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Residents press Riviera Beach board over rising water bills; staff plans community meetings
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Summary
During public comment at the March 18 utility-district meeting residents raised concerns about steep water bills and asked for assistance; city management said community meetings will be scheduled and that water and sewer rate increases totaling about 100% are expected over five years to fund the new plant.
Residents used the utility-district public-comment period on March 18 to press the board for clearer explanations and support as water bills rise.
Scott Lewis proposed a concept to reduce both plant costs and severe traffic at the railroad crossing: he urged the city to study whether part of the reported $150 million increase in plant costs could be used to build a bridge over the railroad and suspend water pipes from it. “Think about putting a bridge over the railroad tracks ... and hang the water pipes from it,” Lewis said, adding the dual approach could address both pipeline routing and traffic delays.
Several residents raised affordability concerns. Cindy Marge said callers report bills that have "doubled" and described hardship among seniors: “People are on fixed incomes ... the money is not there for them.” She asked whether the city could coordinate periodic bottled-water distribution for seniors while the project proceeds.
Margaret Shepherd and Wiltshire Hughes both praised staff and the project’s progress but echoed worries about large water bills; Shepherd recounted a report of a senior with a $500 water bill and asked officials to continue prioritizing safe, drinkable water.
City Manager Jonathan Evans responded that staff will schedule community meetings after moving forward with GMP 5 to explain the project status and projected rates. Evans said the city anticipates water and sewer rate increases “over a 5 year period to be about a 100% increase” to finance the new treatment plant, and officials will explore options to help buy down rates.
Why it matters: rising bills and unclear customer communication are leading residents to request more direct outreach and short-term assistance options while construction and financing proceed.
What’s next: staff said April will be the target month to begin community meetings to present status, expected rates, and potential mitigation steps.

