Board approves study of wholesale pass-through charges; directs staff to include cap recommendations

San Dieguito Water District Board of Directors ยท January 29, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The San Dieguito board voted unanimously to authorize staff to include pass-through charges for potable and recycled water in the next cost-of-service study (Resolution 2026-01); staff emphasized the action does not raise rates tonight and would include recommended caps developed with a consultant.

The San Dieguito Water District board unanimously authorized staff on Jan. 28 to incorporate wholesale "pass-through" charges for potable and recycled water into the district's next cost-of-service study, adopting the intent behind Resolution 2026-01.

Finance and Administrative Services Manager Shoshana Aguilar told the board the item would not change rates at the meeting or alter the district's rate structure; it only directs staff to analyze and, if appropriate, include pass-through mechanisms in the upcoming study. She described the existing infrastructure access charge (IAC) pass-through as a modest line item equal to about 5% of the district's annual payment to its wholesaler, the San Diego County Water Authority, and said 19 of the 22 member agencies of the Water Authority already use pass-through charges.

Aguilar explained pass-throughs would move wholesale cost increases from the district's reserves onto customers as a separate billed line item, subject to a board-approved annual-percentage cap. She told the board staff would recommend caps developed with an outside rate consultant during the cost-of-service study and gave examples of neighboring agency caps that range from about 10% to 30% per year.

Boardmember Schaeffer and others raised affordability and equity concerns, arguing the district should consider how drought-driven reduced consumption can still result in higher bills. Vice President Ehlers expressed support for the transparency pass-throughs provide and endorsed a cap on annual pass-through increases; Boardmember Lines emphasized that local water supplies are limited (about 15% local supply from Lake Hodges) and that imported-water costs affect affordability.

After discussion and no public comment, Boardmember Schaeffer moved to authorize staff to incorporate pass-through charges into the next cost-of-service study; Vice President Ehlers seconded. The motion carried unanimously.

The action authorizes staff to develop pass-through language and cap recommendations for the consultant-led cost-of-service study; any actual pass-through rate or cap would be proposed and approved by the board in a future public hearing as part of the formal rate-setting process.