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Metropolitan Council. Environmental Services. 2010 Budget and Rates Preliminary Info. Presented to the Environment Committee May 12, 2009. Jason Willett, MCES Finance Director. A Clean Water Agency. Budget Calendar. April-May: Budget & Rate Issues Discussion
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Metropolitan Council Environmental Services 2010 Budget and Rates Preliminary Info Presented to the Environment CommitteeMay 12, 2009 Jason Willett, MCES Finance Director A Clean Water Agency
Budget Calendar • April-May: Budget & Rate Issues Discussion • Today: Preliminary Budget & Rate Information • May 26: Proposed Budget & Rates to EC • June 18-30: Customer/stakeholder meetings • July: Council adoption of 2010 rates • Sept.–Oct.: ES Capital Budget/CIP finalization • December: Budget adoption (part of Unified Budget)
Today’s Discussion • 2010 preliminary base budget • 2010 preliminary rates (for base budget) • Impact of recession on SAC fund and rates • Identified budget options: • Use of operating reserves • Less Pay-as-You-Go (PAYG) • Reserve capacity methodology improvements
Base Budget Highlights • No operating reserves used • PAYG of $7 million • No reserve capacity methodology changes • SAC reserve fund will drop below its established minimum balance (under all scenarios)
Base Budget Highlights • Debt Service reduced by capital project cost reductions; the six-year CIP was reduced from $918 million to $789 million • Deferred major growth projects: • Blue Lake expansion • New Hastings plant, and Northeast and Northwest interceptors • Delayed other growth projects by about one year • $8-$10 million ARRA grants projected • Includes use of some excess Debt Service Reserve
Base Budget Highlights • Labor: • No wage rate raises (except contractual) • FTEs not increased • Reduction of budget for overtime • Labor vacancy assumption of $2 million • 10% health care cost increase
2010 Budgeted FTEs Treatment Services 405 GM Office 21 EQA 119 Interceptor Services 78 Technical Services 84 Temporary Ops Trainees -12 Total 695
Base Budget Highlights • Electrical costs reduction for conservation • Reduction in fuel cost adjustment for electricity • $500K reduction of interdivisional charges from Central Services • Includes water supply funding from State
2010 Base Budget: Revenue/Sources (7 million PAYG) Revenue/Sources Budget Percent(in millions) 2009 2010 Change SAC Transfer 37.9 38.4 1.3 Industry-specific charges 10.0 9.6 -4.0 Other 3.5 3.6 2.9 Subtotal Revenue 51.4 51.7 0.6 Revenue from MWC 161.3 167.3 3.7 TOTAL Revenue 212.7 219.1 3.0
2010 Base Budget: Expenses/Uses Expense/Uses Budget Percent(in millions) 2009 2010 Change Debt Service 90.5 92.1 1.8 MCES Labor 59.3 60.3 1.7 Non-Labor 48.3 49.3 2.1 Interdivisional 10.6 10.4 -1.9 PAYG 5.0 7.0 40.0 TOTAL Expenses 213.7 219.1 2.5 SURPLUS (DEFICIT) -1.0 0.0
Projected Debt Service ($s in millions) Debt assumptions: Most recent capital spending projection (dated 5/5/09): Council bonds @ 5%, PFA loans @ 3.5% ($50M/yr with $80M in 2009), $7M PAYG in 2010 increasing $2M/yr thereafter.
Preliminary 2010 Ratesand Charges Base Budget *Equals $1.82 per thousand gallons **Does not meet policy minimum ***Assumes cap on annual increase
Service Availability Charge • Economic effect of recession on SAC: • 2008 SAC units of 10,470 was the lowest since SAC program inception in 1973 • In 2010, the SAC reserve fund is projected to drop below the minimum balance (Council policy 3-2-5); may occur in 2009 • A $200 increase is proposed for 2010 if no improvements are made to reserve capacity methodology
5-Year SAC Units Paid SAC Fund: Used for reserve capacity portion of capital costs (M.S. 473.517(3)) Note: 2009 is estimated.
SAC Reserve Minimum Balance Policy Requirement = the average required SAC transfer projected for the next five years. Actual ResultsProjections 2007 2008 2009 2010 Balance at Year-End $72.2 $55.8 $36.0 $25.0 Minimum Balance by Policy $38.4 $43.8 $37.4 $38.6 $ in Millions Year-end SACFund Balance Minimum Balance
SAC Changes/Improvements • Base: • Council approval will be sought to allow SAC reserve fund to drop below established minimum • SAC credit change expected to increase number of units paid by about 2,000 RECs per year (included in base) • Add-on Service Charges shifted to SAC fund • Delayed spending on certain capital projects to reduce debt service and the corresponding SAC transfer • Options: • Methodology improvements in plant and interceptor capacity measurement • Legislation to shift some SAC costs to Municipal Wastewater Charges
Service Availability Charge Annual SAC Rate increases under different recovery scenarios**: 2,000* 1,000 Flat at 10,000 • 10% 13% 25% • 9% 11% 20% • 8% 12% 20% • 10% 11% 18% • 10% 10% 18% • 10% 10% 18% * This is used in MCES projections (8,000 SAC units projected in 2009 increased 2,000/yr to a plateau of 18,000 in 2013).**All scenarios incorporate an expected increase of about 2,000 units/yr due to the credit system changes.
Strength Charges Paid by connected industries for wastewater strength in excess of domestic waste • Total suspended solids (TSS) over 250 mg/liter • Chemical oxygen demand (COD) over 500 mg/liter 2009 Proposed 2010 Increase* Excess TSS: $.152/lb. $.160/lb. 5.3% Excess COD: $.076/lb. $.080/lb. 5.3% * Treatment works O&M increased 4.3% combined with a 1.2% decrease in the 10-year average flow.
Load Charges Paid by haulers that discharge truckloads of wastewater into our system (includes volume, strength and facilities components) *COD component of Industrial Load Charge is 50% of TSS component. ** Assumes a 25% annual cap on the rate increase.
Facilities Component Paid by haulers to reimburse MCES for capital costs to upgrade and consolidate disposal sites • Adopted by Council in July 2004 • Includes capital and operating costs for sites that are completed and in use before new rates become effective • Capital calculated as the annual debt service on costs divided by prior 5-year average annual gallons hauled (to get a rate per 1,000 gallons) • In 2010 this component increases from $3.37 to $7.98 per 1,000 gallons due to completion of the Metro Plant disposal site (cost $4.3 million)
Holding TankLoad Charge Should the increase be capped as it was in 2009? Rate with 25%annual increases • $1.93 • 2.41 • 3.02 If the whole facilities component • 3.77 is included in the Holding Tank Load • 4.71 Charge, the 2010 rate would be • 5.89 $9.78 • 7.36 • 9.20 • 9.78
Industrial Discharge Permit Fees Using Base Budget: 2010 Fees Quarterly Reporters $4,675–5,600 Semi-annual Reporters $ 950–3,700 Annual Reporters $ 600–950 Liquid Waste Haulers $ 600–950 Special Discharge $ 600–950 Permit fees increase 6.7% from 2009 (MWC increase plus 3% add-on to phase up to cost of service)
Identified Budget Options • Reduce PAYG • Use some excess operating reserves • Modify reserve capacity; computation method: • Plants • Interceptors
Option 1: Reduce PAYG • Rationale for $2 million/year increase to pay for rehabilitation projects: • Ongoing expenses of maintaining system • More predictable than growth or quality improvements • About 40% of capital expenses are for rehab projects (about $50-$75 million per year)
Option 1: PAYG Factors • Pros: • Avoided interest expense • Adds flexibility into Annual Budget • Positive factor for bond rating • Cons: • Higher MW Charges during transition • Equity claim: debt financing better matches payments and future beneficiaries of the system • Opportunity cost
Option 1: PAYG Impacts • Higher Municipal Wastewater Charges (MWC); more than 20 years before the reduction in annual debt service would offset the increased MWC • Annual debt service, debt outstanding and the ration of debt service to total expenses would decrease • Note: $7 million of PAYG is included in 2010 Base Budget
PAYG Outstanding Debt millions (Projected) With no PAYG in 2010 & forward With $2M/yr PAYG increases
Debt Service/Annual Budget Debt Service as a Percent of Annual Budget* With no PAYG in 2010 & forward With PAYG (increased $2m/year) *Assumes the O&M portion of the budget increases 3% per year; includes portion of Debt Service paid by SAC transfer.
Option 2:Use of Reserves Operating Reserve Balance (in millions) Reserve Balance at end of 2008 $21.5 2009 Projection: Budgeted use 1.0 Contingency use 0-2 Surplus/Deficit TBD Estimated balance at end of 2009: 18.5-20.5 Target Balance: 10% of 2010 Operating expenses* 12.0 Excess Available: $6.5-$8.5 *Council policy 3-8
Option 3:Modify Reserve Capacity • Using a reduced Reserve Capacity number reduces the SAC Transfer(SAC Fund $s Wastewater Fund) • SAC rate increase can be less or the SAC reserve fund balance higher • Municipal Wastewater Charge increase must make up the difference
Option 3:Modify Reserve Capacity • Plants: • The reserve capacity calculation currently separates the capacity of liquids treatment (131BG) and solids treatment (126BG); the lower number could be used for “plant” capacity • Consistent with M.S. 473.517 subdivision 3 language
Option 3:Modify Reserve Capacity • Interceptors: • Capacity currently used to calculate reserve capacity is 249.7BG, based on a minimum peak flow factor of 1.5:1 • No authoritative source of peaking factors • Used capacity includes capacity for peaking (non-excessive) • If a peak flow factor of 1.7:1 is used, interceptor capacity changes to 228BG Reserve Used
Option 3:Modify Reserve Capacity SAC Rates (urban) with capacity changes: No ChangesOne Change* Both Changed* • 2,200 2,100 2,100 • 2,400 2,250 2,200 • 2,600 2,450 2,350 • 2,800 2,650 2,550 • 3,000 2,900 2,800 • 3,200 3,150 3,050 *If plant capacity or interceptor capacity is independently changed, as both plant and interceptor changes have about the same impact.Note: Rural Growth Centers will have separate and higher SAC rates.
Rate Impact of Choices Rate Increase from 2009 to 2010: MWCSAC Base Case Options*: $5M PAYG $3M PAYG Modify plant capacity Reduce interceptor capacity to 228BG Use $2M of reserves Bond Rating Impact neutral mildlynegative neutral neutral mildlynegative 3.7% 10.0% 2.5% no impact 1.3% no impact 4.7% 5.0%** 4.5% 5.0%** 2.5% no impact *Any combination is available.
Customer Budget Meetings • Brookview Community Center, Golden Valley • Thursday, June 11, 2009 • 9:30–11:30 a.m. • League of Minnesota Cities (plus Metro Plant tour), St. Paul • Tuesday, June 16, 2009 • 9:30–11:30 a.m.