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Dateline: August 2,
2001
Improvements
mean higher water bills
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Clarendon
and Hedley residents will see an increase in their monthly water bills as
Greenbelt Municipal & Industrial Water Authority begins making capital
improvements.
Greenbelt
General Manager Bobbie Kidd says bonds have been secured for a $5.3
million project which will add a new storage facility at Childress and
install new filters and a new chemical treatment process at the plant
north of Clarendon.
The
Childress project, which will increase the authority’s holding capacity
there by at least 50 percent, will cost about $2.6 million. Work at the
filter plant will cost $2.5 million.
Member
cities in the Greenbelt system have signed supplemental contracts with the
authority and have raised their rates to meet Greenbelt’s new demand
charges, which will increase by 23.32 percent, Kidd said.
Clarendon
Aldermen last week raised the minimum charge for water from $15 for 5,000
gallons to $18.90. The price for the second 5,000 gallons used is
unchanged at $1.40 per thousand, but after that the cost increases from
$1.50 per thousand to $1.60 per thousand.
In
Hedley, city aldermen raised rates minimum rates by $4 with rates for each
additional 1,000 gallons going up by 25¢ per thousand.
Hedley’s
new rates became effective this month, and Clarendon’s will begin
September 1, 2001.
While
most of the 23 percent increase is related to upcoming construction costs,
Kidd said eight percent reflects an increase in utility costs – namely
electricity.
Greenbelt
Water Authority is made up of Clarendon, Hedley, Childress, Crowell,
Quanah, and the Red River Water Authority. Each of the five cities has one
representative on the Greenbelt Board, and Red River has none.
Each
member pays a percentage of Greenbelt’s budget based on its water usage
for the previous year, Kidd said. Hedley pays 2.17 percent, Clarendon pays
9.00 percent, and Childress pays 51.04 percent. Crowell and Quanah pay
6.96 percent and 14.12 percent respectively. Red River covers 16.71
percent.
The
authority also sells water to a few area cities as well as for some
industrial uses.
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