Following months of public deliberations, Metropolitan’s Board of Directors adopted this month a biennial budget that will allow the district to continue delivering safe, reliable water to Southern California, while managing the financial challenges of lower water sales, partially due to climate change, and rising costs due to inflation.
The $2.4 billion annual budget includes rate increases of 8.5% for each of the next two years, charged to its 26 member agencies. It also anticipates a small increase of the voter-approved property tax Metropolitan levies, amounting to an average increase of $2-3 a month for the median value home. Balanced alongside these revenue changes, the budget also includes cost containment measures, including cutting departmental expenditures across various categories.
The biennial budget includes capital investment spending of about $636 million over the next two years to ensure the continued reliability of Metropolitan’s distribution system and to increase the system’s resiliency to better respond to climate change. It also includes nearly $100 million in funding for conservation programs over the next two years.
Read the press release.
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