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Showing posts with label Public fire protection charges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Public fire protection charges. Show all posts

Saturday, July 27, 2019

Suez defends millions of dollars in charges to N.J. towns for 'public fire protection'

WATER WORKS: Suez North America headquarters are on From Road in Paramus, above and below.
GOING TO THE SOURCE: I had been trying to get Suez North America to comment after Hackensack officials complained in June about their bill of more than $343,000 for "fire protection." So, I went to Suez headquarters without an appointment, cooled my heels in the waiting room and finally was given the cellphone number of the company spokeswoman, who said she was on the road. On Friday, she emailed me what I needed.


By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

HACKENSACK, N.J. -- When a vehicle struck a fire hydrant and ruptured a water main in Fort Lee, the water company immediately dispatched a repair crew.

"The cost was substantial, but the safety of that block depended on a working hydrant," Debra Vial, spokeswoman for Suez North America, said on Friday. "We are always on call."

The cost of the repairs were $38,741.27, she said, defending the charges to Hackensack and other towns for "public fire protection."

"We work every day ensure that the 16,226 hydrants in our system and all of the infrastructure to support them are always ready whenever and wherever a fire erupts," Vial said.

"This is critical to keeping our communities safe. As part of our commitment to the communities we serve, rates for hydrants are lower now than they were in 2010."

Hackensack's bill

As I reported on June 11, Suez's charges for "public fire protection" are $195.12 for each of Hackensack's 531 hydrants or $103,608.72; and $0.04 "per inch-foot of main" or $240,180.98.

The total bill for Hackenack in 2019 is $343,789.70.

Testing of hydrants

Specifically, Hackensack officials are upset about the $103,608.72 in charges for hydrants.

Fire Chief Thomas J. Freeman was turned down when he asked Suez about potential savings, in view of his department checking and servicing hydrants for roughly 10 years.

"The charge represents far more than the maintenance and testing of hydrants," Vial said.

"It includes the cost of providing the overall operation, maintenance and infrastructure necessary to ensure a robust system capable of providing the adequate pressure and capacity needed to fight fires.

"For example, we must build and maintain enough storage to handle the additional volume and pumps to deliver at a higher capacity that what is needed for domestic services only."

Other towns

Teaneck presumably pays more to Suez, as do Paramus and Englewood, all of which are larger than Hackensack and have more hydrants.

Ridgewood, Paterson, Clifton and Passaic all own their own water systems, and do not pay Suez for fire protection.

Vial, the Suez spokeswoman, said if I wanted a list of New Jersey towns and what they pay Suez, I should ask the state Board of Public Utilities, which sets the fire-protection rates.


SUEZ CANAL: In the waiting room, below, you can watch a video on the origins of the one of the world's biggest suppliers of clean water and waste-recycling services.
BASED IN FRANCE: Suez says the company provides water and waste-recycling services to more than 7.5 million people in the United States and Canada.
SUEZ ADVISORY: A sign in the company's 4th-floor men's room asks you to "please be considerate of the next person and clean up after yourself." Given the large number of slobs, litterers and smokers who toss butts out of car windows, I'd love to see signs like that all over northern New Jersey.

Tuesday, June 11, 2019

A $343,000 bill for 'fire protection' drives Hackensack taxpayers and officials crazy

WATER WORKS: A Suez water company crew at work on Passaic Street in Hackensack on May 7.

Suez charges New Jersey towns
millions for water mains, hydrants


By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

HACKENSACK, N.J. -- In the annals of budget items that drive local taxpayers crazy, "fire protection charges" from the water company must be at or near the top.

Get this: 

Hackensack is obligated to pay Suez Water New Jersey more than $343,000 this year for "transmission and distribution" through water mains, and testing of fire hydrants.

Even though the city's Fire Department sends out its own personnel to check the 531 hydrants twice a year, Suez won't refund or credit the city for the more than $103,000 billed for the same service this year.

In fact, for the last decade or so, the Hackensack Fire Department has checked every hydrant and its flow twice -- when personnel install and remove markers that are used during the winter in the event snowfall hides them.

In effect, long-suffering city taxpayers are paying twice for fire protection.

'Investigating'

Asked about Suez's fire protection charges at a City Council work session tonight, City Manager Ted Ehrenberg said officials are "investigating."

He said he is hoping to have a discussion with the water company on possibly getting credit for the fire hydrant portion of the bill.

But Ehrenberg noted Fire Chief Thomas J. Freeman was turned down when he asked the water company about potential savings, in view of his department checking and servicing hydrants for roughly 10 years.

BPU authorizes rates

Suez's 2019 bill to Hackensack explains the charges are computed following a method established by the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities for "public fire protection through water mains and fire hydrants."

They are $195.12 for each of Hackensack's 531 hydrants, for a total of $103,608.72; and $0.004 "per inch-foot of main," for a total of $240,180.98.

The grand total for Hackensack is $343,789.70.

"In New Jersey, maintaining fire hydrants are funded through local property taxes, not by ratepayers through utility bills, as outlined by the Uniform Fire Code (regulated by the state Department of Community Affairs)," a BPU spokeswoman said.

Teaneck pays more

Teaneck presumably pays more to Suez because the township is 6.22 square miles, compared to Hackensack's 4.34 square miles, and has 680 to 700 fire hydrants.

Teaneck Fire Chief Jordan Zaretsky said firefighters do not check hydrants, and haven't done so in his roughly 25 years with the department.

Other Bergen County towns with substantial "public fire protection" bills from Suez are Paramus (10.52 square miles); and Englewood (4.93 square miles). 

Non-Suez systems

Ridgewood covers more than 5.8 square miles, but the village owns its water system so doesn't have to pay Suez for fire protection.

That's also the case in Paterson, Passaic and Clifton, three large cities in Passaic County that own the Passaic Valley Water Commission, a public water supplier to those and other municipalities.

No comment

I have been trying to obtain comment from Suez for more than two weeks, but Debra Vial, the Paramus-based company's communications director, has ignored several voice messages left on her landline.

Vial was an assignment editor at The Record for many years before joining Suez.

The Hackensack Water Co. was founded in 1869 and later named United Water. Suez bought United Water in 2000.

Suez North America boasts 3,430 employees, 16,000 industrial and municipal customers, and revenues of $1.1 billion.

The company, based in France, says it provides water and waste-recycling services to more than 7.5 million people in the United States and Canada.