Suggested rate increases were decreased following November outcry over initial increase proposals
The Cloverdale City Council voted to move forward with a new set of water and wastewater rate increases, following a public forum and numerous council presentations, brought on by the initial halt to the rate increase process in November, after community members decried the initial set of proposed rates.
The newly proposed rate increases show a significant decrease when compared to the rates proposed in November 2020, but still outline yearly increases that are larger than Cloverdalians have seen in recent years. The new proposed water rates outline a 6% increase in July 2021 and a 12% increase in July each year, from 2022 to 2025. The proposed wastewater rate increases outline a 3% increase in July 2021, with a 10% increase in July each year, from 2022 to 2025. According to Mark Hildebrand of Hildrebrand Consulting, who performed the cityā€™s water rate study, the proposed water rates represent a cumulative increase of 67% over five years (down from the 84% increase proposed in November) and the proposed wastewater rates represent a cumulative increase of 51% (down from the 119% proposed in November).
The council provided city staff with direction to move forward with the new proposed rates during an April 14 council meeting.
The proposed rates will come back to the council on June 9 for a public hearing.

In the name of deferred maintenance

Years of deferred maintenance have helped define the current proposed water and wastewater rate increases ā€” parts of the cityā€™s aging infrastructure need to be repaired or replaced and the city needs to find ways to fund it. However, past annual 3% water and wastewater rate increases are just enough to cover inflation, according Hildebrand.
ā€œUltimately the rates are going to need to get to a point where they can pay for the annual capital reinvestment thatā€™s going to have to happen every year,ā€ Hildebrand said during a March 24 council meeting.
Hildebrand said legally cities arenā€™t allowed to charge more for water rates than it needs to run them, meaning the city canā€™t use water rates as a revenue-generating avenue and that money from rate increases canā€™t be used to supplement things like the cityā€™s general fund.

Water capital improvements

ā€œThereā€™s been fairly significant deferred maintenance in both our water and our wastewater utility systems. With that said, we understand that itā€™s often difficult now to progress with a very robust maintenance schedule that requires relatively significant cost increases. What we didnā€™t want to do was completely eliminate the projects that were driving the rate increases, because we feel that thereā€™s significant risk in doing so,ā€ City Manager David Kelley said during the councilā€™s April 14 meeting.
When looking at what capital improvements are needed, City Engineer Mark Rincon pulled out four water system capital spending projects based on facilities that are ā€œshowing their age.ā€ The water facilities Rincon discussed during the councilā€™s April 14 meeting include:
ā—Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  The Cherry Creek Reservoir, which Rincon said has been in service since 1967. Rincon said that the reservoir is ā€œobsolete in a few factors,ā€ because it doesnā€™t meet current seismic stability standards, the interior needs a new coating but the city canā€™t take it out of service because thereā€™s no tank redundancy.
ā€œWeā€™re up against a double-barrel ā€” the aging of the facility, it needs maintenance and it also needs to be basically replaced,ā€ Rincon said. The capital spending for this project comes with a $1.27 million price tag.
ā—Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  The cityā€™s Ritter Reservoir isnā€™t as old as its Cherry Creek one (it was put in in 1988), Rincon said, but has a shorter life because itā€™s a bolted-together, steel-plated tank.
ā€œThis one is starting to show leaks throughout its seems, you can see that it has tie-down straps, but itā€™s probably not sufficient to todayā€™s standards,ā€ he said, adding that the Ritter tank is scheduled for replacement sooner rather than later and that it too needs a new interior coating. The capital spending for the Ritter Tank is expected to be $1.587 million.
ā—Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  The largest capital improvement the city will have to take on for its water system, Rincon said, is its chlorine contact tank. All water processed through the city has to run through the contact tank.
ā€œThis is one facility, itā€™s been in service for 20 years, itā€™s never been taken out of service because itā€™s basically a choke-point in the system ā€¦ if we lose that tank, we lose potable water, and thatā€™s serious,ā€ Rincon said.
Rincon said that the city wants to add another chlorine contact tank, which would create redundancy and would give the city the ability to alternate tanks in order to take one out to get it serviced. The cost associated with it is $3.07 million.
ā—Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  Also aging are the water treatment plantā€™s transfer pumps, which send water into distribution. ā€œThe issue there is that mechanical systems donā€™t last as long and pumps become less efficient over time ā€¦ weā€™re looking at a mechanical system thatā€™s overdue for total rehabilitation,ā€ Rincon said.

Wastewater capital improvements

According to Rincon, the wastewater system is currently undergoing video and smoke testing in the cityā€™s older subdivisions, which helps identify areas that need sewer main replacement.
ā€œWeā€™ve been doing a lot of slip lining here ā€” these are interim projects to keep the pipeline intact and flowing, short of replacing the pipelines. These are ongoing to extend the life of the pipeline,ā€ Rincon said.
One thing the wastewater plant is lacking is a SCADA (supervisory control and data acquisition) system, Rincon said, which would allow the city the ability to monitor the plant 24/7.
ā€œEspecially as we move into advanced treatment, SCADA is going to be absolutely necessary,ā€ Rincon said.
Additionally, he said that the cityā€™s Shahan Pump Station ā€” a robust system of manholes that collect wastewater that gets pumped out ā€” needs to be rebuilt to modern standards.
ā€œDuring emergencies when we lose power, we have to man that 24/7 and thatā€™s just not a good situation,ā€ he said. ā€œThis facility is beyond its useful life and it needs to be replaced.ā€

In order to lower the proposed rate increases, Hildebrand said he worked with the city to figure out which deferred maintenance projects could be deferred longer or pushed back to get to achieve lower increases.
ā€œWe did undertake quite an effort to try to ensure the long-term health of our utilities but also reduce the burden of the rate impact to your customers and our residents. What weā€™re trying to seek is really a middle ground between continuing to defer improvements and potentially subjecting our water and wastewater systems to potential long-term costs that really could be greater to our community if we donā€™t engage in these important maintenance activities,ā€ Kelley said.
According to Hildebrand, the scenario presented to the council on April 14 reflects the least amount of capital spending the city was able to develop without having serious concerns about deferring projects too much.
When going over proposed capital improvement projects, Kelley pointed out that one project, a new well, is marked as being ā€œin developmentā€ and will be fully funded from development impact fees and wonā€™t be funded with revenue from water rates.

Impacts of increases and how the city performed public outreach

Rate increases coupled with rising housing prices and a COVID-19-impacted economy combine to create a difficult picture for some Cloverdale residents.
Kelley called the proposed rate increases ā€œrelatively bare minimum that address the capital needs of our water and wastewater utilities,ā€ since they include further deferral of some of the cityā€™s capital improvement projects, as well as a lower rate increase for July 2021 to reflect the economic impacts that households have endured during the pandemic.
Critics of the water and wastewater rates have also brought forward concerns about the impact that new development has had on city infrastructure, instead pointing to the way Cloverdale manages continued development in the city and the use of impact fees from new developments.
ā€œStaff really did look at that very carefully and closely and ā€¦ we maxed out the use of available impact fees to find projects that have relationships to serving new development and growth. That also reduced the cost burden on existing residents and enabled us to reduce some of the rate increase,ā€ Kelley said.
Councilmember Todd Lands asked if the city could negotiate higher development impact fees with developers.
ā€œBasically what weā€™re setting up is 10% to 20% growth in Cloverdale over the next four years ā€” thatā€™s going to be 10% to 20% more demand on our systems that weā€™re not taking into account in these numbers,ā€ he said. ā€œIt seems like we should be asking for more than just a well or the little bits that weā€™re pushing. It seems like we should be trying to negotiate more for the taxing and demand that itā€™s going to be putting on our systems.ā€
Kelley said that in order for the council to adopt new impact fees, city staff would need to bring forward an updated study in accordance with AB1600.
ā€œThere is an opportunity for us, as a next step, to engage in the work of updating our nexus study,ā€ Kelley said, adding that council can choose whether it wants to look at a comprehensive study or a targeted one that just looks at specific areas, like water infrastructure.
Additionally, the only two public comments during the April 14 meeting were from people who were displeased with the level of outreach that the city performed.
ā€œIn the five months since the initial proposal, it seems like thereā€™s been two meetings ā€” one a council meeting where the public was invited to comment and the other was a public forum where an hour and 45 minutes were spent with a presentation and 15 to allow for comments. It seems to be like thatā€™s a bit less than anticipated, at least from the comments from the November meeting when we thought that there would be some public input. The fact is that there was very little opportunity for public input until a week or two ago,ā€ Craig Carni said during public comment.
Similar comments were echoed by community member Rob Koslowsky, who submitted a written public comment to the council.
When asked by Councilmember Melanie Bagby about possible outside funding for infrastructure projects, Kelley said that while infrastructure bills are working through the governmental pipeline, the city canā€™t factor any of them into its budget since they arenā€™t currently approved.
ā€œWeā€™re not counting on that. Weā€™re counting on being able to fund and build those projects in this rate study,ā€ Kelley said. ā€œThat being said, when and if a funding bill is provided for infrastructure, we will seek opportunities to obtain grants to support those projects.ā€
In many cases, Kelley said that grants and reimbursements require the city to pay for the project up front, with them going back to request reimbursements afterward. Should the city be able to procure a grant during the five-year timeline associated with the rate study, the council has the ability to reevaluate the rate increase for the year, ā€œWeā€™ll have to look at that on an annual basis or ā€¦ do a check-in to kind of see where weā€™re at,ā€ Kelley said.
Both Lands and Mayor Jason Turner commended Hildebrand and city staff for their work on establishing the new proposed rates.
Looking back
The rates proposed in November 2020, which have since been tabled, outlined a 13% water increase and 17% wastewater increase on Jan. 1, 2021, with the same increase happening on July 1, 2021 and on each subsequent July 1 through 2024. In the past, the cost of capital improvement projects havenā€™t been factored into the cityā€™s rates and annual increases have been around 3% per fiscal year.
Discussion about the proposed rates was held in November 2020 and elicited over 894 pages of letters addressed to the city opposing the rate increases. From there, the proposed increases were withdrawn and the council decided to instruct city staff to organize a public forum where community members could learn about and discuss the rates.
The council held one public forum session about the rates on April 7, the two-hour forum had around 45 minutes devoted to public comment, the rest consisted of a presentation about the proposed rates and associated deferred maintenance needs.
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