What specific rates may change on my bill?
Water and sewer rates and the fixed meter service fee. Tap fees are paid by developers, and for new or expanded construction only.
What if I live in an HOA? How do the rates affect me?
Homeowners Association residents pay a different water rate than single-family detached residential. This is based on a few factors, including type of building and the infrastructure required to serve the building(s), which is also different than single-family.
How do you calculate sewer usage?
Because we don’t have sewer meters, the amount we charge our customers for sewer service is calculated based on the water you use in the winter months of December, January and February. That is our best gauge of how our customers are using water indoors, since there is typically little outdoor water use happening in the winter months.
The city has built and maintained a sewer system that stands ready to serve all city customers at any time. While the average single-family residential customer uses 4,000 gallons of water in the winter time, some customers have little or no water use in these months. Staff recognizes that even though some customers may be gone from their homes during a portion of the year, and others may use very little indoor water in the winter, the city must operate the wastewater system to provide that service at any time.
To ensure that each customer pays an appropriate amount to keep the sewer system ready to provide service, all customers, both residential and commercial, pay a minimum monthly 'readiness to serve' charge that is set at an amount equivalent to a 2,000 gallon monthly charge. With water revenues, all customers pay a fixed fee to cover the operation of the water system, regardless of water use. In the wastewater system, a minimum charge provides a similar level of equity.
Why does Westminster use tiered rates?
Tiered rates are an established method of recovering costs to the city’s system caused by users of all usage levels, and they have been used in Westminster for more than 40 years.
Westminster is an irrigation-season peaking utility. The water plants are sized to meet the water demand on the highest water use day in the year, generally that day is in the first half of July when about 1/3 of the demand is indoor and 2/3 is outdoor irrigation. During most of the year, that plant capacity is not required to meet demand. If there was no outdoor irrigation, the city’s plants would only need to be 1/3 of the size that they were built. The more irrigation you use, the bigger the plants, water storage and pipes Westminster had to build to meet demands and greater level of service to equipment such as pumps, motors, valves and controls.
How will two family units with one water meter be handled?
Duplexes using one water meter will have water allotment for two houses. For example, Tier 1 rates are up to 8,000 gallons for a single house, but for a duplex Tier 1 rates are up to 12,000 gallons. Tier 2 rates are up to 40,000 gallons for a single house (40,000 for a duplex) and Tier 3 rates are 41,000 gallons and over for a single house (42,000 and over for a duplex).
Why does the city charge more for irrigation water? Why does the City charge more for Tier 2 and Tier 3? Doesn’t water cost the same no matter how much I use?
The city charges more for outdoor watering (Tiers 2 and 3) for a few reasons.
- Outdoor water is discretionary water. While we all like having healthy landscaping in our yard, our highest priority water is the water we use to cook and clean.
- It costs us more to produce water in the summer for outdoor watering. You might think that it costs the same to provide you water no matter how you use it, but when we have to produce more water for everyone who’s watering their landscaping, and usually all at the same time, we need to have enough treatment plant capacity, storage and pipelines in place to get that water to you when you want it. Most of our water use is by our residents, so our utility system is built to accommodate that use. In this way, the costs for the higher water use are paid by those who are using it. Said another way, having 3 tiers of water-use pricing ensures that the costs for higher water use (e.g., the water use in Tiers 2 and 3) are not paid by those who are not using it.
- We also want our customers to value our water resources, and conservation pricing (aka tiered water pricing) helps us to send that message.