Home > Pulitikal > Maynilad to Increase Tariff by Jan 1’09: Gandang Pamasko at Salubong sa Bagong Taon ng mga Hayupak!

Maynilad to Increase Tariff by Jan 1’09: Gandang Pamasko at Salubong sa Bagong Taon ng mga Hayupak!

Below is a statement prepared by Freedom from Debt Coalition (FDC) opposing new tariff increase by Maynilad. Aba’y wala tayong kamuwang-muwang na magtataas pala ng singil ang mga damuho ng halos 12 pesos kada cub

tubig!

ic meter. Matindi. sa gitna ng krisis e tubo na katakot-takot pa rin ang

iniisip ng mga damuho.  kagandang pamasko at pasalubong sa bagong taon ng mga hinayupak na are. pumapayag kasi tayo sa privatization. ayan ang napapala natin.  Sana maraming consumers ang tumutol dito.

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FDC: No tariff increase for Maynilad

The Freedom from Debt Coalition opposes the unconscionable rate hike being peddled by Maynilad Water Services, and condemns as insensitive Maynilad’s profit-oriented attempt to proceed with business as usual in the midst of a financial crisis that has left the poor extremely vulnerable to the slightest rate increase in basic necessities such as oil, power, and water. The proposed rate adjustment is part of the rate rebasing exercise, a scheduled business mechanism done once every five years that paves the way for large rate hikes based on new business plans proposed by water concessionaires to the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System – Regulatory Office (MWSS-RO). In its “public consultation” held last Friday, Maynilad presented an increase of P 7.10 in the basic tariff for households consuming 30 cubic meters a month.

The cited amount, however, is misleading and does not fully present the impact of this proposed increase. If Maynilad gets its way and the proposed increase is approved, VAT, environmental and sewerage charges, which are all based on the basic tariff charge, will also go up. Households connected to Maynilad’s sewer lines will experience an increase of at least P11.93 per cubic meter. Those without sewer services will take on an increase of P8.75. In the final equation, the average household’s monthly bill will go up by P262-P357. With 86% of Maynilad’s consumers composed of residential connections, 20% of which belong to depressed communities, Maynilad’s proposed rate increase cannot be taken lightly. For several years Maynilad has enjoyed tax holiday incentives from the Bureau on Investments and until now continues its attempt to retain this incentive. In the absence of this tax holiday, Maynilad insists that it is not precluded from having its consumers shoulder Maynilad’s corporate taxes.

FDC believes it is only right that Maynilad reveal a breakdown of their proposed rate hike to publicly show how much of what is to be paid will actually go to the payment of corporate taxes, to the payment of MWSS loans and loan interests, and to the actual projects that they are proposing to undertake. From the P7.10 increase, how much will go to Maynilad’s coffers as revenue? How much of the proposed increase will be allocated to corporate perks for Maynilad’s executives? These items must all be properly laid down in any consultation that purports to seek public approval for a rate increase. The people’s right to refuse paying for unnecessary extravagances must be recognized. We should know what we are actually paying for. Without such transparency in the rate proposal, the public consultation being held will amount to nothing more than a procedural farce. Maynilad’s current rates are already being disputed as over-priced, thereby placing in doubt any moral ground to demand further increases.

A civil case filed by civil society groups questioning Maynilad’s rate hike of January 2005 still remains pending until today thanks to Maynilad’s stubborn refusal to submit its rates under the jurisdiction of the National Water Resources Board, the only water regulatory body with quasi-judicial functions to look into water rates for consumer interests. To this day, the question of whether or not we are paying too much still remains unanswered. It is therefore sheer temerity on Maynilad’s part to demand a rate hike it does not deserve. Maynilad is nowhere near the service targets it submitted in 1997 and still owes the MWSS at least $36.9 Million in unpaid concession fees, not inclusive of a disputed $18.1 Million also claimed by MWSS as additional concession fees. These fees, which should have rightly been paid years ago, have been permitted to be restructured so as to give Maynilad’s new management more room to breathe. Are we to understand then that while the government willingly bailed out Maynilad when it was in dire financial straits, that same government will now stand idly by as Maynilad demands a rate hike that the poor cannot afford? Where is the government in all this? Government itself has also come to earn revenues from Maynilad’s consumers, and continues to insist that Metro Manila consumers should shoulder all the expenses of water provision. It has already collected more than P1.6 B in VAT revenues from Maynilad’s consumers in the years 2006 and 2007. More has been collected in prior years.

As senate debates the allocation of taxes collected from the people, FDC calls on them to reconsider the moral propriety of refusing to allocate people’s taxes to something as basic as water provision. Maynilad’s proposed water rate increase must be opposed. The welfare of millions of consumers in more than 600,000 household connections in Maynilad’s west zone must be protected from the non-transparent profit mechanisms employed by Maynilad.

FDC refuses to wait until disconnections are imposed on 150,000 destitute households that cannot afford the rate hike. We call on government to do the same.

  1. glesy the great
    December 24, 2008 at 7:58 am12

    sa may bahay ang aming bati merry xmas na malwalhati!!! Mamamasko po!!!!!

    wala munang diet-diet.. let go and let’s eat!!!!
    wala munang galit-galit… forgive and forget!!!!
    wala munang malungkot… sit back, relax and enjoy..

    dahil Birthday ni Papa Jesus!!!

    HAPPY BIRTHDAY BJ (baby jesus)!!!
    cheers;p-glesy the great

  2. December 27, 2008 at 7:58 am12

    ang tindi naman pasabog n’yan!

    hapi nyu yir!

  3. January 15, 2009 at 7:58 pm01

    well, after our constant pressure and engaging MWSS and the 2 concessionaires, MWSS retreated and heeded our calls! for the first time! NO RATE INCREASE (at least for 2009) and review the concessionaires’ capital expenditures. Yahoo! abangan ang susunod na kabanata. at least for now, na-save ang 10 pesos per cubic meter na dagdag sa babayaran nating tubig sa maynilad areas at almost 7 pesos sa manila water areas.

  4. just another point of view
    January 17, 2009 at 7:58 am01

    It would be unfair for Maynilad or even for Manila Water, the East Zone concessionaire, not to get the approved tariff hikes. They entered into the privatization contract with the government with the promise that they will get a reasonable rate of return on the investments that they make in their respective concession areas. If the rate-rebasing mechanism was not employed, what company in its right business sense would plunge itself into the then murky business of water? Let’s recall that when the water utility was handled by the local government, it was really inefficient with non-revenue water (i.e. leakage) at alarming levels. The entry of these private companies helped improve our water systems. Actually, check their capital expenditures and you will see the proceeds of the money that we pay for water. And to add more, the rate hikes these companies propose are socialized in nature. It means that if you consume less water, you get less increase in your water bill. But then again, I admit that Maynilad is quite pricey compared to the East Zone concessionaire. That issue must be looked at but an outright refusal of tariff increase is not the answer.

  5. January 17, 2009 at 7:58 am01

    thanks for your reaction.

    first, we oppose any rate increase now because of the economic crisis. marami ang tatamaan. big companies like maynilad and manila water can find ways to augment capital expenditures rather than collecting it now from poor people. i believe, that;s more unfair than granting increase to this wealthy capitalists. if they want more money for improving their quality of service, they can get it from other sources, instead of exploiting the need for service improvement as reason for tariff increase.

    second, in previous consultations, the concessionaires never divulged details of their capex and proceeds of the proposed price hikes. kaya it’s right for the mwss to review first its capex before granting any increase next year. by that, parang sinasabi rin ng MWSS na hindi nila gaano nare-review ang capex ng mga concessionaires.

    third, the concession agreement actually aims to reduce water prices rather than increase it. but it already rocketed to more than 1000% increase after 10 years.

    and now they are asking for a 10 year extension of the conract. let’s go back to basics. are the promises of privatization realized after 10 years?

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    March 3, 2009 at 7:58 pm03

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