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City of Pleasanton Water Rate Study <br /> 1. Introduction <br /> Revenue stability Rates are designed to recover revenue from the City's fixed <br /> and variable charges that will adequately cover its fixed and variable costs, <br /> barring water shortages when rationing is required. <br /> Conservation signal Rates are designed to recover the cost of service from each <br /> customer class and, within each class, to provide appropriate rewards for <br /> efficient water use and to discourage waste. <br /> Administrative ease Rates are designed to enable easy implementation and <br /> ongoing administration, including monitoring and updating. <br /> Affordability Rates need to be as affordable as possible while maintaining a <br /> sound financial position and credit rating. <br /> Customer acceptance Rates are designed to be as simple as possible to facilitate <br /> customer understanding and acceptance. <br /> Fairness Rates are designed so that each customer class pays its proportionate <br /> share of the required revenue in compliance with legal rate making <br /> requirements. <br /> In the current rate study, a key consideration was encouraging efficient water use <br /> within the SFR customer class, which is where considerable discretionary irrigation <br /> occurs. The existing set of three tiers in the residential consumption charges was <br /> developed over 15 years ago after the last major drought. The City Council determined <br /> that adding a fourth tier would focus the price signal on the appropriate customers, <br /> given today's customer demand patterns, thereby rewarding low use and discouraging <br /> high use. <br /> The result of adding a fourth tier to the residential rates raised the question as to <br /> whether it still made sense to include MFR customers in the residential class. In order <br /> to do so, adjustments have been made to the multi family use based on the size of the <br /> meter connection. These adjustments factor the use in proportion to the capacity of the <br /> connection, but have been applied inconsistently. Moreover, landlords receive the bill, <br /> rather than the end -user tenants. As a result, the tiered price signal is not as effective. It <br /> was concluded that it would be more equitable and easier to administer if the MFR <br /> customers were moved from the residential to the commercial customer class. <br /> City staff concluded that the seasonal irrigation rate structure should be converted to a <br /> uniform structure. The City's seasonal rates were designed to encourage efficiency <br /> during the peak irrigation season. To do so, the high peak season rate was balanced <br /> with a very low off -peak rate in order not to charge more than the cost of service to the <br /> irrigation class over the course of a year. <br /> Seasonal rates are best suited for systems where there is little off -peak demand. In the <br /> City's case, however, there is significant irrigation during the off -peak that benefits <br /> from the very low rates; it is possible that not all of the irrigation customers use their <br /> March 18, 2010 Page 6 HF &H Consultants, LLC <br />