30 Sept 2014

Dublin: Water Meter Protesters Face Jail' While Regulator Is Set To OK Most Charges: *UPDATED

*The Commission for Energy Regulation has announced that customers of Irish Water are to have their metered charges capped at an assessed rate for the first nine months of use.
The Regulator has also revealed that home owners who receive water which is not fit for human consumption will not have to pay any water supply charge.

* www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/non-registration-tariff-less-than-some-water-bills-289380.html 

* www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/roscommon-people-are-sceptical-over-water-promises-1.1946535 

Under the charges announced today, a family of two adults and two children will pay an annual water bill of around €278
Homeowners will be billed for water from tomorrow.
There are two types of customer - those with meters who will pay for the water they use, and those without meters who will pay an assessed charge.

Metered customers will be charged €2.44 per 1,000 litres, but charges will be capped at the unmetered rate for the first nine months of use.
Those without meters will pay an annual rate of €176 for a household with one adult - or €278 for a home with two adults.

Children will be given a free allowance of 21,000 litres.
Customers who live in areas where the water is unfit for human consumption will not pay any water supply charge, once a boil water notice has been in place for at least 24 hours - however they will continue to be charged for waste water services.

The regulator has also announced that customers will receive a rebate where their metered consumption is shown to be less than the assessed consumption used in the assessed charge period.

Meanwhile, people who own a second home will pay a charge of €125 on their non primary residence.
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The Commission for Energy Regulation will today largely accept Irish Water’s proposals for charging – both for metered bills and homes without meters – when it announces its decision on water rates.

However, CER will make a number of changes to the initial proposals, such as extending the period during which all water bills will be capped at an estimated rate as well as the discount period for those whose water is undrinkable.


The free allowances will remain the same at 30,000 litres per household and 21,000 litres per child annually, the level at which Irish Water says will enable children to go free.

Metered rates will be set at €4.88 for 1,000 litres of water – or just under half of one cent per litre – for properties requiring both the waste and drinking water services.

A property that only requires one of the services – for example a house with a septic tank for dealing with waste water – will be charged at a rate of €2.44 per 1,000 litres.

The assessed charge applies to those who do not have meters installed, and is an estimated amount based on the number of people living in the home.

The assessed charge starts at €176 for a one adult home, with an extra €102 added for every additional adult. Children will not be included in assessed charges because they go free.

Irish Water had proposed that everyone would have their bills capped at the assessed rate for the first six months of charging, meaning any use above that level will be free. Those who come under that level will be entitled to a rebate.

However, it is understood the CER has extended this period to nine months, or the first three billing periods, to allow people get to grips with water metering and how their usage will affect their bills.

The CER will also confirm that householders whose water supply is unfit for human consumption are expected to receive an immediate 50 per cent discount on their water bills under revised compensation plans.

Charges will be levied on water supply, as well as waste-water, and everyone will pay for waste-water, which comprises 50 per cent of the bill, regardless of water supply quality.

Under this system homes with septic tanks installed do not pay for their waste-water services.
Currently, where a water supply has been declared unfit for human consumption for less than three months the householder gets half off their water input supply, or 25 per cent of the total bill.

Where the supply is unfit for drinking and there is a boil-water notice for more than three months they get a 50 per cent discount off the total bill, or 100 per cent of their inward water supply for free.

It will also confirm that homeowners will not have to provide evidence that they suffer from a medical condition when applying to have their water bill capped on health grounds.

The assessed charges for non primary residences, such as holiday homes, which do not have meters installed will be reduced from €160 to €125. The €100 addition to the household benefits package will be spread evenly over four bills a year, or €25 per bill.



Irish Water optimistic about boil notices
Decision on water discounts expected soon
Govt spent €241m on water investment in 2013

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