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Author Topic: L.A: Pay Higher Power Rates To save Us From Bankruptcy  (Read 2421 times)
wfy9621
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« on: March 23, 2010, 08:51:45 PM »

Only LA could "reason" like this. This is a backdoor tax. Do you know The LA Dept Water and Power was caught handing surpluses over to the LA general fund a couple of years ago? No wonder spending got out of control....

http://cbs2.com/local/los.angeles.city.2.1584435.html

Mar 23, 2010 5:20 pm US/Pacific L.A. Council To Review Proposed Utility Rate HikeLOS ANGELES (AP) ― 

The City Council voted Tuesday to review a proposed utility rate hike that Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa says is crucial for the city to avoid falling into bankruptcy.

The council can either affirm the city Department of Water and Power plan or reject it with recommendations.

"We need to take incremental steps instead of -- in the midst of a recession -- putting a gun to people's heads and saying pass this increase," City Council President Eric Garcetti said.

One increase is scheduled to start April 1 -- the first of four proposed hikes during the next year that would boost rates for residential and commercial customers by 9 to 28 percent.

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted to oppose the rate increase after County Chief Executive Officer William Fujioka said it would hurt the county and its residents.

Villaraigosa, however, said rejecting the rate increase would hurt the city.

In a briefing paper sent to council members, Villaraigosa said that without the rate hike, the DWP would not be able to deposit $73 million in the city's general fund. and the city would not have enough money to complete the fiscal year on June 30.

"Failure to meet basic obligations would send the city into a financial tailspin, leading to further downgrades and an inability to borrow to meet future financial obligations," the mayor wrote.   
(© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
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wfy9621
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« Reply #1 on: March 23, 2010, 08:54:46 PM »

More, if you can stomach the surrealism:

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2010/03/villaraigosa-warns-of-bankruptcy-if-la-council-blocks-power-rate-hike.html

Villaraigosa warns of bankruptcy if L.A. City Council blocks electricity rate hike

March 23, 2010 | 11:24 am
Facing resistance from the City Council over his  ::)renewable-energy plans Roll Eyes, Los Angeles Mayor  :(Antonio Villaraigosa Angry has warned that any attempt to overturn higher electricity rates approved last week by the Department of Water and Power board would throw the city’s finances into disarray, causing it to run out of money in the next four months.

In a briefing paper sent to council members Monday night, Villaraigosa’s office said the DWP would renege on a promise to transfer $73 million to the city’s general fund budget if its rate proposal is rejected.

Such a move would cause the general fund, which pays for public safety, libraries and other basic services, to “run out of cash” before the end of the fiscal year on June 30, Villaraigosa’s briefing paper said.

“Council rejection of the DWP board’s action [to increase rates] would be the most immediate and direct route to bankruptcy the city could pursue,” the report said.

The council is scheduled to decide on Tuesday whether to conduct its own review of the DWP increase. Villaraigosa’s appointees on the DWP board voted last week to approve the first of four rate hikes between now and April 2011.

Once all four increases are in place, households across the city will see electricity cost increases ranging from 9% to 28%, depending on where they live and how much power they consume. Businesses would experience increases in their bills of 21% to 22%, according to the utility.

Councilman Herb Wesson criticized Villaraigosa for using the possibility of bankruptcy to build support for his plan for installing solar panels. “I don’t think you hold people hostage that way,” he said.

The DWP was scheduled to provide at least $220 million to the general fund for the 2009-10 fiscal year. So far, however, the utility has sent only a portion of that money.

Last week, DWP Interim General Manager S. David Freeman warned that the utility would think twice about sending the rest of the money to the city’s budget accounts if the rate hikes are rejected. At the same time, Freeman said that if the hikes were approved, his agency would come up with an extra $20 million in budget contributions by reducing its travel costs and other expenditures.

Once all of the rate hikes are in place, the city budget would see an additional $38.4 million per year, the mayor’s office said.

Without the planned increases, the general fund would lose out on $93 million and have trouble paying its bills, Villaraigosa warned council members.

“Failure to meet basic obligations would send the city into a financial tailspin, leading to further downgrades and an inability to borrow to meet future financial obligations,” his report said.

-- David Zahniser at Los Angeles City Hall
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wfy9621
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« Reply #2 on: March 26, 2010, 11:04:41 AM »

They rob citizens thru high rates, then push around the City of LA!
Let's see--"We have a SURPLUS, but we need rate hikes!"

WTF??


http://cbs2.com/local/los.angeles.city.2.1588487.html

DWP: L.A. Won't Get Its Money Without Rate Hikes

The DWP plans a rate hike on April 1 -- the first of four through next year that would boost rates for residential and commercial customers by 9 to 28 percent. (File Photo)
CBS

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numSlides of totalImages  Related StoriesL.A. Mayor Delays Utility Rate Increase Proposal
(3/12/2010)
The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power is warning that it won't contribute $73 million to the cash-strapped city this year if officials turn down rate hikes.

DWP Acting General Manager Raman Raj said in a letter to City Council members Wednesday that unless they approve the proposed rate increases, the DWP won't have the money it promised to put in the general fund.

The DWP plans a rate hike on April 1 -- the first of four through next year that would boost rates for residential and commercial customers by 9 to 28 percent.

The council's Energy and Environment Committee is scheduled Thursday to begin reviewing the hikes.

Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa supports the hikes, which include a carbon surcharge to pay for clean energy.

(© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
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wfy9621
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« Reply #3 on: April 20, 2010, 09:16:23 PM »

The Los Angeles Dept of Water and Power is a fascist government. They are the SOLE water provider. They are working in unison with the City of LA to rape the pockets of the honest citizenry. The LADWP has a REGULAR operating procedure of taking SURPLUSES and giving them to the city of LA's general fund, which, tho  don't like to speculate, I am pretty sure is not spending the money in an always responsible and long-term-minded manner. They have a surplus NOW, and are insisting on rate hikes!

http://cbs2.com/local/dwp.power.rate.2.1634600.html

Apr 15, 2010 6:24 pm US/Pacific DWP Board Approves 4.5-Percent Power Rate HikeLOS ANGELES (AP) ―  Click to enlarge1 of 1
The board of the Department of Water and Power is scheduled to consider raising the cost of power sixth-tenths of a percent per kilowatt-hour beginning in July. (File Photo)

The city's Water and Power Commission today unanimously agreed to hike electricity rates by an average of 4.8 percent, signaling an apparent end to its dispute with the City Council over the size of the increase.

The increase will take effect July 1.

The City Council voted Wednesday to recommend the hike to the city-owned utility but it can't force the commissioners to accept it. Two weeks ago, the DWP board rejected the same proposal in favor of a larger hike -- which the City Council vetoed.

As a result, the utility has threatened to withhold $73.5 million it had promised to put in the city's starved general budget.

(© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
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wfy9621
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« Reply #4 on: May 11, 2010, 07:42:01 PM »

Nice little summary of the dirtbaggery.

http://cbs2.com/local/Department.of.Water.2.1624354.html

Apr 10, 2010 10:43 am US/Pacific Utility At Center Of L.A.'s Financial Meltdown LOS ANGELES (AP) ―  Click to enlarge1 of 1

When the city's Department of Water and Power spent $50,000 on lactation consultants two years ago to assist breast-feeding employees, the utility said it was a humanitarian move aimed at cutting absenteeism.

Critics, however, saw the move as another over-the-top expenditure of a behemoth bureaucracy that enjoys too much autonomy and undergoes too little scrutiny for the nation's largest municipal utility.

"The political class that runs the DWP is exceptionally arrogant," said Jack Humphreville, who monitors the utility for Los Angeles Neighborhood Council Coalition, a residents' group. "There's a lack of respect for ratepayers."

From lactation contracts to pay raises, the DWP's moves have increasingly sparked the ire of the City Council and customers in recent years. But it now appears the powerful utility may have finally overplayed its hand.

The latest furor -- over DWP's proposed rate hikes and refusal to contribute promised cash to city coffers -- has spurred a push by a livid council to rein in the utility's autonomy.

DWP watchdogs are delighted. "It's the big gorilla in the city," said Nick Patsaouras, a former president of the DWP's board of commissioners who is now a critic of the utility. "Now is a historic time to change how it operates. It is very insular."

In a statement Thursday, the DWP said it looked forward to addressing "reform concerns" with the council.

Critics say DWP's attitude of omnipotence dates back to its beginnings in the early 20th century when it secured the water rights that spurred the growth of the semiarid region into the sprawling metropolis it is today.

The power of the DWP was highlighted in the acclaimed 1974 movie, "Chinatown." The noir gumshoe mystery revolves around the fictional murder of the utility's chief engineer and his chicanery in the 1930s water-rights acquisition.

Today, DWP operates with a $5.7 billion budget and 8,600 employees. It runs 7,200 miles of pipeline that pump water into Los Angeles from rivers around the region, as well as the electrical grid that powers the nation's second-largest city.

For the most part, the utility keeps a low profile. But its recent moves have increasingly raised hackles.

Last year, voters defeated a ballot measure that would have awarded DWP workers the exclusive right to install solar panels in the city, locking out other construction trades. Ratepayers were infuriated that the DWP wanted to lift the cap on rate hikes due to increased raw material costs. City employees, who were facing furloughs and layoffs, were incensed at pay raises granted to DWP workers.

"The DWP is a chronic source of tension," said Raphael Sonenshein, political scientist at California State University Fullerton.

In the latest controversy, the DWP this month reneged on a scheduled $73.5 million surplus fund transfer to the city after the council approved a smaller electricity rate hike than the amount DWP requested.

The DWP's refusal sent the financially strapped city, which is facing a $200 million-plus deficit this fiscal year, into a tailspin. Moody's Investor Services downgraded the city's bond ratings, and Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa proposed shutting down nonessential city services for two days a week. The DWP's credit rating also took a hit from Fitch Ratings.

The City Council accused the DWP of blackmailing the city over rate hikes. "It seems that the Department is holding the City taxpayers hostage ... " stated a letter from council leaders to the DWP on Wednesday. "We firmly believe that the Department has the funds available to make the transfer."

The council approved measures to be placed on next year's ballot asking voters to give it more control over the DWP and wrest much of the mayor's power away. He appoints the utility's five commissioners and its general manager. They also called on the utility to better explain its bills to customers.

Sonenshein said he doubted the council's measures would pass, but he noted they highlight the need for the DWP to be more transparent about its budget and mindful of how its actions are perceived.

"They took their semiautonomy to mean they rule the roost," he said. "They basically stuck a finger in the council's eye. What they did was flat out insulting."   
(© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

Showing 1 - 1 of 1 Comments)         
By shag11 posted Sat Apr 10 2010 5:04:05 PM L.A. is my home and I love it, but it's too big. A few years ago when there was a move by a couple of cities to secede, I was rooting for them. L.A. is too big and unmanageable. There are way too many employees that are doing the same job. I had a friend that'd been in her job 30 years. She worked two hours a day and told me 5 others had the exact same responsibility. She said her entire dept. was overloaded like that for years, because of nepotism and cronyism. Most gov't agencies are like this in L.A.
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H0llyw00d
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« Reply #5 on: May 11, 2010, 08:00:33 PM »

Couldn't happen to a nicer place.....Lived in that cesspool for 8 years, Hollywood is filthy, West LA is crime ridden, South Central is, well, I don't need to elaborate...After 2 muggings, the 3 day King party and Northridge shake em up, I said to hell w/ this mess
Still waiting for Ocean Front view from AZ!!!!
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