A new, powerful Citizen Portal experience is ready. Switch now

Paris consultant recommends 2.75% water-rate increase; council approves $21 million TWDB application

June 09, 2026 | Paris, Lamar County, Texas


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Paris consultant recommends 2.75% water-rate increase; council approves $21 million TWDB application
Chris Eert of New Gen presented the city's 2026 water and wastewater cost-of-service study, saying the firm recommends a modest 2.75% increase in water rates and no immediate change to wastewater rates, which already reflect recent multi-year increases tied to the city's wastewater-treatment project. "We are recommending a consideration of a modest change to water rates 2.75%," Eert said during the presentation.

Eert told council that much of the wastewater rate increases were imposed to pay for the recent treatment-plant rehabilitation and that the sewer ordinance has completed its scheduled increases. He flagged a near-term reduction in consumption by a major contract customer, reporting the Campbell Soup facility expects a roughly 20–25% decline in annual consumption and peak-day demand. "When Campbell reduces their use that reallocates those costs," Eert said, noting fixed system costs (pipes, pumps, staff) remain despite reduced variable expenses.

Eert recommended keeping a two-part rate (fixed charge plus variable charge) and asked the council to monitor contract customers and consider consolidating certain contract-meter pricing only if it helps system management; he also urged a slight increase to the industrial wastewater (strength) surcharge so industrial customers pay their share of treatment costs. The consultant said a 5,000-gallon monthly benchmark for an average single-family household would see about a $1.12 monthly increase on water alone; combined water and sewer at that level were discussed as roughly $138.91 if the water increase were adopted.

At the next agenda item, engineering staff described House Bill 500's $1.038 billion state water fund and advised Paris's allocation is approximately $21 million based on population. Mr. Haj said the grant would be 100% state-funded and require no local match and asked the council to authorize filing the application and related documents. "This is 100% funded by the state of Texas," Haj said.

The council voted 5-0 to approve a resolution authorizing staff to file for Texas Water Development Board funding and to proceed with grant-related agreements. Mayor and council members praised the opportunity and highlighted the need to address older waterlines.

What happens next: Staff will complete the TWDB application and continue discussions with contract customers; any formal rate changes would return to council for consideration in a future meeting.

Don't Miss a Word: See the Full Meeting!

Go beyond summaries. Unlock every video, transcript, and key insight with a Founder Membership.

Get instant access to full meeting videos
Search and clip any phrase from complete transcripts
Receive AI-powered summaries & custom alerts
Enjoy lifetime, unrestricted access to government data
Access Full Meeting

30-day money-back guarantee