Rural water rate increase?

IRUA gets water from Marshalltown too. As much as they do from Newton. I'm guessing you have to pay extra for that compared to Marshalltown residents though.
Looks like they get about half as much from Marshalltown (900 million gals vs 450). Didn't know that. Wonder how that works. There's no way all of our water is coming from Marshalltown. We can tell the difference. Maybe rural areas North of Mtown get Mtown water and South gets Newton?
 
Thanks for the additional info. As you can see though, non of the rates exceed $10/1000 and those rates are for the minimum and in most cases the cost is half that or less for the over.
I was talking about what rate customers pay for water. The amounts listed in that article are what rates communities like Newton charge to regional water associations. It's not the same thing. Rathbun Regional Water, for example, charges their customers around $10/1000 gallons for the minimum. I'm not sure if you are suggesting Regional Water Associations should be providing water at cost to its customers, but obviously they can't do that because they have operational costs.
 
Looks like they get about half as much from Marshalltown (900 million gals vs 450). Didn't know that. Wonder how that works. There's no way all of our water is coming from Marshalltown. We can tell the difference. Maybe rural areas North of Mtown get Mtown water and South gets Newton?
According to their 2023 annual report they get 90 million from Newton, Marshalltown, and their own well field outside of Waverly monthly. Not sure why there is a discrepancy in numbers.

 
I don’t think any increase will send me back to using the well. We lost power for two days last week and it brought back memories of the days of no water because of no electric or pump problems. I’m not even sure if there is a pump repair person nearby
 
I live in the desert and people in my town are ******** up a storm because they finally realized they can't sustain the lowest rates in the area.
 
And in return, they are now contemplating charging us in northeast Iowa for the increased cost of the Newton water
In most cases, spreading costs over a larger rate base results in lower per customer costs.
 
Out of curiosity, on average how much are you paying each month right now? If starting at $15/month, going to $75 is one thing. Starting at $100 going to $500 is a different story.
 
You think you have it bad, the city where I live let water and sewer improvements go for so long that finally the federal government stepped in and demanded they fix it. That was 15 years ago and we are still under the same consent decree.

What that meant, is water rates doubled immediately and there have been a series of increases since, the latest one just a couple of weeks ago. People have been complaining about the high cost of water before this latest increase. Some families get monthly water bills of $400 or more. I've heard of one-time monthly bills as high as $1,000-plus.

All this because the city administration hasn't been doing its job and fixing problems as they arise. We were promised that as soon as the problems were fixed, the water rates would go back down, but that was 15 years ago.

My bill for a single person household is about $45 a month, but If I'm not careful, it can go up to $55 in a heart beat. Before all this, my monthly bill was in the $25 range and that includes garbage pickup. It doesn't seem like that much, but I do laundry once a month, if that, because I'm retired and have a lot of clothes and shower maybe two times a week because, again, I'm retired and don't go anywhere or have anyone to impress.

If I was working, my water bill could easily double what it is now by doing laundry every week and showering every day.
 
Out of curiosity, on average how much are you paying each month right now? If starting at $15/month, going to $75 is one thing. Starting at $100 going to $500 is a different story.
I'm paying $15.62 per 1,000 gallons. Our bill is typically around $75.
 
Been getting water from these folks over 35 years. They have done an outstanding job keeping water affordable over the years. Projects have been completed on schedule and budget. Water quality is excellent. Service is great. Are existing well water was very hard and loaded with sulfer.

What bothers me more is the amount of water required for both ethanol production and data center cooling. These will become bigger and bigger factors as time goes on and will impact cost/availibility.
 
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I live on an acreage and have a well. I built a new house in '95 and although we didn't have access to rural water at the time we knew it was imminent and plumbed for ease of hookup and a couple years later it arrived. All outside use remained on the well. The vein of water tapped by our well (140' deep) is arguably one of hardest around. In the "old house" we had Culligan do a hardness test as we shopped for a new water softener and the hardness exceeded their charts. Besides the cost of salt for treatment the water was over time very hard on dishwashers, toilets, showers, washing machines and the like, so the thought of buying water when we already had availability was easily offset. I don't think the cost for a minimum use of water has increased more than a couple bucks a month in the last 25 years. I just received a letter from Iowa Regional Utilities Assoc. that they found themselves in a dispute with their suppliers on the interpretation of a 40 year old agreement that would increase their water cost from between 172 and 793 percent of what they have been currently paying and that cost passed on to us would cause our bill to double. If this comes to fruition I guess we will bite the bullet and remain a customer but I didn't plan for this in my retirement budget:):):).

It's the city of Newton doing this if anybody is wondering. Mostly because they screwed up their budget.
 
All this because the city administration hasn't been doing its job and fixing problems as they arise. We were promised that as soon as the problems were fixed, the water rates would go back down, but that was 15 years ago.

Unfortunately, city government is often a product of its voters as well. People don't want to pay more so they're happy when the city is putting off repairs when all they hear is their taxes aren't going up. Eventually someone ends up holding the bag. Its also possible the reason the rates havent gone back down is that they are now doing that regular maintenance and that is taking that additional money, but it may prevent those kinds of jumps in the future.

Happens a lot of times with HOAs too. Far too many have too little in reserve (especially newer HOAs that are still in good condition and repairs seem like a distant problem) and aren't banking away money for things like roof and pavement repairs, leaving whoever lives there when repairs become unavoidable with a large assessment to make up for what should have been smaller more regular dues payments building up reserves in the years/decades prior.
 
Sounds like it could go up to $150 per month because of this (if they don't reach some sort of agreement.)
Can you explain that math? If the wholesale cost from Newton to IRUA is going from $1.14 for 1000 gals to 3.27 for 1000, a 2.23 difference, how does that translate to an increase of $75 for around 5000 gals?
 
What bothers me more is the amount of water required for both ethanol production and data center cooling. These will become bigger and bigger factors as time goes on and will impact cost/availibility.
It doesn't directly affect me because I'm on well water, but Cedar Rapids recently announced that Google is building a data center near the airport. The city said they would be top 3 in water usage (mostly likely only behind ADM and Quaker Oats).

Google gets some tasty 20 year tax credits and the rest of the population gets utility increases.
 
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Can you explain that math? If the wholesale cost from Newton to IRUA is going from $1.14 for 1000 gals to 3.27 for 1000, a 2.23 difference, how does that translate to an increase of $75 for around 5000 gals?

No idea. It won't impact me. I'm just going off what I was told by a guy that got a letter saying his water bill is going to double.
 
I have young people who work for me that are excited about their 2.5% raise. I wish I could straight up tell them they are actually pocketing less money this year than last year
 
I have young people who work for me that are excited about their 2.5% raise. I wish I could straight up tell them they are actually pocketing less money this year than last year
There is a whole subforum where you can discuss all your feelings about this without polluting a thread about rural water rates
 
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If you are rural and own your land, can’t you drill your own well? Spend
$15-20k and get your own well and pressure system. Avoid those pesky $30 per month water bills.
 
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