Refining Montecito Water Rates for Desal: A Balancing Act

By Melinda Burns

Which Montecito water customers should bear the greatest share of the $4.3 million yearly cost of purchasing Santa Barbara water for the next 50 years?

A draft overview of potential water rate increases, presented by the Montecito Water District board at a sparsely attended public workshop on Monday, included scenarios that would raise the monthly service charge for a ¾-inch water meter, standard for many single-family homes, from $45 now to up to $128 by 2024. Higher fixed charges would provide more fiscal stability for the district, the presentation showed, but small users would be hit with larger bills.

The Montecito water board wants to buy enough water from Santa Barbara to meet about a third of the community’s annual demand. The city would produce the extra supply at its $72 million desalination plant, but the water shipped to Montecito would come from other city sources as well. The Montecito water board is scheduled to adopt rate hikes to pay for Santa Barbara water next April; they would go into effect on May 1.

Under one scenario unveiled by the board this week, residential water bills, currently $142 per month, on average, would more than double to $291 by 2024, while commercial and institutional bills – for large users such as the cemetery, golf courses and hotels – would increase by 47 percent during the same period, from $851 per month now, on average, to $1,251.

With a city supply on hand, district officials said, Montecito could reduce its dependence on state aqueduct water, saving up to $1 million per year. The new rates would include increases to cover inflation, officials said, but would not cover the future costs of drawing up a groundwater sustainability plan, repairing district storage tanks, or building a wastewater recycling plant.

On Tuesday, at its regular monthly meeting, the board for the first time announced its intent, in collaboration with the Montecito Sanitary District, to supply non-potable recycled water for irrigation to the Santa Barbara Cemetery and other large customers. Estimates for that project range from $5 million to $16 million.


Melinda Burns is a freelance journalist in Santa Barbara.

Melinda Burns

Written by Melinda Burns

Melinda Burns is an investigative journalist with 40 years of experience covering immigration, water, science and the environment. As a community service, she offers her reports to multiple publications in Santa Barbara County, at the same time, for free.

What do you think?

Comments

0 Comments deleted by Administrator

Leave a Review or Comment

4 Comments

  1. This is hilarious! What did Montecito residents think was going to happen by voting in Bob Hazards “ water security slate of candidates” ?
    This is only the beginning of their water fee woes. Next he will have his slate dismantle the sanitary district. A special district that has been a well oiled financially sound machine for decades. Good luck with your Water Security Team Montecito!

  2. It would be interesting to compare the water prices between Goleta, Santa Barbara, Montecito, Carpinteria. For example, if a house uses 10 HCF per month and, has a 3/4 inch meter, how much would be the total $/month for each of these areas? Is Montecito water really that much more expensive than Santa Barbara water? If the answer is “Yes,” then this leads to a whole series of questions such as “Why is Montecito water so expensive?” and “How can the cost of Montecito water be reduced?”

  3. @7:54 My 1” meter with Goleta Water District is $78.99 per month. Water use charge is now tiered at 1-6 HCF =$5.26,
    7-16 HCF =$6.46 , 17+ HCF= $7.12. They finally dropped the drought surcharge. I live in the county and have 2 acres of land. But I have the same tiered allotment as someone in a small Goleta tract house. The tiered system is a scam and it doesn’t encourage water conservation. Everyone should be charged one rate per HCF. Utility companies really have unfair ways to increase costs to consumers. Could you imagine being charged this way for any other commodity ? What if A gas station charged one rate up to 5 gallons then slowly increased the cost per gallon?

  4. 11:15 p.m. Your comments ignore the fact that water is a basic necessity of life and assuring an affordable price for the least wealthy if reasonable. It is also true that an escalating price discourages wanton misuse of the limited resource. So a graduated scale is perfectly just. Maybe it is justice that you object to.

Man Arrested for Assaulting La Cumbre Plaza Employee

Holiday Increase in Stolen Packages and Vehicles