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16
City of Pleasanton
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CITY CLERK
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AGENDA PACKETS
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2023
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110723 REGULAR
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16
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11/2/2023 4:48:37 PM
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CITY CLERK
CITY CLERK - TYPE
AGENDA REPORT
DOCUMENT DATE
11/7/2023
DESTRUCT DATE
15Y
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income residents; this will be incorporated into the second phase of the rate study to be <br />completed. <br />Due to the current sewer enterprise operations and reserves, the sewer rate increases <br />are being limited to cost-of-living adjustment only. The City is currently updating the <br />Sewer Master Plan with completion anticipated by summer 2024 that will outline future <br />major maintenance projects that will be reviewed to determine if rate increases will be <br />required in the future. <br />Per Proposition 218 requirements, water agencies must develop a nexus between their <br />rates and their costs and document their methodology in an administrative record <br />report/study). A complete copy of the full and final Water and Recycled Water Rate <br />Study prepared by Raftelis, dated August 4, 2023, is provided as Attachment 1. <br />Audit and Review of Accounts and Expenditures <br />The first step in analyzing the current water and sewer rates was to review and audit <br />existing customer accounts to determine if there were any differences in the amount of <br />water provided compared to the volume charged for in the billing system; this is a <br />routine operating procedure for a utility. Staff also reviewed existing expenditures to <br />determine if there were areas where costs could be reduced or economies of scale <br />could be realized prior to developing the expenditures for the rate analysis. <br />Proposed Water Rate Increase <br />The proposed water rate increase is intended to accomplish several critical outcomes.. <br />Immediate/near-term essential system upgrades, including pipe expansion <br />projects (Stoneridge Drive, Bernal Avenue and Sunol Boulevard) and a <br />temporary booster pump that were approved by the City Council and are <br />underway <br />Funding to plan for the water supply alternative project design work — $2 <br />million/year is budgeted toward a local solution for the 3,500-acre feet of <br />groundwater the City is currently purchasing from Zone 7 <br />Funding to pay for the additional purchase of water from Zone 7 over the next 2-3 <br />years, while the water supply alternative is constructed <br />Augmented staffing with three positions to manage, plan and implement solutions <br />for the water distribution system <br />Replenishing the fund reserve to meet the policy target of 35 percent in Fiscal <br />Year 2025/26 and restoring the enterprise fund's financial position to maintain <br />adequate debt coverage that allows the City to resolve the water supply <br />alternative project and projects identified in the Water System Master Plan. <br />To proactively address these criteria, the city contracted with Raftelis to initiate a water <br />rate study. Aligned with established best practices, the rate study process includes <br />three elements: a financial plan, cost of service, and rate structure. <br />Page 7 of 19
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