But some say it’s just a shell game to wring as much money as possible from Glendale Water & Power, which critics argue artificially inflates customer rates.
“This issue has instigated a lot of thought, a lot of accusations, and has the potential to appear and be perceived as funny business in terms of money being moved around, like a shell game,” Glendale Water & Power Commissioner Zanku Armenian said during a public meeting Monday.
Glendale Water & Power also absorbs millions in expenses for city services and infrastructure that would otherwise have to be paid for with money that pays for police, firefighters, libraries and other public programs.
“There are many, many additional benefits to a municipal utility that in many cases we take for granted,” General Manager Glenn Steiger told the commission.
The services — ranging from paying for the electricity that powers all city streetlights and traffic signals to handling all citywide billing — add up to roughly $4 million in additional costs to the utility, Steiger estimated.
“It seems like those could be considered a fund transfer,” Commissioner Hugh Yao said. “Those are like free services to the city because we’re a municipal utility.”
Under a provision of the city’s Charter approved by Glendale voters more than 60 years ago, the City Council last year approved the transfer of $19.1 million in electric revenues and $4.2 million in water revenues to the General Fund, which pays for basic public services.
But in February, the City Council was forced to halt water revenue transfers after city attorneys determined recent court cases had thrown the legality of the practice into doubt.