America's water funding crisis has a structural problem hiding in plain sight — and it has nothing to do with pipes.
John Mastracchio of Raftelis points to one of the unaddressed drivers of water unaffordability: the extreme fragmentation of the U.S. water sector.
Thousands of small utilities serving individual communities simply don't have the customer base or financial capacity to absorb the cost of regulatory compliance, aging infrastructure, cybersecurity, and treatment of emerging contaminants.
The math is unforgiving — the smaller the utility, the higher the per-household cost of every new mandate and every aging pipe.
Mastracchio's suggestion is regional consolidation and economies of scale, spreading infrastructure costs across broader service areas to make investments more manageable.
It's a strategy already gaining traction in some states — and one the AWWA's Beyond the Replacement Era report identifies as critical to closing the $56.6 billion annual funding gap.
Episode at https://bit.ly/2trillion4water
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