Directors OK utilities advisory committee

FORT SMITH -- City directors unanimously approved the establishment of a Water and Sanitary Sewer Utilities Advisory Committee but were split on what they believed the committee should accomplish.

The title of the ordinance Mayor George McGill proposed last month, and approved by directors Tuesday following a 30-minute debate, says the committee would review or recommend projects or policies related to the city's water and sewer utilities.

McGill said he viewed the committee as a body to which department heads would regularly report about projects the utilities were undertaking, report to the directors on those projects and provide a venue for the public to keep abreast of how the water and sewer department was spending the tax dollars.

McGill proposed the committee March 12 in response to the deluge of complaints from water customers about their water bills after the city installed new meters and, at the same time, implemented new online billing software and transferred billing from the city's Finance Department to the Utilities Department.

Many customers complained about skyrocketing water bills because of new meters that measured water use more accurately or because they had trouble dealing with the new billing software and couldn't get the new utilities billing representatives to resolve their complaints.

"This is our fault," Director Robyn Dawson said Tuesday of the confluence of issues. "This is no one's fault but us. It's not leaks. It's not adding a new-meter 15 percent to your bill. It is the perfect storm that we have created, and we need to tell the public we're sorry, we're going to fix it."

Some problems have resulted in residents receiving unusually high water bills. One resident, Morgan Baker, complained on a Facebook community forum that she received a $347.59 water bill that was more than double the $120 to $150 she normally paid.

"Now you tell me how in the heck it jumps that much," she wrote. "I don't care what the city says, I will not pay this when I know for a fact we did not use that much water."

Director Andre Good proposed that in cases of obviously high bills, city staff refer to the customer's three or four previous bills and charge them the average of those bills until the city can resolve its billing problems. The remark drew applause from the audience.

"I know every person up here on this board has gotten phone calls, text messages, emails, stopped on our lunch breaks, after we're off work, at church about people's water bill issues," Good said.

The city has made billing adjustments for 1,253 water customers so far this year, according to statistics released by the city. Of those, 222 were made because of billing errors. Nearly half, 587, were made because of leaks in the customers' service lines.

Director George Catsavis said he wanted the advisory committee to be an advocate for water customers who receive unreasonably high water bills and can't get the city to reduce them.

Deputy City Administrator Jeff Dingman told Catsavis that dealing one on one with water customers would not be the committee's prime responsibility. If customers could not get the city to respond to their complaints, they should turn to their directors, he said.

Instead, Dingman said, the committee would be more involved with finding improvements to policies and procedures that the directors could enact that would alleviate customers' problems.

Director Neal Martin said the committee should review programs, propose policy changes and capital project planning, especially concerning the federal consent decree, so that directors can make decisions to spend the city's money most effectively.

"I think having a dedicated committee that is helping to oversee a half a billion dollars is something that has to take place," he said.

Fort Smith signed a consent decree in 2015 with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Justice and the state of Arkansas agreeing to make comprehensive improvements to the city's wastewater system in 12 years to clear up chronic violations of the federal Clean Water Act.

To pay for the estimated $480 million cost of complying with the decree, sewer rates have been increased 167 percent, which Martin called the largest rate increase in the city's history.

NW News on 04/04/2019

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