truthout | Is Chester, Pennsylvania, the proverbial canary in the coal mine? Sure does look like it.
The
Philadelphia suburb is trying to sell its drinking water system. “The
city’s fiscal issues have been greatly exacerbated by the COVID-19
crisis,” Mayor Thaddeus Kirkland wrote in an April letter to
residents. “It is our hope that the fiscal problems will be of a
limited duration, however, as there is a path to financial stability on
the horizon.”
That
“path to financial stability” is to hand over the Octoraro Reservoir
and the surrounding 1,358 acres of public land to a private corporation.
Water bills would almost certainly go up, because, on average, private
water utilities charge 59 percent more than public utilities. The system’s public workers would be outsourced (and almost certainly paid less). And all that land could be fenced off from public use.
For
what? Somewhere around $200 million. A nice chunk of change, given
Chester’s longtime budget issues. But add up the headaches and rate
increases that often come with privatization, plus the loss of public
control and land access, and it wouldn’t be worth it.
“A lot of people around here take ownership of [the reservoir],” a nearby resident told Lancaster Online. “We’re proud of it. It would be a crime.”
Why should anyone care outside of Chester? Because vulture capitalists might be coming your way soon.
Like during the Great Recession, state and local revenues are cratering. State governments are looking at a $765 billion budget shortfall over the next three years. Rainy day funds are woefully inadequate. States can raise taxes on corporations and the wealthy — and they should. But the federal government has to send aid to states and localities rather than continue to overwhelmingly help large corporations.
Until
then, companies like Aqua America — the front-runner in Chester — and
the entire infrastructure privatization industry will be licking their
lips. Global Water Intelligence, an industry insider rag, writes,
“The inability to raise water rates … [and] an instant reduction in tax
revenues for many municipalities on the back of job losses brought
about by COVID-19 could accelerate acquisition opportunities for
investor-owned [i.e., private] water utilities.”
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