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Oro Valley council approves notice of intent for modest water base‑rate increase; public hearing set for June 3

March 04, 2026 | Oro Valley, Pima County, Arizona


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Oro Valley council approves notice of intent for modest water base‑rate increase; public hearing set for June 3
Mayor Winfield opened a council session on March 4, 2026 in Oro Valley where the town moved to publish a notice of intent to increase potable water base rates and to set a public hearing on June 3, 2026. The notice does not itself change rates but starts the formal public process required under state law.

Utilities presenter Mister Abraham told the council that rising operating costs — including personnel, power, and water resource expenses such as CAP wheeling — have increased the utility’s outlays by about $900,000 from last fiscal year and that the utility must protect its operating cash reserves. He said staff is proposing a base‑rate‑only adjustment next fiscal year of about 3.6 percent; for a typical residential customer with a 5/8" meter the change would increase the monthly water portion of the bill by about $1.86. Abraham said the town is keeping commodity (consumption) rates unchanged because commodity pricing encourages conservation and is less reliable revenue in drought years.

Abraham described reserve targets the utility must meet — an operating cash reserve requirement calculated at about 20 percent of personnel, operations and debt — and presented a multi‑year plan intended to move the utility from short‑term cash burn to rebuilding reserves as certain debt obligations roll off the books in later years. He said staff reduced some planned capital spending to limit near‑term rate pressure and highlighted projected efficiencies equivalent to roughly $450,000 in offsets.

Vice Mayor Barrett and other council members pressed staff on the choice to apply the increase to the base rate rather than split it with the commodity rate. Barrett said she would prefer a mixture that preserves conservation incentives tied to commodity pricing; Abraham replied that the utility’s revenue stability needs make a base‑rate increase the safer approach for meeting near‑term reserve targets.

Councilmember Murphy, the Water Utility Commission liaison, thanked residents who participated in the commission’s deliberations. Gephardt and Abraham noted the utility commission had unanimously supported staff’s recommendation at its November 2025 meeting.

Councilmember Green moved to adopt the resolution publishing a notice of intent; Councilmember Nicholson seconded. The council voted 7–0 to publish the notice and set the June 3 public hearing date. If the council were to adopt a rate increase after the hearing, Abraham said the earliest effective date would be 30 days after adoption.

The town will place the rate‑analysis report for public review in the town clerk’s office and online and will publish newspaper notice meeting statutory timelines. The public hearing is scheduled for June 3, 2026, when residents can present comments and the council will consider adoption.

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