The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fulton seeks to hike water rates for next 3 years

Residents can weigh in on plan at two public hearings this month.

- By Arielle Kass akass@ajc.com

Fulton County is considerin­g raising water rates by 5% annually for the next three years.

County commission­ers began raising rates in 2017, when they approved a 5% annual increase through 2019 to pay for more than $500 million in improvemen­ts to sewage treatment plants and other infrastruc­ture. The next round of increases was anticipate­d — but

the proposal is higher than what was originally expected.

David Clark, Fulton’s public works director, said he initially intended to raise rates by 4% a year from 2020 through 2022. But the cost of expanding the Big Creek treatment plant in Roswell came to $300 million, about $50 million more than expected, so the increase is needed to cover the additional expense.

Residents will have a chance to weigh in on the proposed increases at two public hearings at the end of the month.

Even with the increase, Clark said, Fulton water users have among the cheapest rates in the area. Now only Cobb County water costs less than Fulton’s. Clark expects in 2022 Fulton will have the fourth-cheapest water in metro Atlanta.

Still, this may not be the last rate increase in the foreseeabl­e future.

“We’re going to revisit it in

another three years,” Clark said. “There are indication­s that we won’t need to increase it, but we don’t know until we get to that point.”

By then, he said, the Big Creek constructi­on should largely finished, so the costs should be better known. One reason another increase might be necessary, though, is if more capacity is needed at the Camp Creek facility in south Fulton.

The Big Creek expansion is needed because that treatment plant is at capacity, Clark said. Without the work to expand its capacity to 38 million gallons a day from 24 million gallons a day, the county’s sewage system would not be able to support new developmen­t or redevelopm­ent in north Fulton. Additional­ly, the expansion will be used to improve the technology at the plant, so cleaner water will be discharged into the Chattahooc­hee River at the end of the process.

Big Creek is the second plant to be upgraded. Upgrades to the Little River plant in Woodstock, which expand its capacity to 2.6 million gallons a day from 1 million gallons a day, are expected to be completed next summer.

If approved, the rate increases would go into effect Jan. 1.

The public meetings will take place Sept. 23 at the South Fulton Service Center at 5710 Stonewall Tell Road in College Park and Sept. 24 at the North Fulton Service Center at 7741 Roswell Road NE in Atlanta. Both meetings will be from 5 to 8 p.m.

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