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Mount Pleasant, outside of Charleston, has been one of the state's fastest-growing communities in the past 20 years, growing from about 30,000 to 65,000 residents. But development has come nearly to a halt with the down economy. In New Jersey, the Sayreville water department recently raised rates 13 percent. One big reason was the department's biggest customer, a steel mill, suspended operations for several months because of lower demand for its products. As a result, the water department's revenues fell $350,000 to $400,000, said Jeff Bertrand, the town's business administrator. "That was because of the economy," Bertrand said. "Nobody was buying the rebar because nobody was doing construction."
And in California, water and sewer rates in tiny Davenport outside of Santa Cruz are going up because the economy has forced a shutdown of the local cement plant, built in 1906. Sewer rates will increase especially fast
-- up 74 percent to nearly $2,500 a year -- because of the plant shutting down, said Rachel Lather of the Santa Cruz County Sanitation District. When water rates go up, customers' bills might increase anywhere from a buck or two to $20 or more a month. That doesn't sound like it'll break the bank, but collectively the higher rates could amount to tens of millions of dollars. And when jobs are scarce, every extra dollar hurts. In the eastern Maine town of Baileyville along the Canadian border, residents faced the prospect of both lost jobs and higher water bills when the local pulp mill announced it was closing. Baileyville's water utility proposed raising rates 80 percent after the Domtar Corp. mill, the utility's largest customer by far, said it would close because of the poor global economy. Domtar accounted for 52 percent of the utility's total sales, and residents would have seen their minimum quarterly bills go from $55 to nearly $97. Domtar shut down last May, putting 300 employees out of work, but unexpectedly reopened two months later after business conditions improved. Even so, the Baileyville Utilities District had to raise rates 9 percent. But the prospect of nearly doubled water rates when residents were losing their jobs was too much for Baileyville, a small town of about 1,500 people where employment largely revolves around the pulp mill. "You've got to charge more when revenues go down," said water utility manager Gardner Ross. "But people don't have incomes coming in, so it's a double-whammy."
[Associated
Press;
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