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Dateline: April 15, 2004
'No
water for you!'
Municipal
alliance goes after debtors
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
People
who skip out on city water bills will soon find it more difficult to get
away thanks to a new alliance among regional cities.
The
Panhandle Regional Recovery Association (PRRA), which became active on
March 29, allows member cities to collect overdue accounts on behalf of
other member cities.
“You
can run, but you can’t hide,” Clarendon City Administrator Sean Pate
said of utility debtors.
Under
the new system, when a resident leaves Clarendon with a past due water
bill and moves to Claude, for example, then that resident must pay the
Clarendon bill before Claude will turn on his water service.
The
customer is charged a $25 fee, which goes to the PRRA; the collecting city
gets 25 percent of the overdue payment; and the city where the account
originated collects the remaining 75 percent. The system works on all new
and existing accounts.
“When
the customer moves to a member city, the individual is notified; and if
they don’t pay, they get their water turned off.”
City
Hall has about $25,000 in delinquent accounts on its books, but only those
accounts that have become delinquent since July 1, 2003, can be entered
into the system.
“In
the last couple of days we’ve entered into the system 24 accounts
worth about $3,000,” Pate said.
Currently,
there are 22 Texas Panhandle cities in the PRRA, and Pate thinks that
number will soon increase.
“For
it to really work, we need to get all the cities in a 50 mile radius of us
to join,” said Pate, who is also a member of the PRRA Board of
Directors. “We’re getting one or two new cities every week, and by the
next six months, I think we’ll have nearly all the cities in the
Panhandle.
The
PRRA is the first effort of its kind in the state, and such a system would
have been illegal before new legislation took effect last summer under HB
2036. Now, all eyes are on the Panhandle as regional groups in North
Central Texas and on the South Plains prepare to form revenue recovery
associations of their own.
“We
envision it going statewide to the point where if you leave here and move
to Texarkana, we’ll still catch you,” Pate said.
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