The New Ventura Water Rate Increase Will Effectively Cost You 43% More
“To sin by silence, when they should protest, makes cowards of men.”
—Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Decisions made by past and present City Councils led to Ventura Water increasing water rates by 7% and wastewater rates by 6% for each year over the next four years. Extrapolated out, the water rate increase for the “average” ratepayer will grow 43% during that time.
The current City Council and Ventura Water want to convince you we need the increases. They began the process by including a brochure in your latest water bill explaining why they propose increasing rates.
If You Don’t Protest, You Vote “Yes” Automatically
Ventura is obliged under Proposition 218 to allow ratepayers to protest the rate increases. Yet, Ventura Water doesn’t make it easy to do so. The protest form is intentionally challenging to locate. In the 8-page Ventura Water ‘Proposed Rate Adjustments’ document, Ventura Water buries the protest procedure on the last page. It is not bolded or highlighted to stand out to the reader. The protest format is not user-friendly. There is little explanation on how to complete the form, making it confusing to property owners.
VREG has written before about how unfair filing a protest under Prop 218 is in Ventura. While Ventura does what is minimally required to be legal, the way objections are structured limits public complaints and makes it nearly impossible for voters to overturn any rate increase. In no way does Ventura’s protest procedure truly measure the public’s intent to tax themselves further.
The notice explains that the city will hold public hearings on April 19, 2021 and April 28, 2021.
If you oppose this increase, Ventura Water’s notice states that the parcel owner, or customer of record on the water bill, must file a written protest with the City Clerk at City Hall.
Where To Get Your Rate Increase Protest Form
The City did not enclose a protest form with the rate increase notice. Instead, the brochure directs you to go online. You can find the Water Shortage Rate Protest form here. You can complete the form online, but you must print it for it to count.
Written protests may be submitted by mail to the Ventura City Clerk’s Office at 501 Poli Street (Room 204) Ventura, California 93001, or in person at the drop box near the back entrance of City Hall at 501 Poli Street, Ventura, California 93001 (parking lot behind City Hall). City Hall is currently closed to the public due to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. All mailed written protests must be received (not postmarked) by the City Clerk no later than May 17, 2021, at 5:00 pm.
To prevent the rate increase, most property owners (51%) must file a protest. Renters have no right to protest. Business owners have no right to protest. Only the 32,000 people that own property with water meters have a right to vote. The remaining 81,000 people in the City of Ventura are effectively disenfranchised. They have no vote but will have to pay.
Why Is Ventura Raising Rates?
Ventura Water Department justifies the rate increase by saying we must “control our water and wastewater,” and Ventura Water does not “trust” other agencies to help do that.
Instead, Ventura Water plans to build a $240 million wastewater treatment plant that will duplicate facilities that already exist near Ventura. The 2019 Corollo Report (commissioned by Ventura Water), titled Ventura Water Supply Projects and Alternatives, states that if Ventura Water utilizes the United Water Conservation and the Oxnard Water Treatment Plant, they would not need to build a separate treatment plant. The cost savings to Ventura ratepayers could be enormous.
Ventura Water neglects to mention that Ventura Water must rely on and co-exist with outside agencies like United Water and Casitas Water already. Also, soon Ventura Water will be working with the management of the State Water project to deliver water to the city.
The ‘lack of control and trust’ Ventura Water purports to be why it’s not cooperating with other water agencies is absurd. It’s already working with several other agencies and depends upon many other outside agencies for water resources.
The Unspoken Motivation Behind The New Plant
This City Council, and past ones, has accepted Ventura Water Department’s recommendations for a new processing plant called VenturaWaterPure without profound skepticism. Ventura Water has a massive conflict of interest (getting a new facility built and employing another 27 employees – Corollo Report 2019). Yet, the City Council seems oblivious. People may deny it, but governments measure their success in part by budget and staff size. Why would anyone think that the Ventura Water Department is any different?
Why Is The City Council Reluctant To Change?
The City Council fears that any redirection from building their facility will delay complying with the Wishtoyo Consent Agreement and result in substantial legal penalties. By extending the Consent Agreement deadline and utilizing the existing facilities at United and Oxnard, Ventura could produce a faster result.
Editors Comments On The Rate Increases
If we continue down this path, Ventura ratepayers will pay more than may be needed. Ventura Water has put the price tag on “control” and “trust.” It’s $200 million.
We’ve said repeatedly, at the very least, the Ventura City Council should:
- Call for an accurate, independent, cost analysis that could result in potential savings of $200 million
- Delay any rate increase to Wastewater rates
- Direct the City attorney to apply for a deadline extension on the Wishtoyo Consent Agreement to provide more time to find the optimal solution while avoiding substantial legal penalties
- Open negations with United Water and the City of Oxnard to utilize a wastewater treatment process.
Our current path is misguided and needs reevaluation. Whenever a financial decision boils down to “control,” the issue is power and prestige, not what’s best for the public.
Protest Your City Councilmembers’ Water Rate Increase
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The City passed this increase in water rates despite the 2000+ protest letters and public comments. This is going to hurt my finances.
Yes, there were thousands of protests to the water rate increase, but not the required number of 16,000. You’re not alone when you write this will hurt your finances. Everyone will be effected; it’s just that many ratepayers don’t know yet because they’re not paying attention.
Still trying to locate a link that doesn’t dump site… all links I’ve been trying to protest this with are null. Food off my table. My apt landlords have failed
To show me how I’ve used more water or how as
An apartment complex we’ve acquired the additional charge.
No pamphlet was sent out. In fact after weeks of pressing Essex for the “email” they were sure they received about it, they were unable to provide substantial proof of water usage which is what their explanation has been thus far. No one is making more money. But we are all working harder. Those of us who are poor and doing our best to float our friends enough money to eat and feed the kids we host. How is this responsible? Rent increased/threats of non payment while house holds are still reeling from Covid losses… at the bottom, I can say for certainty that myself and my neighbors have already been wary of the drought, why is this additional charge our fault to pay. It should come as an additional onset of the landlords who are already raising prices for rentals well beyond what 2-4 people can afford in a one bedroom apartment. Small farmers supporting businesses and multiple family units aren’t paying this extravagant increase. How are locals supposed to keep this tiny economy thriving? Ask those questions. To the echelon that don’t have to figure out whether they should spend their money on food or rent… just saying. From one ex journalist to your paper… grow some guts
Max, Thanks for your comment. You may be too late to lodge a protest over Ventura’s water and wastewater rate increase. The window for that protest closed on May 17, 2021.
The final total of people protesting was 1,035 protested the water rate increase, 1,013 protested the wastewater rate increase and 977 protested the water shortage increase. 42 votes were received too late and were not counted in the totals.