Soaking Tenants: Billing Tenants Directly For Water and Sewer Services
By Olivia Wein and Charlie Harak
Published in NCLC’s Energy & Utility Update
Fall 2003
The 1970’s Redux: The Unbundling of Water and Sewer Sewer Bills From
Rent
The energy crisis in the 1970s, a time of oil embargoes and growing concern
over energy costs and conservation, led to the trend of charging tenants separately
for energy as opposed to including the costs in the rent.1
A similar trend has started to emerge in recent years for water and sewer bills.2
This trend to have tenants pay for water and sewer separate from rent is driven
by factors similar to those that drove apartment owners to separate energy costs
from rent back in the 1970s.
Water and sewer costs are rising for households across the country. Fresh water
is getting scarcer as the population grows in some regions of the country. In
addition, increased costs are rising rapidly for repair and replacement of aged
and crumbling infrastructure and for complying with water quality regulations.3
While the average water bills vary from system to system, overall during the
past decade water rates have generally increased faster than the Consumer Price
Index for the past decade.4 It has been common practice for
landlords to include the cost of water and sewer in the tenant’s rent.5
However, the increase in water and sewer rates has, within the past few years,
led to an increase in the number of landlords looking to pass these costs directly
to the tenants.
There are basically four ways a tenant can pay for water and sewer service:
to the landlord through the rent; to the landlord or billing agent through a
separate bill based on a submeter; to the landlord or billing agent through
an allocation formula (also called ratio utility billing system or RUBS), and
directly to the water and sewer utility (where the unit is individually metered).
This article focuses on two of these methods, the trend toward submetering and
RUBS.
In recent years, the apartment owners associations and the submetering/RUBS
industry have been advocating for the removal of barriers to the use of submetering
and RUBS. They often cite to a 1999 study linking water conservation and submetering/RUBS
by Industrial Economics, Inc. for the National Apartment Association and the
National Multi- Housing Council.6 Their analysis indicates
that tenants in submetered units used 18-39 percent less water and tenants billed
through RUBS used 6-27 percent less than those paying for water in their rent.7
The apartment and submetering industry argue that submetering and RUBS leads
to water conservation and a reduction in the amount of wastewater that needs
to be treated.8 Submetering companies’ websites sell
their services to landlords by also arguing that shifting water and sewer costs
to tenants will increase the reporting of leaks, leading to a better maintained
building; it “insulates the property owner from the uncontrollable rise
in water and sewer expense;” it also “increases the property’s
net operating income;”9 and it makes the landlord’s
“base rent more competitive.”10
Whether or not a landlord can submeter or use RUBS to shift the cost of water
and sewer directly to the tenant will depend on local and state laws.
Restriction on the Resale of Water
Until very recently, federal environmental policy concerning the submetering
of water to tenants under the Safe Drinking Water Act treated certain apartment
owners who submeter as public water systems subject to regulations of the Safe
Drinking Water Act. 11 In August 2003, the US EPA started
a proceeding to modify this policy. In interpreting section 1411 of the Safe
Drinking Water Act (42 U.S.C. § 300g), US EPA staff and program managers
have issued several memoranda stating that an apartment owner with a building
having 15 service connections or regularly serving water to at least 25 people
(the definition of a public water system under the Safe Drinking Water Act)
who bills tenants separately for water is “selling” water and thus
independently subject to the Safe Drinking Water Act’s regulations.12
In an effort to promote water conservation in apartment buildings, the US EPA
proposed revising its policy on submetering apartments so that apartment owners,
not otherwise subject to the Safe Drinking Water Act regulations, whose buildings
receive water from regulated public water systems and who use submeters to bill
tenants directly for water are exempt from full Safe Drinking Water Act requirements.13
However, the property is still considered a Public Water System under the Safe
Drinking Water Act, and the US EPA could still use the Act’s emergency
powers provision to address a public heath risk in the building.14
On December 23, 2003, the US EPA finalized its proposed policy change to the
applicability of the Safe Drinking Water Act on submetered properties,15
but declined to expand the exemption to properties using billing allocation
systems such as RUBS.16
Some states have enacted laws that exempt landlords who submeter water to tenants
from state water quality regulations. For example, Florida’s statute on
the regulation of water and wastewater systems exempts from regulation as a
utility “landlords providing service to tenants without specific compensation
for the service.”17 “Any person who resells water
or wastewater service at a rate or charge which does not exceed the actual purchase
price of the water or wastewater” is also exempt.18
In 1999, the Florida legislature amended the later exemption to eliminate an
annual requirement that resellers file with the utility commission a list of
charges and rates for water sold and the source and actual price of the water
and also the requirement that the meters are subject to testing at a price set
by the commission.19
At the urging of the state’s apartment association in 2000, the North
Carolina legislature removed apartment owners who submeter from the responsibility
for monitoring, analysis and record-keeping under the state’s Drinking
Water Act, from apartment owners who submetered by placing that responsibility
on the supplying water system.20 The following year, the state’s
apartment association pressed the state’s legislature to clarify that
an apartment complex that receives water from a public water system and allocates
those costs among the tenants of the building is exempt from the monitoring,
analysis and recordkeeping requirements of the state’s Drinking Water
Act.21
Example of Recent Changes to State Laws to Allow and Encourage Submetering
Another landlord barrier to shifting the water and sewer costs directly to
the tenants has been in state laws that prohibit submetering. However, there
has been activity to change state and local laws to allow submetering and in
some areas, RUBS.22 In 1996 the North Carolina legislature,
in response to the state apartment association’s efforts, changed the
state law to allow submetering of water.23 North Carolina
does not allow RUBS.24 The state regulations for the resale
of water and sewer service to tenants refers to the water and sewer charge as
the “variable rent component”.25 The North Carolina
legislature added a new subsection to the statute concerning the utility commission’s
certificate of convenience and necessity that authorized the commission to adopt
procedures for the resale of water and sewer in apartments, condos and other
similar places.26 The state legislature amended the submetering
legislation in 2001 to permit the utility commission to adopt submetering procedures
that “allow a lessor, pursuant to a written agreement, to allocate the
costs for water and sewer on a metered use basis.” Further, “ .
. . the written rental agreement shall specify the monthly rent that shall be
the sum of the base rent plus additional rent at a rate that does not exceed
the actual purchase price of the water and sewer service to the provider plus
a reasonable administrative fee.”27 At the urging of
the state’s Attorney General’s Office and the NC Justice and Community
Development Center28, the legislature also modified the landlord-tenant
laws to protect tenants from eviction for failure to pay their water and sewer
submetered bill29 and prohibit late fees for water and sewer
submetered bills.30 The landlord is permitted to use the security
deposit to recover nonpayment of the water and sewer submetered bills.31
In 2000, Georgia’s legislature amended its conservation and natural resources
code to authorize owners of rental units to submeter or use an allocation formula
to charge tenants directly for water and wastewater.32 The
legislation states that the total paid by the tenants cannot exceed that paid
by the property owner for the building; that the owner can charge tenants a
reasonable fee for establishing, servicing and billing for water; and that the
terms of the water and waste-water charges must be disclosed to the tenants
prior to any contractual agreement.33 The legislation had
also exempted these property owners from being considered an owner or operator
of a public water system.34 Subsequent legislation removed
that exemption in 2002.35
The Pitfalls of RUBS
The mantra of those advocating for directly shifting the costs of water and
sewer bills onto tenants is that it promotes conservation. While there is some
merit to this argument in the case of submetering, it is much harder to accept
in the case of RUBS. The allocation formulas can be based on factors such as
the number of occupants, the number of bedrooms, square footage, and individually
metered hot or cold water usage.36 These are proxies for water
usage and consequently sewer usage and fail to capture the vast range of actual
water usage from household to household. For example, an allocation formula
based on the number of occupants does not account for how much time tenants
actually spend in a unit. A tenant who spends much of her time on the road for
work will very likely use less water and sewer service than a tenant who works
out of her unit. An allocation based on square footage could unfairly charge
a senior living alone in a 2-bedroom unit the same as a young family of four
where one parent and two young children remain at home most of the time. Indeed,
under RUBS, a household that makes extra efforts to conserve water will not
be paying a water bill that reflects those actual savings. The US EPA also expressed
its doubts about the conservation claims of RUBS proponents when it declined
to include properties billing with RUBS in its recent policy change concerning
the applicability of the Safe Drinking Water Act on submetered properties.37
In 2003 a Maryland state delegate introduced a bill to ban RUBS, H.B. 976.
The bill was in response to tenants, billed through RUBS, having water bills
comparable to single-family homeowners with washing machines, lawns and pools.38
RUBS has been described as “terribly arbitrary” by Richard Miller
of the Maryland Office of People’s Counsel.39 The National
Apartment Association argued that H.B. 976 was premature, would lead to higher
rents and needed additional research.40 The legislation failed
to pass in 2003, but there may be attempts in Howard and Montgomery Counties
to ban RUBS.
A fallback to securing an outright ban on RUBS is to regulate the practice.
In October 2003, the Seattle City Council passed an ordinance that prohibits
deceptive and fraudulent practices related to third party billing for master
metered or other unmetered utility service.41 It defines as
a deceptive and fraudulent business practice third party billing failing to
comport with the practices set out in the ordinance. These practices include
protection of a tenant’s personal information, provision of advance written
notice of the billing practice to the tenant (including methodology of the billing),
posting of current utility bills for the building, limits on the total charges
and fees, licensing and registration of the third party billing agent, and a
dispute resolution process including filing a complaint with the Office of Hearing
Examiner or civil action against the landlord. The ordinance provides for actual
damages and a $100 penalty. Attorneys’ fees and a higher penalty are available
for deliberate violations.42 The state of Texas also regulates
submetering and RUBS. Apartment owners who submeter or use RUBS must adhere
to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality’s rules.43
Under the submetering and RUBS rules, landlords in Texas must disclose these
billing practices and the methodology in the rental agreement as well as the
rights of the tenant to contest the bills.44 Landlords are
limited in which fees can be charged to tenants and cannot make a profit from
submetering or use of RUBS.45
The Front-Line Battleground: Massachusetts
Massachusetts currently requires the landlord not only to provide the physical
facilities that bring water to rental premises, as do most states, but it also
requires the landlord to pay for the supply of water.46 Massachusetts
appears to be the only state that explicitly bans submetering of water.47
By the mid-1980s, if not earlier, property owners began pushing the notion that
tenants could be required to pay for the supply of water if there was a clear
agreement between the owner and tenant to that effect. The owners argued that
the word “provide” in the relevant section of the state’s
Sanitary Code only meant that the owner must maintain the plumbing and related
facilities that bring water to, e.g., sinks and toilets, not that they had to
pay for the actual water delivered through the plumbing system.
The state Department of Public Health issued an informal advisory opinion on May 2, 1988, affirmed and superseded by a formal Advisory Ruling on July 3, 1990, interpreting the state ’s sanitary code as requiring the landlord to provide and pay for the supply of water in rental premises. The Department subsequently revised the definition of the word “provide”
in Mass. Regs. Code tit. 105, § 410.020 to mean “supply and pay for.”
The Department’s Advisory Ruling noted that:
“Water and sewer services are basic attributes of a dwelling unit essential
to the health of the occupants. In the Sanitary Code, the Department has made
the determination that public health considerations require the owner to supply
every dwelling unit with water and sewer services, just as the owner must
supply a kitchen sink [citation omitted] and toiler facilities [citation omitted].”
For several years, Massachusetts property owners have been filing bills to
overturn the Department’s regulations.49 The Massachusetts
Law Reform Institute and other low-income advocates oppose these bills on several
grounds. There are important and practical reasons for doing so. It is relatively
easier for tenants and advocates to find resources to assist with a single rent
bill that includes water costs or to mount a successful defense to an eviction
action based on non-payment than to find resources to deal with overdue rent
AND water bills or develop legal defenses on these two fronts simultaneously.
Further, where tenants are responsible for payment of water bills, the failure
to pay those bills and consequent termination of water supply could itself lead
to an eviction based on breach of the lease. 50
The Massachusetts advocates raise a number of objections to submetering of
water service, quite apart from the argument the Department of Public Health
makes that owners should pay for water in order to protect the public’s
health. They question whether usage would be accurately metered, especially
if a RUBS system is allowed (see “The Pitfalls of RUBS,” above).
They point out that submetering leads to new administrative costs being imposed
on tenants since the owners generally pass the submetering company’s costs
along to tenants. They note that for low-income tenants, shifting water costs
to tenants will likely make units even less affordable. Finally, they emphasize
that shifting costs to tenants may actually decrease the existing incentives
for owners to fix leaks and install plumbing fixtures and equipment that use
less water because the owners will no longer have to pay the bills.51
Allowing owners to submeter water usage opens a Pandora’s box of billing
problems. Will each meter measure only usage in each individual apartment? How
will tenants be able to know that there is no cross-metering between apartments
or no common-area usage (e.g., outdoor water) being added onto bills? How can
tenants make sure that the owner collects no more from the tenants than the
actual amount the owner pays to the water company? What will stop an unscrupulous
owner from overcharging? How will disputes over any of these issues be resolved?
Regarding this last point, the “Best Practices Guidelines” supported
by the National Submetering and Utility Allocation Association says nothing
more than this:
Resident Complaints. Methods shall be specified to express
and resolve complaints regarding the billing service.52
This relatively toothless guideline is only voluntary on the part of the owner.
So far, low-income advocates have been successful in stopping these bills.
But the property owners keep coming back. NCLC will keep its readers apprised
of any new developments. Advocates in other states may be able to us the Massachusetts
regulations as a model for obtaining more favorable rules in their own states.
Conclusion:
Property owners are eager to shift to tenants the costs of water and sewer
services. In almost every state, they can do so subject to varying statutory
or regulatory restrictions. Because the practice of submetering and RUBS intersects
with many areas of law (e.g., Safe Drinking Water Act, landlord-tenant law,
and the regulation of public water systems) the submetering and RUBS laws can
be housed in one or many parts of a state’s codes. The ability of tenants
and their advocates to successful resist the switching of costs to tenants or
to deter and defend against unfair billing practices will depend in each state
on who regulates the submetering and RUBS practices of the apartment owners.
We expect the trend to shift water and sewer costs directly onto tenants to
continue into the foreseeable future as water and sewer bills are only expected
to increase into the foreseeable future. We will be preparing a more comprehensive
analysis that will also look into utility metering laws and important tenant
protections in our 3rd edition of Access to Utility Service, expected to be
available by the end of 2004.
1 NCLC, Access to Utility Service, (2nd Ed.
& 2003 Supp.), § 5.5.2.2; Leta Herman, “Landlords Go With the
Flow to Save Costs By Having Tenants Pay For Water,” Washington Post,
March 3, 2001; Marc Treitler, “Submetering: What You Don’t Know
Can Cost You,” Units, National Apartment Association, July 1, 2000.
2 Seattle City Council News Release, “Council Considers
Legislation on Third-Party Water Billing,” September 9, 2003; “Getting
Involved: Council taking comment on billing of renters,” Seattle Post-Intelligencer,
September 22, 2003; Erica C. Barnett, “Wrung Dry: Ratepayers Complain
About Water Bills,” The Stranger.com, May 8 – May 14, 2003; Jason
Song, “Asking If Water Meters Matter,” Baltimore Sun, August 26,
2002; Matt Williams, “ Metered Tenants Cut Back Water Use; New Regulations
Allow Landlords to Charge Residents for Water,” Greensboro News &
Record, July 24, 2002; “Santa Ana-based billing service finds its niche,”
The Orange County Register, March 21, 2002; Andrew LePage, “ California
Apartment Group Backs Proposal to Bill Tenants for Water,” The Sacramento
Bee, April 19, 2001; Chris Helms, “Apartment Water Issue Goes to City
Officials,” Greensboro News & Record, October 14, 2000.
3 US EPA, The Clean Water and Drinking Water Infrastructure
Gap Analysis, EPA-816-R-02-020 (2002) at pp. 8-9; Marianne Lavelle and Joshua
Kurlantzick, “The Coming Water Crisis”, U.S. News and World Report,
Aug.12, 2002, at pp. 22-30.
4 US EPA, Community Water System Survey, Vol. I: Overview, EPA
815-R-97-0018 (1997), at p.18.
5 Marc Treitler, “Submetering: What You Don’t Know
Can Cost You,” Units, National Apartment Association, July 1, 2000.
6 Doug Koplow and Alexi Lownie, Industrial Economics, Inc.,
Submetering, RUBS, and Water Conservation (June 1999).
7 Id. at 7-8.
8 Utility Billing Systems Would Create Significant Reductions
in Water Use and Wastewater Production, Fact Sheet Regarding Billing the Residents
of Rental Housing for Water and Sewer Services, Submitted by Edwin Shanahan,
Greater Boston Real Estate Board, To Massachusetts legislature, April 3, 2002
(on file at NCLC). See also, Iinovonics Wireless Corporation at www.iInovonics.com/submetering
/whySubmetering.jsp; Sage Water at www.sagewater-usa.com/sub_reasons.html;
Omega Utility Services at www.omega-utilities.com/WhySubmeter.html.
9 Omega Utility Services at www.omega-utilities.com/WhySubmeter.html.
See also, Sage Water at www.sagewater-usa.com/sub_reasons.html; Inovonics Wireless
Corporation at www. inovonics.com/submetering/whySubmetering.jsp.
10 Sage Water at www.sagewater-usa.com/sub_reasons.html.
11 US EPA request for comments on the applicability of the
Safe Drinking Water Act to Submetered Properties, 68 Fed. Reg. 51777-51780 (Aug.
28, 2003).
12 68 Fed. Reg. at 51778 (Aug. 28, 2003).
13 Draft US EPA Memorandum, 68 Fed. Reg. at 51778-51779 (Aug.
28, 2003).
14 Draft US EPA Memorandum, 68 Fed. Reg. at 51779 (Aug. 28,
2003).
15 68 Fed. Reg. 74233 – 74255 (Dec. 23, 2003).
16 68 Fed. Reg. at 74235 (Dec. 23, 2003).
17 Fl. St. §367.022(5).
18 Fl. St. §367.022(8).
19 1999 Fla. Sess. Law Serv. Ch. 99-319 (West).
20 2000 N.C Sess. Laws 2000-172 (H.B. 1218), codified at N.C
Gen. St. § 130A-315(d)(2000) and the Apartment Association of North Carolina
Final Legislative Report 2001 at p.3.
21 2001 N.C. Sess. Laws 2001-502 (H.B. 1061), codified at N.C.
Gen. St. § 130A-315(d)(2001). See and the Apartment Association of North
Carolina Final Legislative Report 2001 at p.3. (available at http://www.taa.bz/aanc/legislative_updates/2001-final.pdf).
22 Marc Treitler, “Submetering: What You Don’t
Know Can Cost You,” Unnits, National Apartment Association, July 1, 2000
(article scites recent submetering legislative activity in Arizona, Arkansas,
California, Florida, Georgia, Nevada, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, local activity
in Chicago and Cleveland, and commission activity in California, South Carolina,
Texas and Washington).
23 Chris Helms, “Apartment Water Issue Goes to the City
City Officials Say Allowing Apartments to Buy and Resell Water Has Few Benefits
For The City, But No Downsides Either,” Greensboro News & Record,
October 14, 2000.
24 N.C. Admin Code tit. 4, r. 11.R18-16 Variable Rent Component
(2003).
25 N.C. Admin Code tit. 4, r. 11.R18-16 Variable Rent Component
(2003).
26 1996 N.C. Sess. Laws Ch. 753 (S.B. 1183), codified at N.C.
Gen. St §62-110(g) (1996).
27 2001 N.C. Sess. Laws 2001-502 (H.B. 1061), codified at N.C.
Gen. St. §62-110(g)(2001).
28 Apartment Association of North Carolina Final Legislative
Report 2001 at 3-4.
29 2001 N.C. Sess. Laws 2001-502 (H.B. 1061), codified at N.C.
Gen. St. §§ 42-3 and 42-26(b).
30 2001 N.C. Sess. Laws 2001-502 (H.B. 1061), codified at N.C.
Gen. St. § 42-46(d).
31 2001 N.C. Sess. Laws 2001-502 (H.B. 1061), codified at N.C.
Gen. St. § 42-51.
32 2000 Ga. Laws 831, codified at Ga. Code Ann. §12-5-180.1
(2000).
33 2000 Ga. Laws 831, codified at Ga. Code Ann. §12-5-180.1
(b)(2000).
34 2000 Ga. Laws 831, codified at Ga. Code Ann. §12-5-180.1
(a)(2000).
35 2002 Ga. Laws 954, change codified at Ga. Code Ann. §12-5-180.1
(a)(2002).
36 See, e.g., Title 30 Tex. Admin Code., Subchpt. H, Chpt §
291.122; Ariz. Rev. St. Ann. § 33-1314.01(F).
37 “Water savings, if any, from RUBS and hot water hybrid
billing systems (HWH) are uncertain. At this time, EPA believes that RUBS or
other allocation billing systems do not meet the definition of submetering,
as used in this policy, and do not encourage water conservation.” 68 Fed.
Reg. 74235 (Dec. 23, 2003)(emphasis added).
38 Liz Kay, “Foes of Unmetered Billing Rebut the Conservation
Argument,” Baltimore Sun, March 19, 2003; Jason Song, “Delegates
to Debate Unmetered Billing Ban,” Baltimore Sun, March 18, 2003.
39 As quoted in Liz Kay, , “Foes of Unmetered Billing
Rebut the Conservation Argument,” Baltimore Sun, March 19, 2003.
40 Liz Kay, “Foes of Unmetered Billing Rebut the Conservation
Argument,” Baltimore Sun, March 19, 2003.
41 Seattle Council Bill Number 11461, Ordinance Number 121320,
passed on a vote of 8-0 on Nov. 3, 2003, to be codified in Title 7 of the Seattle
Municipal Code.
42 Id.
43 Tex. Water Code , Subchapter M, Submetering and Nonsubmetering
for Apartments and Manufactured Home Rental Communities and Other Multiple Use
Facilities.§§ 13.501 – 13.506.
44 Id.
45 Id.
46 Mass. Regs. Code tit. 105, § 410.180 (“The owner
shall provide, for the occupant of every dwelling, dwelling unit, and rooming
unit, a supply of water sufficient in quantity and pressure to meet the ordinary
needs of the occupant”); § 410.020 [Definitions]( “Provide
means to supply and pay for”). See “Advisory Ruling” of Mass.
Department of Public Health Gen. Counsel Donna Levin, July 3, 1990 (interpreting
the meaning of § 410.180, prior to the adoption of the clarifying definition
of “provide” in § 410.120)(on file at NCLC).
47 See fifty-state summary prepared by the National Submetering
& Utility Allocation Association, April 2, 2002 (on file at NCLC). (NSUAA
is located at 1866 Sheridan Rd., Suite 210, Highland Park, IL 60035). Note,
however, that Massachusetts does allow for the “operation . . . of an
energy monitoring system installed prior to July 1, 1997, whereby the cost of
heat or air conditioning is allocated or charged . . . based upon measurements
made by a computerized monitoring system.” 1997 Mass. Acts ch. 164, §
335.
48 “Advisory Ruling” of Mass. Department of Public
Health Gen. Counsel Donna Levin, July 3, 1990.
49 In the 2003 Massachusetts legislative session, those bills
include H. 361, H. 1490, H. 1491, H. 2057, H. 2969, H. 2970, H. 3480, S. 735,
and S. 736.
50 See, e.g., McKeel v. Jasper Housing Auth., 652 So.2d 315
(Ala. Ct. App. 1994)(authority brings eviction action based on tenant’s
failure to pay utility bills; reversed on lack of proper notice); York Apts.
V. Jelinek, 1997 WL 658939 (Minn. Ct. App. 1997)(unpublished opinion)(lease
provides that non-payment of utilities is a substantial lease violation; eviction
affirmed); Oneida Housing Auth. V. Gilsoul, 238 Wisc.2d 96, 617 N.W.2d 678 (Wisc.
Ct. App. 2000)(unpublished decision)(lease required tenant to pay utilities;
eviction reversed due to notice defects).
51 See Letter of Massachusetts Law Reform Institute to Joint
Committee on Housing and Urban Development, June 18, 2003 (on file with NCLC).
52 The NSUAA Guidelines are on file with NCLC.