Water and power(point)

Posted on | June 2, 2010 | 1 Comment

The Los Angeles Department of Water & Power yesterday released a sketch operating budget for 2010/11, which the Los Angeles Times reports may spell rate hikes from 4% to 8% for consumers. For those interested in the source of their water and power, the budget offers some nice graphics (lifted left; click to enlarge). As a couple of asides, the cost of converting from coal to renewable sources of energy inspired the recent rebellion in the Los Angeles City Council; and consistent clean hydropower from Hoover Dam is dependent on adequate elevations in Lake Mead, a source threatened by inadequate conservation programs by the department and its umbrella agency, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California.

Click here to be taken to the proposed LADWP budget, or here for yesterday’s report card for the department, which in the face of incompetent leadership by the Mayor of Los Angeles and turbulent city council politics has gone through nine general managers in 10 years while elevations keep falling in Lake Mead, the country’s largest storage reservoir and key water and power source for the West.

Comments

One Response to “Water and power(point)”

  1. David Zetland
    June 2nd, 2010 @ 9:18 am

    Remember that “cheap” Hoover power is only so because the Feds sell it at cost, not market prices.

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