
San Antonio Metropolis Council on Thursday voted 6-5 on Thursday to postpone a vote and additional dialogue on a proposed charge hike by San Antonio Water Methods (SAWS) till October.
A few of those that voted to push again mentioned they did so as a result of they don’t totally belief the present management of the city-owned utility.
If it had handed, SAWS’s proposed charge improve would have pushed up the typical water invoice for a San Antonio resident by some $230 yearly by 2029. Supporters of the proposal, together with Mayor Gina Ortiz Jones, preserve the change is required to finance greater than $3 billion in infrastructure enhancements which have been delayed for many years.
“These enhancements will value extra the longer we wait,” Jones advised her colleagues.
Even so, some on council took situation with SAWS CEO Robert Puente, who earned greater than $700,000 final yr in base pay and bonuses, and what they argued was his mismanagement of the utility.
Distinct 10 Councilman Marc Whyte referred to as out the utility for its lack of 16 billion gallons of water final yr, citing it as an indication of mismanagement.
“I don’t consider the proof is there to make any council member really feel assured that the numbers have been crunched as they need to have, that the cash SAWS has spent up to now has been correctly spent, or that the income generated by a possible charge improve might be correctly spent sooner or later.”
In the meantime, District 2 Councilman Jalen McKee-Rodriguez, who described his interactions with Puente as “snippy,” took situation with the CEO’s previous resolution to chop water off to condominium advanced house owners who have been late on their water payments, affecting a whole lot of tenants.
“It made me extremely indignant on the time,” McKee-Rodriguez mentioned. “It was not the one strategy SAWS may have made, however it was probably the most handy, although probably the most inhumane.”
District 1 Councilwoman Sukh Kaur, alternatively, targeted on SAWS’s lack of communication with enterprise house owners and residents about utility enchancment initiatives, which she mentioned have been regularly not on time.
“I went via all the circumstances that our constituents have referred to as us about,” Kaur mentioned. “There’s been 103 circumstances over the past couple of years round SAWS [construction] points.”
Kaur, McKee-Rodriguez and Whyte joined District 4 Councilman Edward Mungia, District 7 Councilwoman Marina Alderete Gavito and District 9’s Misty Spears in voting to postpone the vote and additional dialogue.
Alderete Gavito, Spears and Whyte are also calling for an audit of the utility’s operations and spending earlier than then.
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