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Costs could force county water-rate hike
by Bob Shiles
Staff writer
Feb 03, 2013 | 168169 views | 12 12 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Bob Shiles

Staff writer

LUMBERTON — It could cost Robeson County residents more to use county water beginning July 1.

County Manager Ricky Harris said Friday that the cost of installing and maintaining water lines and storage tanks has increased, forcing county officials to at least consider increasing the rates for both residential and commercial customers.

“It will definitely be looked at during budget time,” Harris said. “The commissioners won’t like it, but it’s something that has to be looked at.”

A hint that county water rates might increase surfaced last week during the county’s annual three-day retreat. Al Grimsley, the county’s public works director, told the commissioners that the cost of operating his department is increasing.

“Everything, all of our materials, have increased by 13 percent,” he said.

According to Grimsley, all of the counties surrounding Robeson charge their water customers higher residential and commercial rates. He said many counties charge out-of-county users double for water.

At present, Grimsley said, out-of-county users of Robeson’s water system — including many customers in southern Cumberland County — pay the same rates as in-county customers with an additional $4 monthly surcharge.

Currently, Robeson charges residential customers $24.05 per 5,000 gallons and commercial customers $896.50 for 500,000 gallons. Rates in surrounding counties for residential customers per 5,000 gallons, and commercial customers per an average of 500,000 gallons include: Hoke: $26.5o residential, $1,762 commercial; Bladen: $29.40 residential, $908.65 commercial; Columbus: $37 residential, $2,017 commercial.

Grimsley warned the commissioners that the county water system must be monitored closely to ensure that it continues to operate economically.

“If we don’t keep our eyes on it, our costs may overtake us,” the director said.

Grimsley did not recommend that rates be raised immediately. He told the board that he is in the process of conducting a study to determine if the current rates are meeting the costs of operating the system. He said he would present the commissioners with the results of the study when they are working on the 2013-14 fiscal budget.

The commissioners will hold their regular monthly meeting Monday, but the agenda is light in the wake of the three-day retreat that ended Friday.

The board is expected to make appointments to the Board of Equalization and Review and the Southeastern Economic Development Commission. Also, the commissioners are scheduled to hold a closed session.

The meeting begins at 6 p.m. at the county administration building on North Elm Street.



Comments
(12)
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ugh12
|
February 03, 2013
I'd like to know where the retreat was and what it cost the tax payers.
payup
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February 03, 2013
Show up to the meeting Feb 18. and make sure the Commissioners know that a change is needed. Has anyone ever looked at the books to see where our tax dollars are going? They should put the slush funds together and give the water department funding. Support your County and make a change. The Commissioners are still laughing all the way to the OutBack Steak House after the meetings. Oh and its on us.
kristofr35
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February 03, 2013
Straitforward take your bill to your meter and verify the reading on your meter and the gallons used. Your last months reading is on the bill. The same goes for your electrical meter.
ROSSisRIGHT
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February 03, 2013
All commissioners: Pay this extra cost out of the discretionary funds. It's our tax money we paid in already anyway......
PercyKution
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February 03, 2013
They don't have any of that money left. They spent it on their "boyfriends", since they're all same-sex marriage democrats.
just_me66
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February 03, 2013
i agree we were home when the meter reader came by he read the neighbors and went right by our house. we stood right there and watched him.

my husband went out there when he came back by, stopped him and then he read our meter.

he said he didnt know we had a meter, We have had county water for 10 years and you dont know we had a meter. REALLY!!!
PercyKution
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February 03, 2013
Thats what he was told to say in case anybody asked. It's ALL a SCAM.
TravestyOfJustice
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February 03, 2013
Yet another way this den of thieves we call commissioners come up with to raise money for their on discretionary coffers. What we need is a true outside audit of not only the "COOKED" books but also the huge amount of waste in any county office you walk in to. IF the true amount of duplicity in work assignments was known, it would be shocking. There should be an ordinance passed that, neither immediate nor primary relatives of commissioners or their spouses, could be employed by the county. I wonder how many unnecessary positions would then be eliminated. Besides, isn't it a conflict of interest to have said family members employed based on the fact that said employee either directly or indirectly works for the commissioner(s). But then again, I guess we can "trust" the commissioners to be professional, much as they are with voting themselves par raises, perks, and money for their own "discretion"... Just Saying...
straightforward
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February 03, 2013
the county also needs to hire folks that are goig to read the meters and not just ride by and guess at them. we recieved our bill the other day and compaired it to our neighbour bill we live in a doublewide occupied by 3 adults and wash twice as many clothes they have a single wide with 2 adults and 1 child somehow our bills look identical amount and gallons used. never in 5 years has this occured
PercyKution
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February 03, 2013
You hit the nail on the head with the "COOKED BOOKS". And it will only get WORSE until every last one of these COCKROACHES are run plumb out of the county. And dared to come back.
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