1 / 18

Investing in your water … investing in your future

Investing in your water … investing in your future. California American Water 2009 - 2011 General Rate & Conservation Case Applications. Monterey Water District by the Numbers. Water system established in 1882

manoush
Télécharger la présentation

Investing in your water … investing in your future

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Investing in your water … investing in your future California American Water 2009 - 2011 General Rate & Conservation Case Applications

  2. Monterey Water District by the Numbers • Water system established in 1882 • 38,000 connections; 120,000 population including sub-systems (Ryan Ranch, Hidden Hills, Bishop, Ambler Park, Ralph Lane, Chualar & Toro) • 680 miles of water mains • 3,012 fire hydrants • 18 wells along Carmel River; 8 wells in Seaside Basin Aquifer • Two reservoirs, San Clemente & Los Padres • 99 storage tanks, 87AF capacity – plan to add 26AF in 2008 - 2011 • Elevation: 0’ – 1,210’ (0 – 524 psi) • 83 pump stations, 75 pressure regulating stations • 7 satellite well systems • 90 full-time employees, two-thirds Utility Workers of America representation

  3. System Usage by Type Golf Course 3% Public Authority 9% Industrial 1% Unaccounted-for-Water 12% Residential 45% Commercial 22% Multi-residential 9%

  4. Current Applications • Monterey General Rate Case (GRC) Includes all satellite systems • General Office Rate Case • Conservation Application • Monterey Wastewater GRC • Felton GRC

  5. Setting Your Water RatesA 20-month Process GRC Schedule: • Initial proposal filed November 30, 2007 • Final Application filed January 30, 2008 • Public hearings in Monterey May 8 & 9, 2008 • DRA Report on their findings and review August 2008 • Evidentiary hearings October 2008 • Proposed Decision by Administrative Law Judge April 2009 • Final Decision by CPUC Commissioners in June 2009 • Final rates effective July 2009 *DRA = Division of Ratepayer Advocates, an independent entity of CPUC

  6. GRC Proposed ChangesIncrease in 2009 mainly driven by Capital Investment • Commercial, Industrial and Public Authority customers will receive the same percentage increase

  7. Filings for a Sustainable System • Conservation December 14, 2007 • Current GRC + General Office January 30, 2008 For rates in 2009 – 2011 3. Rate of Return May 2008 4. San Clemente Dam Total Cost Recovery Future 5. Next GRC + Support Functions May 2010 For rates in 2012 - 2014 • Coastal Water Project EIR & CPCN On-going review • CWP Total Cost Recovery Future Monterey Customers currently pay for Coastal Water Project preconstruction costs through a surcharge on the bill

  8. Major Drivers of Rate Request2009 – 2011 Loss of Consumption 3% Other 4% General Office 7% Labor 8% Capital Investment 62% Seaside Basin & Sand City 16%

  9. Capital Investment – 62%2008 – 2011 ($170M Total) Other Improvements: 4% $7M Meet Peak Demand: 8% $13M Protect Environment & Regulatory Compliance: 55% $93M Improve Reliability & Water Quality: 10% $18M * % of total capital Reduce Leaks: 23% $39M Construction costs for Coastal Water Project not included

  10. Clerical Position Operations Specialist Systems Operations Specialist Senior Operations Engineer Operations Engineer in Training 4 Maintenance Technicians 4 Utility Workers Valve Turner Backhoe Operator Labor – 8% 15 Additional Employees Proposed Payroll increases & benefits of existing employees

  11. General Office & Other – 14% • General Office: 7% • Customer Service Center • Belleville Laboratory • Finance & Legal • External Affairs • Other • Maintenance & Other: 4% • Power • Chemicals • Supplies • Maintenance projects • Loss of Consumption: 3%

  12. Regulatory Impacts To Your Water Supply – 16% 10,000 AFY reduction from 2009 limit or replacement supply needed

  13. Seaside Adjudication Changed Your Supply • Decision issued March 2006 • 2,500 AF reduction from recent pumping levels required by 2021 • 15% - 20% reduction in overall customer demand or increase in supply needed to meet order • 1% reduction in consumption each year until 2021 • This reduction is for Seaside Adjudication Only

  14. 2009 Seaside Basin Fees & Sand City Desal Lease – 16% 2009 Amount Over Ultimate Limit 1,866 AF Replenishment Fee $4,600,000 Other Seaside Basin Fees $800,000 Sand City Desal Plant Lease $800,000 Total Fees $6,200,000

  15. Conservation Application Filing • Further conservation needed due to reduced water supply • $1.7M additional annual expenses for conservation items • 5% rate increase for conservation expenses – in addition to GRC • Rates will impact large users more than average users • Estimated water savings = 300 AFY or 97M gallons • Accelerated timeline; interim phased decisions

  16. State Water Resources Control Board (SWRCB) Draft Cease & Desist Order (DCDO) • Enforces Order 95-10, which limits Carmel River diversions to 3,376 AFY (interim goal of 11,285 AFY) • SWRCB Order 95-10 hearings ’92 – ’95: • Determine waters in valley “underflow” - not groundwater • Allowed continued diversion of water from the Carmel River • Required diligent pursuit of alternative water supplies • Established measures to protect environment while diversions continued • “Plan B” to Coastal Water Project, ASR, Sand City Desal, Recycled Water and REPOG • SWRCB Public Hearing set: • Tuesday April 1, 2008 1:00 p.m. at Monterey Conference Center

  17. Proposed Reduction Schedule • Water year = October 1 – September 30 • Interim goal = 11,285 AFY (used as base line)

  18. Investing in your water … investing in your future California Public Utilities Commission Public Advisor’s Office 505 Van Ness Avenue San Francisco, California 94102 1-866-849-8390 (toll-free) (415) 703-2074 Email: public.advisor@cpuc.ca.gov Case Number: A.08-01-027 CPUC Public Participation Hearings May 28 – 7pm, Chualar Elementary School May 29 – 2pm & 6pm, Monterey City Hall California American Water Questions?

More Related