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UOSA outlines rate and capacity changes after rerating study; Manassas highlighted methanol project benefits
Summary
Upper Occoquan Service Authority presented a jurisdictional cost allocation study proposing septic reciever billing changes, capacity‑sharing mechanisms and reserve-billing smoothing; consultants found latent plant capacity that could reduce the need for an expensive expansion.
Brian Steglitz, executive director of the Upper Occoquan Service Authority (UOSA), told Manassas council that a jurisdictional cost‑allocation and rerating study identifies opportunities to adjust how the authority bills for septic receiving, capacity loans and reserve/maintenance charges and to tap latent treatment capacity to avoid a nearly $200 million plant expansion.
Key points: Steglitz said the septic receiving facility is…
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