Beneath the Water Bill: Who Sets Your Water Rate and How to Have a Say | Ep. 01 episode artwork

EPISODE · May 26, 2026 · 26 MIN

Beneath the Water Bill: Who Sets Your Water Rate and How to Have a Say | Ep. 01

from The Leak In The System · host Susan Springsteen

Every month a water bill arrives. The number on it is the end of a legal process most ratepayers never see.Darryl Lawrence is the Consumer Advocate for the State of Pennsylvania, an independent state agency whose sole function is to intervene in utility rate cases on the ratepayer's side. In every major water, electric, and gas rate case filed with the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, his office files complaints, deposes expert witnesses, challenges return on equity calculations, and advocates for public input hearings across affected service territories.In this episode, Lawrence walks through how water rate cases are filed and litigated, why the timeline from filing to commission decision is capped at nine months by state law, and why most rate cases are inflated on return on equity rather than infrastructure spending. He explains how the gap between utility-proposed and OCA-proposed return on equity can reach tens of millions of dollars in a single case, why the distinction between on-the-record and off-the-record testimony at a public input hearing determines whether his office can cite what ratepayers say in its formal filings, and what negotiated settlements can deliver that a commission order legally cannot. He also covers what makes public testimony impactful, why turnout at hearings shapes how many hearings get scheduled in future rate cases, and how organized civic pressure has forced utilities to pull contested proposals entirely.For policymakers, utility professionals, community advocates, and anyone who has received a rate increase notice and wants to understand how water rates are set before the next bill arrives.What you know changes what's possible.We cover:00:00 Why Water Rates Keep Climbing01:20 Meet Pennsylvania's Consumer Advocate03:30 Infrastructure Is The Real Driver04:18 You're Paying For Future Spending Too06:08 Why Public Input Hearings Matter Most08:41 On The Record vs. Off The Record11:32 When 1,000 People Killed A Proposal12:55 How To Prepare Your Testimony15:49 You Know Things The Advocates Don't16:16 Why "Average Bill Impact" Misleads You22:18 The Nine-Month Legal Clock22:56 Why Settlements Beat Litigated OutcomesResources:🌐 Pennsylvania Office of Consumer Advocate: oca.pa.gov 📧 Contact the OCA: [email protected] Connect with Susan Springsteen:💼 LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/susan-springsteen-58788144 💧 LeakAlertor Pro: leakalertorpro.com Listen Next:🎧 Coming soon: Episode 2.About the HostSusan Springsteen is the founder and CEO of H2O Connected, developer of LeakAlertor product line. With more than two decades in water technology and product development, she brings a practitioner's lens to The Leak in the System, examining the innovations, responsibility, and decisions that shape the future of water.

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published May 26, 2026

Every month a water bill arrives. The number on it is the end of a legal process most ratepayers never see.Darryl Lawrence is the Consumer Advocate for the State of Pennsylvania, an independent state agency whose sole function is to intervene in utility rate cases on the ratepayer's side. In every major water, electric, and gas rate case filed with the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, his office files complaints, deposes expert witnesses, challenges return on equity calculations, and advocates for public input hearings across affected service territories.In this episode, Lawrence walks through how water rate cases are filed and litigated, why the timeline from filing to commission decision is capped at nine months by state law, and why most rate cases are inflated on return on equity rather than infrastructure spending. He explains how the gap between utility-proposed and OCA-proposed return on equity can reach tens of millions of dollars in a single case, why the distinction between on-the-record and off-the-record testimony at a public input hearing determines whether his office can cite what ratepayers say in its formal filings, and what negotiated settlements can deliver that a commission order legally cannot. He also covers what makes public testimony impactful, why turnout at hearings shapes how many hearings get scheduled in future rate cases, and how organized civic pressure has forced utilities to pull contested proposals entirely.For policymakers, utility professionals, community advocates, and anyone who has received a rate increase notice and wants to understand how water rates are set before the next bill arrives.What you know changes what's possible.We cover:00:00 Why Water Rates Keep Climbing01:20 Meet Pennsylvania's Consumer Advocate03:30 Infrastructure Is The Real Driver04:18 You're Paying For Future Spending Too06:08 Why Public Input Hearings Matter Most08:41 On The Record vs. Off The Record11:32 When 1,000 People Killed A Proposal12:55 How To Prepare Your Testimony15:49 You Know Things The Advocates Don't16:16 Why "Average Bill Impact" Misleads You22:18 The Nine-Month Legal Clock22:56 Why Settlements Beat Litigated OutcomesResources:🌐 Pennsylvania Office of Consumer Advocate: oca.pa.gov 📧 Contact the OCA: [email protected] Connect with Susan Springsteen:💼 LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/susan-springsteen-58788144 💧 LeakAlertor Pro: leakalertorpro.com Listen Next:🎧 Coming soon: Episode 2.About the HostSusan Springsteen is the founder and CEO of H2O Connected, developer of LeakAlertor product line. With more than two decades in water technology and product development, she brings a practitioner's lens to The Leak in the System, examining the innovations, responsibility, and decisions that shape the future of water.

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Beneath the Water Bill: Who Sets Your Water Rate and How to Have a Say | Ep. 01

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Every month a water bill arrives. The number on it is the end of a legal process most ratepayers never see.Darryl Lawrence is the Consumer Advocate for the State of Pennsylvania, an independent state agency whose sole function is to intervene in...

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