Thunder Bay wastewater surcharge to rise about $83 annually - Action News
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Thunder Bay wastewater surcharge to rise about $83 annually

Proposed changes to how much Thunder Bay residents will pay in wastewater surcharges had city councillors debating at their Tuesday night meeting.

Thunder Bay Mayor Keith Hobbs said he wants the surcharge raised even higher

City administration in Thunder Bay says increasing the sewer surcharge from 75 per cent to 90 per cent will "achieve financial sustainability, full-cost recovery and affordability for consumers, while maintaining the city's existing service levels for sewage collection and treatment." (istockphoto.com)
Money flushed away!Council debates how much Thunder Bay residents sewer surcharges will rise this year.
Proposed changes to how much Thunder Bay residents pay inwastewatersurcharges had city councillors debating at theirTuesday night meeting.

The discussion was part of council's review of the 2015 city budget.

Currently, residents pay a sewer surchargeof 75 per cent of their water consumption.

Administration proposes raising it to 90 per cent.

Councillor Aldo Ruberto wanted to see that number lowered, but Mayor Keith Hobbs took the discussion in a different direction.

Thunder Bay Mayor Keith Hobbs. (Supplied/City of Thunder Bay)
[Its] probably political suicide to do it, but I'm going to make an amendment that we go to 100 per cent.

Hobbs said doing so would reduce, by millions, the amount of debt the city would incur for future sewer system capital projects and save millions more in interest payments.

Some councillors supported the idea, but most, like Rebecca Johnson, did not.

Thunder Bay councillor Rebecca Johnson. (Supplied)
I don't care well I care what happens to my grandchildren but at the same point in time, I'm also considering what's happening to the taxpayer in 2015, and we better be looking out for them right now.

Ruberto said ongoing rate hikes are an issue for him.

If you look at the costs from last eight years or nine years, it's been like a straight up, for everything, water, hydro, taxes, etc. When do we stop with that?

Hobbs said his idea makes fiscal sense.

Right now, yeah, it's going to tick off a lot of people, and, yeah, I'm going to get crucified as a mayor for bringing this forward, he said.

Coun. Aldo Ruberto. (thunderbay.ca)
[But] I think we have to look ahead, not just today."

Ruberto countered that the 100 per cent surcharge will make thing difficult for the small business owner, for the families that are struggling out there.

This is going to make it really tough. I was coming here tonight to say, 'hey ... let's go from 75 [per cent], maybe to 80 [per cent], never mind 90. Now we want to jump to a hundred?'"

City administration said increasing the surcharge from 75 per cent to 90 per cent will allow Thunder Bay to "achieve financial sustainability, full-cost recovery and affordability for consumers, while maintaining the city's existing service levels for sewage collection and treatment."

Council voted down the mayor's motion, leaving the proposed surcharge at 90 per cent, pending final ratification of the budget.

City staff said, for an average homeowner that works out to an increase of $83 per year.