fernandopartridge
Well-Known Member
I've had that bizarre scenario, moved into a house with the RV method of billing whereas was previously metered. Bills have doubled, I've requested a meter.Recently moved from a house in Earlsdon to a house in Eastern Green. The value of the property I've moved into is less than the one I left behind in Earlsdon. But because water rates are based on pre-house inflation trends and instead on rateable value my water charges have more than doubled.
Anyway, received this email from ST the other day:
"We’ve all found ourselves in unprecedented times with COVID-19 over the last few months. Many of us are at home loads more and looking for ways to keep busy. Everyone’s cleaning the car or the patio more, and making their gardens look lovely, all of which uses a lot more water than usual.
Despite the recent rainfall, demand for water has increased by as much as 40% in some areas when the weather gets hotter, so we’ve been creating and pumping more treated water than ever before in our 30 year history to your taps.
As it takes us 12 hours to treat and pump water to your home, we’ve launched a new high water use alert system to make sure we can always get enough water to your community.
New water alert system to save water
Our new alert system will let you know when we see demand spiking in your local community.
To make sure we can get plenty of water to everyone, we’ll ask you to pull together as a community and temporarily stop using high usage water devices.
This will help us make sure there are no low pressure problems.
We’ll contact you by text to activate the alert"
Pull together as a community? What, you mean like share baths or piss on a neighbour's trees rather than wasting it down a loo? Why don't you just say "shame and embarrass"? And then offer me a rebate on the 1k a year I give you? Money sucking b'stards.
England's privatised water firms paid £57bn in dividends since 1991
Used to work at the Valuation Office and we got questions about the RVs all the time even though it was replaced by Council Tax bands as a valuation method in 1991, water companies would pass the buck over the charging.