Aqua America
Inside Food & Water Watch's report, Aqua America: Strategies of a Water Profiteer, find information about:
-
water privatization
-
private utilities
-
rate increases
-
water rates
-
water bills
-
distribution system improvement charges
-
water quality
-
Nicholas DeBenedictis
Executive Summary
Aqua America is the second largest publicly traded water and wastewater corporation based in the United States. It has pushed its way to the top through a strategy of aggressive acquisitions and drastic rate increases.
| What You Can Do |
|---|
Aiming to make several dozen acquisitions a year, the company targets smaller systems to avoid a citizenry armed with resources to fight the takeover. And it pursues systems in states that have fast growing populations, corporate friendly regulatory environments and considerable investment needs.
Of course, all of this is done with an eye toward its bottom line.
Not long after taking over a system, the company begins its almost continual process of increasing rates. In just the first nine months of 2007, the company increased rates in nine locations. It has nine additional rate increases pending and plans even more over the course of 2008.
While families see skyrocketing water bills, the company sees booming revenue growth: 13 percent in 2007 alone. But rather than reinvesting all the money from community bills into improving their water and sewer systems, as a public utility would do, the company is “delivering solid returns to its shareholders.”
Discontent is growing among its customers, and many communities are beginning to speak up. In some cases, they even are kicking out Aqua America and reclaiming public control over their vital water and sewer infrastructure. Aqua America is failing to protect the public interest. Instead of private control of their water systems, communities need — and overwhelmingly support — a national trust fund for clean and safe water. Federal support for public utilities will do what Aqua America has not done: A trust fund will help ensure families across the country have access to clean, safe and affordable water.
- Published:
- 2008
- Number of Pages:
- 15
- Download this Document:
-
PDF file
Fact Sheets
Reports
- Mortgaging Milwaukee’s Future — The City of Milwaukee faces a serious fiscal predi ...
- Unmeasured Danger: America’s Hidden Groundwater Crisis — Farmers in the western United States are drilling ...
- Sustaining Our Water Future — The Marin Municipal Water District (MMWD) is devel ...
- Water Privatization Threatens Workers, Consumers and Local Economies — Our country’s good public operators have kept wa ...
- Dried Up, Sold Out — Dried Up, Sold Out: How the World Bank’s Push fo ...