally for two purposes: ½ for pay-as-you-go capital spending, which reduces costs over the long term, and ½ for other water system expenses, which would lessen the need for rate increases.

Additionally, Thompson identified another source of revenue to prevent water rate increases: federal stimulus money. Under the terms of the stimulus bill, the New York State Revolving Fund will receive approximately $432 million for clean water projects and $82 million for drinking water projects. However, only half of that money currently is slated to be distributed in the form of direct grants or similar deep subsidies.

In a recent letter Thompson asked the Governor to support direct grant allocation of all of this money because of the overwhelming needs of the water systems operating throughout the State, and the New York City Municipal Water Finance Authority in particular.

 

To view the letter to Governor Paterson click http://sweb02:8080/press/pdfs/03-29-09_GovernorWater.pdf

 

To view the Comptroller's statement before the Water Board click http://sweb02:8080/press/pdfs/04-03-09_water-statement-dr5.pdf

 

To view Thompson's Video Statement click http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-TrHH8gxPE


Thompson further said the DEP should reduce its operating budget by 5%. The DEP has been exempted from the same belt-tightening reductions required at other city agencies because it relies on water and sewer rates instead of tax revenue.

 

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