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⏱️ 7 min read
The Hard Truth About Water Prices
For years, Californians were warned to expect water shortages. Droughts made headlines, and emergency restrictions became normal. Every discussion about water focused on the lack of it. Now, the story has changed. Reservoirs are full or nearly full, the snowpack has recovered, and the state is no longer in crisis.
But do not expect to see any relief on your next water district bill.
This gap is not just a delay or a mistake. It shows how California sets water prices and what those prices are meant to protect. When you see this, high bills during wet years make sense—they are part of the system.
Reason 1: Water Rates Are Built Around Fixed Costs, Not Supply Levels
Water agencies do not set prices like regular markets. Rates do not change with rainfall or reservoir levels. Instead, they are set to cover costs, most of which are fixed.
Employees still need to be paid. Treatment plants must keep running. Pipes need regular inspection, repair, and replacement. Water quality testing, monitoring, and reporting go on whether reservoirs are full or empty. Emergency capacity must be ready, even if it is not used.
Once these costs are built into the rate structure, having more water does not change the numbers much. A wet year might help for a short time, but it does not reduce payroll, maintenance, or compliance needs. The system is designed to deliver steady revenue, not to lower customers' bills. Rates go up when costs increase, but rarely go down when things get better.
🔒 BELOW THE PAYWALL:
• Why infrastructure debt keeps your bill high, no matter how much rain falls
• How conservation lowers usage but pushes rates higher
• Why the drought-era temporary spending quietly becomes permanent
• How wholesale water contracts insulate suppliers from abundance
• Why California’s thousands of obscure local water districts face little real accountability to ratepayers
• What full reservoirs actually change and why your bill is not one of them...
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