Ryan the Temp said:
AgLA06 said:
Ryan the Temp said:
ThunderCougarFalconBird said:
"Flat fee" water billing is just CoH's way of saying, "our water metering system is incomprehensible jacked up and broken and we have no idea what we're doing or how to fix it," right?
Something like 25+ percent of the remote reading transmitters don't work, so the city has two choices: 1.) Manually read the meter, which they don't have enough people to read every meter every month; or 2.) Estimate your reading and then do a manual read when they can get to it. They city most often chose to estimate bills, which caused things to get screwy with bad estimates and huge catch-up bills. This was a problem when I worked at utility customer service 20 years ago, and it's apparently only gotten worse.
I mean we have to be talking tens of millions of dollars is missed revenue right? My brother purchased his house like 10 years ago. He didn't receive a water bill the first couple of years. Then called in and has sense only received a bill for less than the fees are supposed to be each month.
Putting together a team to analyze accounts for amounts that don't make since and replacing the meters would net them more they would spend.
Probably hundreds of millions. Never mind the delinquent water bill debt the City refuses to take effective action on. I once proposed COH switch to the model they use in New York where every water bill is treated as a lien against the property. Right before the real estate boom of the late 1990s, New York had more than $1 billion in delinquent water bills. The real estate boom reduced that number by something like $700 million. I was able to show how it could result in a recovery of almost $200 million in delinquencies, but I was completely ignored. (ETA: This was around 2007-2008)
Cut off the water and any other service to the property until repaid. That's the option.
I get where you were coming from, but the flip side is a bust leaves the city looking like a post apocalyptic novel.
Focus on being competent first. Ensure all meters are working. Ensure all accounts are audited for discrepancies or billing amounts that don't make sense. Put a maintenance / replacement plan in place so that every year 10% are replaced to avoid this going forward. All that would bring in hundreds of millions more than now for a city that needs the revenue.