By now, the city’s public water provider and drainer
has become a joke. Widespread publicity over a number of issues has revealed an
extraordinary range of incompetence:
·
Declared boil advisory after boil advisory, now
numbering 15 since the hurricane disasters of 2005.
· S&WB work in uptown New Orleans caused
damage potentially to hundreds of homes, where initial court rulings may cost
the agency millions of dollars
· The agency has hundreds of open positions, with
dozens of employees routinely quitting, with the high
vacancy rate blamed on having such employees in the city’s civil service
and inefficient agency vetting of hires
· Enough people have received so obviously
distortedly-high bills that about a fifth
of customers have challenged these; others stopped paying when the agency
proved unwilling and unable to collect partly in consequence over the billing
issues; and some received no bills at all but now have gotten collection
notices
· A revolving door of executives have filtered
through the agency in just over a year, capped by top administrators receiving
shoves out that door after netting large pay boosts despite the agency’s
turmoil
The agency, run
by a board of mayoral appointees and enshrined in state statute,
would find these kinds of problems likely solved through privatization. The fiscal
discipline involved would weed out such inefficiencies.
Over
the past two decades reformers have floated that idea, only to have special
interests beat it back. However, the recent rash of problems has demonstrated
perhaps only this radical remake can fix such a far-gone organization, which even
the leftists infesting city government might consider.
But before sending out the request-for-proposal,
an inconvenient fact remains: no one would bid for the work, given the massive
infrastructure needs. No one knows exactly how much it would cost to do varied
tasks such as replace obsolete or upgrade serviceable equipment; ensure piping
and other carriageways for water, sewage, and drainage doesn’t permit obstruction
or allow leakage and goes where intended; and iron out back office technology woes,
but it looks likely to exceed $1 billion.
Perhaps that answer will come when a special
legislative task force on water, sewerage, and drainage provision in New
Orleans reports early next year. One disturbing fact already has surfaced from
its most recent meeting: a consultant who has worked previously with the agency
argued for at
least $50 million more a year spent just to keep the current system going
without any major infrastructure changes.
That ratepayers could shoulder, but clearly the vaster
work requires additional funding that no private operator would commit to out
of its own pocket, and only if the city and state put a plan in place to
overhaul infrastructure that will require money from somewhere else. Raising property
taxes (Orleanians already pay one for S&WB operations) won’t close the gap
either unless these reach confiscatory heights.
Given the combination of city politicians and
special interests involved, privatization as their recommendation seems unlikely,
even as sharper
tools in the shed call for it. For that to work, the money will have to
come from somewhere. But, the way things are going, that will have to happen
anyway unless New Orleans wants to keep digging a deeper, more expensive hole.
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