So Raleigh mayor Charles Meeker wants residents to try to cut daily usage down to 25 gallons of water per day and is looking to enact a 50% increased charge on your water bill (if you're a Raleigh resident or using raleigh water). Looks like this would take effect on March 1 and you would see it on your bill in May.Source Article: http://www.wral.com/news/local/story/2262767/
1/7/2008 11:29:54 PM
Considering water isn't that expensive, I think most people are probably just going to shrug off the 50% surcharge and keep using however much they feel like they need to. Its just going to be another tax and it will probably not be used to help the problem at all.He also needs to do something to get big businesses to cut back more. But, this being Meeker, I don't see that happening. He's all about catering to the big boys. Just look at the PROP ordinance he pushed through for regulating land lords, it screws over the little guys and then the big apartment complexes are pretty much exempt. Watch this surcharge not even apply to some businesses.
1/8/2008 12:03:19 AM
Makes sense.[Edited on January 8, 2008 at 12:12 AM. Reason : .]
1/8/2008 12:12:30 AM
1/8/2008 12:40:56 AM
^ seriously. I probably shower 5 times a week, but then again I don't bother to work out or do anything that would cause me to be dirty. But when I do shower, it's about 4-5 minutes.
1/8/2008 1:35:46 AM
problem with the fees is:1)they won't use the money to help acquire more water or make reservoirs2) it'll be like every other tax hike and they won't bother to take it away
1/8/2008 1:39:23 AM
This is a dumb idea. Only something like 20-25% of the water usage is residential, which means if everyone does manage to cut usage by 30 or 50%, you'll only save about 7-12% on total water usage.Where as businesses, accounting for the rest, can cut their usage down by just a 1/10th, and save the same amount. If he's going to surcharge people, it should be businesses, not residents.
1/8/2008 1:40:01 AM
1/8/2008 1:43:58 AM
^ oh, i know, i'd like to stay there for a while too. But I realized I wasn't 9 years old and had things to do. no wait, not really, but still, I guess I care about the environment more than the average person (damn appalachian hippies converted me).^^, I think you're right. I work at a restaurant and we have plenty of water running all the time that i try to turn off if i ever see it. Dishes, people washing their hands every couple minutes, mopping...I realize these things need to be done, but sometimes I walk into the back and the waters running with nobody paying any attention and the sink overflowing. I've tried to tell my co-workers, but hey, we're just a bunch of unskilled laborers who don't know any better.I wish i could know what I personally used, I might be around only 25 gallons per day anyways.
1/8/2008 2:44:37 AM
1/8/2008 8:27:42 AM
If this tax goes into effect, it's not ever going away.
1/8/2008 8:52:16 AM
Charles Meeker is an idot.
1/8/2008 8:56:24 AM
everyone on this board is an idiot, and for the first time, Meeker might be on to something... free markets.If the city would let the price of water fluctuate with supply and demand like any other good or service, then rationing would be inherent in the system as opposed to forced in the system. You may not think that you can't get your consumption down to 25 gallons/day, but if you were looking at $1.00 or $2.00/gallon, I bet you would real quick. It's not that extreme... yet. But if we really are looking at the bottom of the barrel of water in Raleigh, there will be no mechanism to stop excess water usage because city water does not exist on the plane of free markets.
1/8/2008 9:08:11 AM
they should have a tiered rate system... the more water you use, the more you should pay for it. that would give a lot more incintive to stay under a certain threshold.
1/8/2008 9:36:01 AM
^ that is the fairest solutionI guess what meeker is saying is that system alone is not fiscally responsible for the city since they are having to spend more money right now procuring water and people are cutting usage making their bills lower and thereby decreasing water revenue overall.
1/8/2008 9:45:59 AM
i'll just shower with bottled water...it's about to be cheaper than paying for city water anyway.
1/8/2008 9:48:42 AM
So does cary get its water from Jordan? I assume we have our own water system over hear, and are unaffected by these changes, Right?
1/8/2008 10:26:47 AM
I think the main thing that would help would be some feedback. One of the old apartments I had rented had cold water _and_ hot water included in the rent. I shudder to think how cavalier I was about water usage back then. I had no idea how much I used, I never really thought about it. I moved into a brand new apartment in 2001. They had electronic meters for each apartment and we got a separate water bill that detailed our monthly usage. It was cheap, but I couldn't ignore the amount of water I used any more. Def a step in the right direction. Now that I own a house its pretty cut and dried. Water use is either me or my wife. We've cut our usage by about 40% according to the last few bills and we're about tapped out (haha). Seriously, I can't imagine how we could cut our usage any more. Short showers, always full loads of laundry and dishes, using extra water that would have gone down the drain to flush toilets. Rain barrels are our next step. After that I suppose we could go to paper plates but then its fill up the landfill vs save water. -- Dave
1/8/2008 10:31:10 AM
^ good for you. I think people need to be as conscious as you are about this.But the pocketbook is where this can be fixed. Let water price fluctuate with supply and we'll see people cut back WITHOUT a mandate for it to be so.That's the beauty... you don't have to have a government organization threatening you if you don't. All of us will conserve.
1/8/2008 10:37:03 AM
i've filled my house with about 500 gallons of bottled water. i'll be selling it on rdu craigslist real soon. go water go!
1/8/2008 10:43:38 AM
1/8/2008 10:47:50 AM
1/8/2008 10:50:56 AM
Wow! A democrat who believes in free market capitalism!
1/8/2008 11:03:28 AM
So how would this work for dorms and hotels??Does each dorm only get 25 gallons of water a day?
1/8/2008 11:18:48 AM
No, there is no quota. They're just charged a market rate for the water based on supply and demand. Rest assured, rates of hotels/dorms will reflect the increase in the price of water just as rates for canned foods reflect the price of oil when it goes up (because of the necessity to transport).If cable distributors can figure out how to give access to cable to individual homes and dorms/hotels/apartments, why does this seem to be an impossible task for water?[Edited on January 8, 2008 at 11:24 AM. Reason : .]
1/8/2008 11:23:45 AM
HAVE YOU SEEN WATERWORLD!!!!!
1/8/2008 11:30:44 AM
1/8/2008 11:36:03 AM
Seriously?So people won't conserve if their water bill was at $30/mo one month and $60/mo for the same amount of water the next? You don't think that will cause people to say, holy shit, my water bill just doubled, lets cut back?What if water was extremely scarce and their bill was $200 for a month?If you think no, then you have no concept of economics or personal finance and I hope you have more money than God, because you'll need it.[Edited on January 8, 2008 at 11:40 AM. Reason : .]
1/8/2008 11:40:10 AM
1/8/2008 11:49:09 AM
why should water cost more to some but less to others?If TWC went around selling Package A cable to houses in N. Raleigh at $150/mo and Package A to houses on the East Side at $70/mo, that would be immoral if not illegal.Water isn't infinite and you want to treat it as it is. If water really is RUNNING out, and the prices were outrageously high to where you could only afford to buy water for drinking, then you'd find yourself conserving a lot more than you THINK you can conserve. You may think you're doing all you can but I guarantee you you're not and you never will unless drastic price fluctuations hit the market. So basically, you'll run the city dry.
1/8/2008 11:56:28 AM
When oil is "scarce" (quotations for sarcasm because supply is meeting demand and we're paying high prices because of speculators and market manipulation) the price goes up. If water is becoming more scarce, a free market response is the best way to bring the consumption down before mandatory (i.e. emergency) measures are needed.
1/8/2008 12:04:42 PM
1/8/2008 12:05:30 PM
^ are you really not getting this?With price levels that are below market and affordable, there is ZERO incentive to conserve unless you're altruistic, in which 1% of the population will conserve.But if the masses are hit with higher prices across the board, we won't need emergency measures until absolutely necessary.
1/8/2008 12:09:47 PM
1/8/2008 12:13:34 PM
^ You know who else liked long showers?
1/8/2008 12:14:51 PM
i totally get ita tiered system would do exacly the same thing in a more equitable wayno matter who you are or how much you use, you will pay the same amount (and a small base increase would not be out of the question) until your use becomes excessive. then, it would be the excessive user, not the conservationist who gets the bill.water isn't like oil, everyone has a right to a basic amount of water to live. If someone wants to buy up all the oil supply, fine I either need to pay more to secure the needed supply, or go without. but everyone is entitled to a basic amount of water at an affordable price.
1/8/2008 12:14:59 PM
1/8/2008 12:15:02 PM
1/8/2008 12:21:20 PM
1/8/2008 12:25:01 PM
You'd do it a lot quicker if water were $2.00/gal
1/8/2008 12:25:39 PM
1/8/2008 12:25:47 PM
1/8/2008 12:29:41 PM
1/8/2008 12:31:08 PM
this thread is baffling me, no wonder the lakes are losing water
1/8/2008 12:33:31 PM
I'm not necessarily saying a tiered system is bad for water usage. I am saying that if water were open to market forces, there would be no "stage 1" or "stage 2" restrictions... the only time you would hear about it is if we were in an emergency because people will only ration when they have to ration. Right now, we really don't have to ration expect for by thread of the government. People are washing their cars in their garages. If water were expensive, they wouldn't be doing that.
1/8/2008 12:34:48 PM
honestly, how hard would it be to helicopter in an iceberg and drop it in the lake?
1/8/2008 12:56:39 PM
1/8/2008 12:57:43 PM
stupid fucking yankees moving down here caused this.
1/8/2008 1:13:08 PM
Is Meeker Republican?^ I know right. Shouldn't we be charging a "move in" tax? We have to build all this infrastructure to support them and their families. Transplanted Yankees are killing us just as much as illegal immigrants. [Edited on January 8, 2008 at 1:15 PM. Reason : .]
1/8/2008 1:13:48 PM
it all started with that damn hockey team.
1/8/2008 1:20:28 PM