Author: Stacey Berahzer (Page 6 of 6)

SOG Environmental Finance Ctr

Don’t Chicken Out on Financial Policies

Stacey Isaac Berahzer is a Senior Project Director for the Environmental Finance Center at the University of North Carolina, and works from a satellite office in Georgia.

We recently facilitated the first “Peer2Peer Exchange” where utility officials from ten of our partner water utilities on a Water Research Foundation project shared stories about their financial policies. To get discussions kicked off, we asked folks which came first, the “well-managed, financially sound utility” (the chicken) or the “financial policy” (the egg).

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Potential Savings through Managing Energy Costs at the Water Utility

Stacey Isaac Berahzer is a Senior Project Director for the Environmental Finance Center at the University of North Carolina, and works from a satellite office in Georgia.

In teaching environmental finance we develop many charts and graphics to help illustrate the concepts that we are trying to get across to our audiences. But, it is more heartwarming (and less work!) when a utility itself uses its own data to create a chart that illustrates one of these key concepts so well. The example above is probably one of the graphics most-used by UNC EFC staff, but it was developed by staff at the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Utility (CMU) a few years ago. In fact, the chart above was featured in one of the first blog posts by our partners at Raftelis Financial Consultants.

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Game Changing in the Water/Wastewater Utility Business

 

Stacey Isaac Berahzer is a Senior Project Director for the Environmental Finance Center at the University of North Carolina, and works from a satellite office in Georgia.

 How can water and wastewater utilities be game-changers in order to adapt to the “new normal?” As part of a project being funded by the Water Research Foundation, staff from the Environmental Finance Center (EFC) and Raftelis Financial Consultants will be leading three consecutive sessions at the American Water Works Association Annual Conference and Exposition (ACE) 2012 in Texas next week.

In the first session, EFC Director, Jeff Hughes will “Define the New Normal and the Need for a New Business Model.” This will literally set the stage for subsequent sessions that will look at modifications of and transformations to to the utility business model. The sessions are meant to be participatory in nature, so much so that the format will, in part, mimic a gameshow! (Think American Idol for Water Utilities.)


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The Increasing Need to Address Customer Affordability

Stacey Isaac Berahzer is a Senior Project Director for the Environmental Finance Center at the University of North Carolina, and works from a satellite office in Georgia.

Water prices are rising faster than any other utility service nationally. Of course, there is good reason for this – the industry has a large backlog of infrastructure needs.

While options such as public private partnerships represent promising areas for financing this backlog, it is mainly water customers who will be writing monthly checks to pay for these infrastructure projects.

With all indicators pointing toward a continued increase in water bills, the historic underpricing of water seems to be slowly righting itself. But, with this comes a greater need for utilities to consider the affordability issues of low income customers. Defining customer affordability has been a tough nut to crack. Perhaps the most quoted affordability threshold is 2.5% of median household income (MHI), but this “rule of thumb” has been criticized for blanketing small pockets of poverty within a census block. On the other hand, the same threshold is cited as sometimes pressuring a water utility to keep rates too low, while many of the utility’s customers can easily handle a higher rate. The bottom line is that defining affordability at the national scale is not easy!

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