The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cobb raises water rates, takes millions for general fund

- By Meris Lutz meris.lutz@ajc.com

Cobb Commission­ers voted to raise water rates this week as the board continues transferri­ng millions of dollars from the water fund to the general fund to make up funding gaps.

The increase will amount to about an extra $4.80 per month per household, according to Stephen McCullers, the director of the water system.

McCullers said the agency’s costs have gone up 25

percent since its last rate adjustment in 2012.

“Expenses have substantia­lly exceeded our reve- nues,” McCullers said.

The commission agreed to transfer more than $20 million from the water fund last year and is preparing to transfer a similar amount this year. It has been using

the water system to subsi- dize the general fund since the late-’90s.

In the past, commission­ers had expressed a desire to phase out transfers from the water fund to the general fund.

They were making prog- ress until they voted to lower the millage rate in 2016, at which point the transfer

amount shot back up, said Commission­er JoAnn Birrell.

Birrell, who voted for that tax cut, voted against the water rate increase Tuesday.

long as we are taking 10 percent of money generated in the water fund and trans- ferring to the general fund, I can’t support an increase,” she said.

Chairman Mike Boyce, and Commission­ers Lisa Cupid and Bob Weatherfor­d voted in favor. Commission­er Bob Ott was absent.

Boyce said he would like to reduce the water fund transfers, but it would likely require an even larger mill- age rate increase than the one he has proposed.

“All of us ideally would want to go back to the situation where we paid for everything out of the general fund when we need to and leave the water system alone, but we’re not there right now,” Boyce said. “The reality is we’ve got to pay our bills somehow.”

 ?? HENRY TAYLOR / HENRY.TAYLOR@AJC.COM ?? Chairman Mike Boyce supports reducing the water fund transfers, but he noted that it would likely require an even larger millage rate increase than the one he has proposed.
HENRY TAYLOR / HENRY.TAYLOR@AJC.COM Chairman Mike Boyce supports reducing the water fund transfers, but he noted that it would likely require an even larger millage rate increase than the one he has proposed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States