Chico demands moratorium on water shut-offs
Mayoral candidate Gery Chico on Wednesday demanded a moratorium on water shut-offs that have cut off the water spigot to thousands of low-income families struggling to pay skyrocketing water bills.
Chico sounded the alarm after a nine-month investigation by American Public Media Reports analyzed water shut-off notices between 2007 and 2018 and found that they were concentrated in black and Hispanic communities.
The shut-offs stemmed from the fact that the cost of water for the average family of four in Chicago “nearly tripled” during that same period, the investigation found.
Similar results were found in five other Great Lakes cities studied: Cleveland, Milwaukee, Detroit, Buffalo and Duluth.
Together, the six cities issued 367,740 shut-off notices over the last decade. A “disproportionately high” concentration were in impoverished neighborhoods with a majority of black and Hispanic residents, the investigation showed.
Chico branded those results “heartbreaking.”
“We are literally cutting off a life-sustaining source to people who may not have the money,” Chico said.
“Until we come up with a program to assist low-income homeowners with water bills the way we have with gas and electric, there should be a moratorium on water shut-offs. People are gonna need some assistance when they don’t have the money, just like they do with gas and electric. And we need an articulated payment plan option.”
Water Department spokesperson Megan Vidis had no immediate comment.
Shortly after taking office, Mayor Rahm Emanuel rejected the idea of privatizing Chicago’s water system. He more than doubled water and sewer rates and enacted annual increases tied to the inflation rate, all to bankroll a massive rebuilding of the crumbling water and sewer infrastructure.
The city subsequently imposed a 29.5 percent surcharge on the water bill for the Municipal Employees Pension Fund. A $9.50-a-month garbage collection fee was also tacked on to the water bill along with a sewer surcharge.
Chico served as former Mayor Richard M. Daley’s chief of staff. He knows water shut-offs have been used to reduce tens of millions of dollars in delinquent water bills.
But he nevertheless argued that the city’s shut-off policy is cruel and unusual.
“It’s not just water and sewer. The garbage fee is on the bill. And if you don’t pay it, the fines and penalties accumulate. If you default on paying the water bill, there’s a very large re-connection fee. This is becoming beyond the reach of a lot of our citizens,” he said.
As for the cost of replacing lead service lines carrying water from the mains to an estimated 360,000 Chicago homes, Chico proposed that the city share the $2 billion cost with individual homeowners.
“We have to move quickly, and I’m proposing something along the lines of a 50-50 sharing program the way we do the sidewalks in this city,” he said.