Friday, February 15, 2002

PTC sewer rates will increase 25 percent for residential customers

By JOHN MUNFORD
jmunford@TheCitizenNews.com

To help pay for its impending $17.2 million expansion, the Peachtree City Water and Sewer Authority is raising its sewer rates across the board.

Depending on usage, the increase works out to between $2.50 and $8.80 per month for residential customers using between 2,000 and 10,000 gallons a month. The residential rate increase to $4.38 per 1,000 gallons an increase of 25 percent is effective March 1 along with an increase in the minimum bill charge from $15.30 to $20.

This is the first time sewer rates have risen in Peachtree City since the city took over the system in 1992.

The increase will be more dramatic for local businesses, industries and multi-family customers of WASA. The rate for those entities will increase from $2.75 per 1,000 gallons to $4.85 per 1,000 gallons by October, with an intermediate increase effective March 1 to $3.25.

That will allow the companies time to budget for the increase, said WASA General Manager Larry Turner. For the authority's largest customer, Photocircuits, the average monthly bill will increase by just over $25,000 by Oct. 1.

The increase was needed to WASA could qualify for bond financing, since bank officials require that it take in enough money annually to pay back the debt that will be owed.

The system expansion, which is slated to begin in June and end in February 2004, will increase the sewer system's capacity by 2 million gallons a day. That will be enough to serve the city at full buildout, Turner said.

Part of the expansion project is to permanently shut down the Flat Creek treatment facility, which was originally built to be a temporary treatment plant but has been in use for almost 30 years, Turner said. Both of the authority's other wastewater treatment plants, the Line Creek and Rockaway facilities, will also be expanded and modernized.

The expansion will also allow the authority to treat waste water with an extra filtration process so it may be used for irrigation at Planterra Ridge golf course. This will keep the golf course from having to draw water from Line Creek for irrigation purposes during the summer months.

Turner also said the expansion will allow the authority to meet all present environmental regulations and ones that could be enacted in the foreseeable future.

WASA member Ted Taylor said the authority didn't have much choice but to approve the rate increase. The authority also agreed to review its rates every two years to make sure it takes in enough money to pay the annual debt service for the expansion.

 


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