PUAB Chairman Jeff Dornbusch, at the PUAB, Feb. 3, special meeting, said he never got an explanation for the disparity between two experts’ statements on the water system’s leakage rate.
Madrid told Dornbusch the City’s base rate of $8.15 includes 7,000 gallons of water. When those gallons were no longer considered lost, it brought the leakage rate down from “40 percent to the low twenties.”
Madrid is not the only City employee refuting the Wilson & Company’s study on water-leakage rate.
The PUAB and the City Commission held a joint session on Jan. 22. After Rural Community Assistance Corporation Karl Pennock presented his water-rate study, citing the Wilson & Company 47-percent water leakage figure, City Water and Wastewater Director Jesse Cole corrected him, claiming it was leaking about 17 percent.
Cole explained more fully in an interview after the Jan. 22 meeting. He said the Wilson & Company engineering study did not take into account that the City’s base rate of $8.15 includes “between 3,000 and 6,000 gallons, I can’t remember which.” He said he explained how he arrived at the figures plugged into his year-end water audit.
The Sierra County Sun had to submit an Inspection of Public Records Act request to get Cole’s audit. In it there is no explanation of how he arrived at his figures.
But if it includes manipulating the metered-water-usage numbers to account for water included in the base rate, Cole’s figures are wrong.
The City’s website, under “utility billing,” as well as an examination of two City utility bills, confirms that the City’s base rate of $8.15 does not include any gallons. Therefore it appears the City’s water pipes are leaking 47 percent, as the Wilson & Company study states.
Dornbusch said the City should consider lowering the rates once the leaks are repaired, if the rate increase in Pennock’s study include paying for water production at a 47-percent loss rate.
The City is holding a series of town halls on the proposed water-rate increase, which will change the base rate from $8.15 a month to $18.
The first town hall is 6 p.m., Wednesday, Feb. 5, at City Commission Chambers, 405 W. 3rd St. Wilson & Co. engineer Alfredo Holquin and “city staff” will be available to answer questions.
Pennock will be available at the noon town hall on Feb. 12 and the 3 p.m. town hall on Feb. 19, both held at City Commission Chambers.