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Figure ES -1 <br />Overview of the Comprehensive Rate Study <br />Revenue Requirement Analysis <br />Cost of Service Analysis <br />Rate Design Analysis <br />1 <br />Compares the sources offunds (revenues) to <br />the expenses of the utility to determine the <br />overall rate adjustment <br />Allocates the revenue requirements to the <br />various customer classes of service in a "fair <br />and equitable" manner <br />Considers both the level and structure of the <br />rate design to collect the target level of <br />revenues <br />The revenue requirement analysis and the rate design analysis were conducted as part of this <br />study. At this time a cost of service analysis was not completed for the City. The development <br />of cost based rates can be accomplished through a review of the revenue requirement and rate <br />design analyses. <br />Summary of the Revenue Requirement Analysis <br />The development of the revenue requirement is the first analytical step in the rate study process. <br />A revenue requirement analysis determines the overall adequacy of the City's local sewer rates. <br />In developing the local sewer revenue requirement, it was assumed that the utility must <br />financially "stand on its own" and be properly and adequately funded. <br />The initial step in calculating the revenue requirement was to establish a "test period or time <br />frame of reference for the revenue requirement analysis. For this particular study, the revenue <br />requirement was developed for the eight -year projected time period of FY 2010 FY 2017. In <br />projecting the revenues and operating expenses for the utility, the primary inputs to the analysis <br />were the City's financial documents and the revenue and expenses as developed by City staff. <br />The City has a significant level of capital improvement projects planned over the study's time <br />horizon. More importantly, in looking beyond the next eight years, the number and size of the <br />replacement sewer projects is anticipated to ramp up significantly. The City and its engineering <br />consultant are in the process of updating the Water and Wastewater Asset Management Study, <br />which includes an analysis of the local sewer collection and pumping system. The Asset <br />Management Study was not completed at the time of this study, but it was in a draft form which <br />allowed HDR to gain an understanding of the potential capital replacement expenditures over the <br />next fifty to seventy-five years. The value of the Asset Management Study to this rate study is <br />that it provided a road map of where the City should be positioned in eight years, as it relates to <br />capital improvement funding from rates and capital reserve fund balances. <br />In( Executive Summary ES-2 <br />City of Pleasanton Local Sewer Rate Study <br />