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Crystal Lake, IL
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Tapping into water rates

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Not all increases for water utilities are large hits. Municipally owned utilities can raise their rates without going through the ICC.

In Crystal Lake, higher rates were instituted in 2008 to cover rising energy and commodity costs to pump and treat water and wastewater, and to replace old infrastructure.

The city had an engineering study done to “review operations costs, capital projections, connections and expected water demand,” said AJ Reineking, assistant to the public works director for Crystal Lake.

The rate increases are being phased in over five years – 5 percent to 6 percent a year – and works out to about 60 cents to $1.20 a month for the average user.

“We’re not in the profit business,” Reineking said. “We just don’t want to be running in the red.”

The approach of smaller but regular increases protects users from big financial hits at one time.

“We want to take it as we need it,” Reineking said. “We don’t want a big impact of residents. You don’t want to have any surprises out there. We want to be as open and transparent about everything we can.”

Cary is in the process of studying its water rates. The last time it did so was in 2007.

The village has hired a company to evaluate operating expenses, short- and long-term debt obligations, and capital needs to ensure the overall financial health of the water and sewer enterprise funds.

Marengo planned a $12 million upgrade of its wastewater treatment plant to increase its pumping capacity. The city last year doubled wastewater rates to help pay for the expansion and then backed off part of the increase when the project was put on hold because a buried landfill was found on the site where the city intends to build.

Reineking said utility providers have increasing costs for operations and commodities, and pumping water from the ground and processing wastewater requires lots of energy.

“Energy costs, fuel costs, commodities, the same thing homeowners are seeing volatile prices on, we see those also ... on a larger industrial scale,” Reineking said.

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