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10.E.
City Council Meeting - FINAL
Meeting Date:
09/17/2013
From:
Andy Wagemaker, Revenue Director

Information

TITLE:

Consideration and Approval of Utility Account Write-offs: Delinquent and uncollectable accounts for Fiscal Year 2013.

RECOMMENDED ACTION:

Approve the write-off of delinquent and uncollectable utility accounts in the amount of $121,300.64.

Policy Decision or Reason for Action:

Generally accepted business practices allow for the write-off of uncollectable accounts. City staff has exhausted collection efforts on the eligible accounts and will no longer actively collect on them.  The City may still recover some amounts owed, since recorded tax liens remain in place and taxpayers may seek to clear personal credit by paying delinquent amounts.  Pursuant to state tax laws, delinquent account information is not subject to public release.

Subsidiary Decisions Points: No subsidiary decision points.

Financial Impact:

None. Each year, the City anticipates that there will be uncollectable utility accounts and reserves an amount at year end for these accounts.

Connection to Council Goal:

Effective governance.

Previous Council Decision on This:

No.

Options and Alternatives:

  • Authorize the write-off of uncollectable utility accounts.
  • Do not authorize the write-off of uncollectable utility accounts and continue collection efforts.





Background/History:

Before any account is eligible for write-off, staff must initiate collection efforts on each account after it becomes delinquent. When collection efforts are exhausted, the account is eligible for write-off. If possible, any amounts due are applied to the customer's credit. If placed on the customer’s credit, the amount owed remains active for 7 years after the delinquency date. Application against the credit of the debtor may lead to the recovery of some of the delinquent amounts in the future. This often occurs when customers apply for credit via other avenues (i.e., mortgages, car loans, apartment rentals, etc.).

Total utility billings in FY13 were approximately $32.2 million. The write-offs are approximately 0.38% of the total amount.  The increase in FY13 is mainly due to an unfilled meter technician position (2 meter technicians instead of 3 meter technicians) for approximately 6 months of the write-off period.  Due to the unfilled position, Meter Services focused staff efforts on meter reading and it did not have the capacity to perform as many meter lock-offs, a tool that helps limit the annual write-off amount. 

Pursuant to federal consumer debt collection law, delinquent account information is not subject to public release.

Utility Account Write-Offs (5 Year History)
Write-Off Year Amt of Write-Off Annual Amt Billed % of Amt Billed
FY13 $121,300.64 $32.2 million 0.38%
FY12 $97,198.35 $29.8 million 0.33%
FY11 $41,508.08 $26.1 million 0.16%
FY10 $60,420.89 $24.8 million 0.25%
FY09 $60,569.03 $24.2 million 0.25%

Utility Account Write-Off Breakdown History
Write-Off Year Utilities Public Works Storm Water Taxes
FY13 $86,993.14 $26,226.11 $4,407.71 $3,673.68
FY12 $67,007.20 $23,647.05 $3,848.82 $2,695.28

Other Write-Off Breakdown Information
Write-Off Year Total # of Accounts # of Accts Greater than $1,000 # of Accts Between $500 and $1,000 # of Accts Between $0 and $500
FY13 487 14 40 433

Key Considerations:

Staff, using billing statements, letters and telephone calls, has worked the write-off accounts. When customers fail to make payments, they may be denied access to future City services and, when possible, the amount owed is applied to their credit.

Expanded Financial Considerations:

It is sound financial management practice to reduce assets to reflect their true valuation. Failure to write-off accounts deemed uncollectable overstates the asset value of the City.

Community Involvement:

Inform. Yearly write-offs ensure that the City is following generally accepted business practices.

Expanded Options and Alternatives:

None.

Attachments

No file(s) attached.