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Paying for Water in California: Prop 218 Caitrin Chappelle, Associate Center Director April 28, 2015 Supported by the S. D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation
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The current drought highlights the crucial role of our water system 2 California’s economic, social, and environmental health all rely on a well-managed water system A key ingredient for success is adequate funding
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Local agencies raise most of the $30+ billion spent annually 3 SOURCE: Author estimates (various sources)
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4 Three constitutional reforms have made it harder to pay for local water services 197819962010 Prop 13Prop 218Prop 26 Property taxes reduced Local special taxes require 2/3 voter approval State taxes require 2/3 legislative approval* * Ballot measures can still pass with simple majority (50%) of state voters General taxes no longer available to special districts Local property-related fees/assessments: 1.Property-owner protest hearings 2.Strict cost-of-service requirements 3.Floods and stormwater: new charges require 50% vote by property owners or 2/3 popular vote Stricter requirements on local non-property related fees and state regulatory fees (more likely to be taxes) Stricter cost-of-service requirements for wholesale agency fees
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Urban water and wastewater utilities are in relatively good fiscal health Usually can raise rates to meet needs Investments have improved urban drought-resilience But looming concerns: –Rising costs (treatment standards, aging infrastructure, Delta) –Legal obstacles to conservation pricing, portfolio-based management, lifeline rates 5 Source: Capital needs estimates from EPA Clean Drinking Water Survey (2013) and Clean Watershed survey (2008)
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San Juan Capistrano Case Good news: The judge rejected the notion that recycled water costs couldn’t be spread among all users. Bad news: The ruling will significantly complicate tiered pricing. Tiered rates can be consistent with Prop 218, if agencies face increasing marginal costs for higher levels of supplies. But this isn’t a precise science. Next steps: many rate structures are vulnerable, agencies need to make better cases, reform? 6
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We face debilitating funding gaps in other areas 7 Overall grade Annual gap ($ millions) Water supplyPassing (mostly)— WastewaterPassing (mostly)— Safe drinking water (small rural systems) Failing$30–$160 Flood protectionFailing$800–$1,000 Stormwater managementFailing$500–$800 Aquatic ecosystem management Failing$400–$700 Integrated managementOn the brink$200–$300 Total Annual Gap: $2 – $3 Billion
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Stormwater management has been most hindered by constitutional reforms New and growing regulatory mandate to manage pollution, not just drainage Any new charge requires a vote – often at 2/3 supermajority – and beneficiaries are usually downstream Costs are rising as regulations get stricter 8 The Los Angeles River watershed is expected to reach “zero-trash”
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Stormwater capture is an example of integrated water management Addresses pollution Augments water supply Success requires –Breaking down management silos –Raising funds Water bills can pick up part of the tab (for water supply benefits) 9 Green Streets in Burlingame
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California needs to look beyond state bonds to close funding gaps Gap area Annual gap ($ millions) One-time infusion from Prop 1 ($ millions) Other long-term funding options Safe drinking water in small rural systems $30–$160$260* Statewide surcharges on water, chemical use Flood protection $800–$1,000$395 Developer fees Property assessments Special state, local taxes Stormwater management $500–$800$200 Developer fees Property assessments Special state, local taxes Surcharges on water, chemical, or road use Aquatic ecosystem management $400–$700$2,845** Special state, local taxes Surcharges on water use, hydropower production Integrated management $200–$300$510 Special state, local taxes Surcharges on water use 10
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Transparency and integration are key Local agencies can make a better case –Communicate costs and needs to ratepayers –Integrate to boost performance and funding options State and federal agencies can help reduce costs –Get integrated –Improve regulatory efficiency –Crunch the numbers (models, data, analysis) 11
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Constitutional reforms may be needed Allow portfolio-based water pricing Treat stormwater as regulatory fee Treat floods like water and sewer Allow lifeline rates Lower voting thresholds for special taxes 12
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The drought opens windows of opportunity for local and statewide action 13 Source: PPIC Statewide Survey: Californians and their Government
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Thank you! 14 More information at www.ppic.org/waterwww.ppic.org/water
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Notes on the use of these slides 15 These slides were created to accompany a presentation. They do not include full documentation of sources, data samples, methods, and interpretations. To avoid misinterpretations, please contact: Caitrin Chappelle: 415-291-4435, chappelle@ppic.org Thank you for your interest in this work.
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