Mount Vernon plans 15% rate hike to replace aging wastewater infrastructure

Community

Water pipe leak 1200

Mount Vernon wastewater customers could see their monthly bills rise $3 per month in 2021 to help fund projects required by state compliance mandates and to fix aging infrastructure. | Holger Schué/Pixabay

MOUNT VERNON – The average Mount Vernon wastewater customer’s monthly bills may rise $3 per month in 2021 to increase revenue to fund projects required by state compliance mandates and to fix an aging infrastructure.

City Council held the second of three readings on the rate hike on Dec. 14.

Most customers pay $19.60 for using the minimum of almost 3,000 gallons of water monthly. They would pay $22.56 in 2021, City Engineer Brian Ball said. The ordinance proposes three years of 15% rate hikes increasing the monthly minimum in 2022 to $25.52. In 2023 it would be $28.92.

The city needs the rate increase to repair and replace its aging wastewater infrastructure and fund capital projects mandated by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, Ball said. In 2020 the city has had 57 sewer backups, and 119.7 miles of sanitary lines require improvements. The wastewater treatment plant’s digesters, which break down organic waste, are about to fail.

Capital improvement project costs will rise to $6 million in 2022, but the city gets $3 million in annual revenue, with $1 million of that used to pay down debt.

The city hasn’t changed its rates since 2017 when a 42% rate hike was imposed, the first increase since 2013.

The ordinance requires an evaluation by council in three years.

“It does give us the opportunity to make sure that we’re constantly evaluating the rates,” Richard Dzik, Mount Vernon Safety-Service director, said. It also keeps the city from digging itself into the hole it has been doing over the last 20 years.

Councilmember Tanner Salyers said that when customers are used to the same billing amount for years and suddenly the charge increases annually, it is not easily accepted.

“I would say this: if we had instituted 3% increases 20 years ago, we probably wouldn't be in this situation,” Dzik said.

Part of the proposal also would remove the senior discount for customers 65 and older.

Councilmember John Francis asked if this was limited to wastewater customers.

Ball said that as written, the ordinance being read would include 1,194 water accounts. Councilmember Tammy Woods amended the ordinance to remove that section.

“I just want to make sure I’m hearing things right,” Francis said. “Because I’m not against the increase. I’ve heard these nightmare stories since I’ve been on council of the sickening decay of our infrastructure under our feet.”

Public Utilities Director Mathias Orndorf’s planned retirement in the middle of 2021 has the city considering a second assistant director, in order to have properly certified water and wastewater operators to avoid EPA penalties.

MORE NEWS