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Frustration over Bayonne’s water contract has reached a boiling point. Can the city find a way out?

During the pandemic, frustration over Bayonne’s water rates has begun to boil over, drawing scrutiny to the city’s water contract: an unusual deal with a private equity firm and water company Suez.

Two online petitions seeking to lower the city’s water prices, one of which is titled “Suez is drowning us!!!!!” have garnered hundreds of signatures since their creation earlier this year.

Jodi Casais, a Bayonne school board trustee and the petitions’ creator, said her water bills had risen by roughly $300 since the beginning of the pandemic.

Read the full article here.

PWC chairman’s full statement: Bernhard has not established trust or transparency

PWC has a long and successful history of reliably serving Fayetteville/Cumberland County with strategic, long-term prudent planning as well as partnering in many initiatives that have bettered our community for all. 

Read the full article here.

Is it time to buy Pennsylvania water stocks?

Pennsylvania’s water industry is drawing more attention from Wall Street, and investors thirsty for income and price appreciation may want to examine water stocks for their portfolio.

There are a few factors at play. Pennsylvania’s Act 12, signed into law in 2016, allows investor-owned utilities to charge ratepayers for the appraised fair-market value of an acquired system, rather than its lower depreciated cost.

Read the full article here.

CCUA’s sewer deal doesn’t fix a problem, it is the problem

The Cumberland County Utilities Authority is on the verge of a sewer deal that would enrich investors in a Louisiana private equity firm but hit sewer ratepayers in Bridgeton, Upper Deerfield, Hopewell, Deerfield and Fairfield with unnecessarily high private sewer rates for years to come.

Several CCUA commissioners met privately with Bernhard Capital Partners, without informing the rest and the CCUA executive director.

With scant notice, they arranged for a BCP presentation at the May meeting, then pushed for issue of a Request for Qualifications. The one issued seems tailored to fit BCP. Its submission deadline is June 15. This deal could be done in less than one month.

The pro-BCP commissioners are trying to remedy a problem that does not exist.

Read the full op-ed piece here.

Should a water authority be privatized to rescue a municipality’s finances?

Only a few lawmakers were on hand for a February budget hearing in the palatial chamber of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Dennis Davin, the state secretary of community and economic development, appeared remotely on a large monitor, for a second round of questions about the bid for the public Chester Water Authority (CWA) by Aqua, a private water company.

The first round of questions with state Rep. John Lawrence, a testy Chester/Lancaster Republican, did not go well and the secretary’s mood had not improved. Asked to share his department’s view on the sale, Davin claimed that he did not know what it was. Lawrence, irritated, reminded the secretary that he had been trying to get some answers for more than a year. Davin agreed to get back to him, later, with an answer. As Lawrence’s time at the podium wound down, Davin continued his evasive tactics. Finally, Lawrence noted he and his constituents opposed the sale, as did every Democratic and Republican legislator in the counties served by the CWA.

Read the full story at this link.

New Jersey American Water Signs Agreement to Purchase Egg Harbor City Water and Sewer System

New Jersey American Water announced today it has signed an agreement to acquire the water and wastewater assets of Egg Harbor City, N.J. for $21.8 million. The municipally owned water and wastewater systems serve approximately 1,500 customer connections each, or 3,000 combined, and are being sold through the state’s Water Infrastructure Protection Act process. New Jersey American Water anticipates completing the acquisition in the second half of 2021, following approval from the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs and the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities.

Read the full story at Yahoo News.

In Philly suburbs, sewer systems are for sale, and citizens push back

Lisa Lilick and Carol Smith struggled to get fellow Conshohocken residents to pay attention to their campaign opposing the sale of the borough’s sewer system. Who wants to think about boring wastewater when there’s a pandemic going on?

Lilick said her online posts about sewer rates suddenly found an audience. A Facebook page was launched, local bloggers took note, a petition was organized, and yard signs went up. Scores of angry residents tuned in to borough Zoom meetings, worried that their elected officials were trying to pull a fast one.

Read the full article at the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Ten Reasons to Protect NJ Public Water

New Jersey has a strong tradition of government ownership and operation of water and sewer utilities that is well-worth protecting and preserving because the public benefits. 

1.     Affordability. The rates of public (government-owned) water and sewer utilities are significantly lower than the rates of investor-owned (corporation-owned) utilities. Rates cover operations and capital investment. There is no additional cost added to cover profit. These distinctions are especially important in communities where many people have low and moderate incomes or in communities that have severe impacts related to the COVID-19 pandemic.  

2.     Good Management. Well-run government utilities are the norm. Any community can ensure Its system quality by hiring skilled managers and operators and ensuring they have the fiscal resources they need to do their job. 

3.     Local control. The people of the community, through their mayors other locally elected and appointed officials, have a direct say over the government water or sewer utility. 

4.     Easy access to Leaders. Government utility governing bodies hold public meetings in the communities they serve. A citizen with a concern can go to any meeting or request any information under public records laws. When corporations and private equity firms are in charge, decisions about rates and service can be made at public utilities commissions in complicated and opaque proceedings, or board rooms that are far away or where the public is not admitted.  

5.     Local asset. The community owns the local asset not a group of shareholders around the country or around the world who don’t have any incentive to perform well.  

6.     Local jobs. Utilities that are government owned draw their employees from the town where they operate or nearby towns.  

7.     The Benefits Go to Ratepayers, Not Shareholders. Economies and efficiencies of operation that save money benefit the ratepayer and not the shareholder. When a government system saves money by saving electricity or replacing old equipment, the ratepayers are the most likely to benefit. The savings can either stabilize rates or can be invested in protecting water quality and keeping the system in shape. In a corporate utility, the savings may be used to increase dividends or support the price of shares.  

8.     Community Never Has to Buy Back its Own System. Communities that privatize and come to regret it face steep costs to buy back their systems or get out of long-term concession contracts. They are often stuck with expensive or poor-quality service.  

9.     Government Systems Help Support their Community. Local government culture is one of cooperation – there’s no “proprietary information” or “trade secrets.” Staff, equipment, and funds are often shared informally or through shared service agreements.  

10.  Government Water and Sewer Service is a Public Service. Water and sewer service is too important to trust to private concerns. Water and sewer service are public goods and should be managed by public servants.   

Egg Harbor City to decide soon whether to sell water and sewer systems

In recent years, municipalities in this state have been selling off their water and sewer systems.

Egg Harbor City will be the first municipality to consider making that move without having to convince residents to vote for it in a referendum.

Two-thirds of the nine-member Common Council will have to agree to the sale.

Read the full story at this link.

Private investment firm seeks partnership with Fayetteville Public Works Commission

The Fayetteville Public Works Commission provides electricity, sewer and water for about 114,000 customers. As the name implies, it is a publicly owned utility.

But recently, it’s caught the eye of a private investment firm, which has submitted a proposal to help manage the utility.

Read the full article at this link.

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