Thursday, July 3, 2025

Local governments, university owe millions in unpaid water bills

Arrears on unpaid water bills have reached hundreds of millions of pesos in Morelia, Michoacán, where state and local governments, as well as a university, have failed to keep their accounts up to date.

The general manager of the local water utility said the 500-million-peso (US $25.6-million) debt “has created financial problems.”

“The average rate of nonpayment is 10%,” said Julio César Orantes Ávalos. “Some of the users who account for unpaid bills are the largest users, to the tune of 500 million pesos. We have payment plans to allow them to get their accounts current. They are making weekly payments, like in the case of the state government.”

Orantes said the biggest debtor is the University of San Nicolás de Hidalgo, which owes 53 million pesos. The next largest are the state government at 16 million pesos, the Morelia municipal government at 11.5 million, and the Secretariat of Education, 11 million.

It’s not just large consumers who are behind, but small users too. Just half keep their accounts current.

The Morelia municipal council has suggested raising water rates in order to make up for the unpaid bills. The rates are already among the highest in the country.

Orantes said that although the water utility is currently functioning with a deficit of 150 million pesos (US $7.7 million), it has enough to pay its 700 employees for the rest of the year. He is hoping payment plans will help reduce the staggering debt.

“The state government, the university [and] the municipal government are getting their accounts current during this administration, [and] they are reducing their debts.”

Sources: Milenio (sp), La Voz de Michoacán (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
people releasing fish in shallow water

Environment Ministry releases 40,000 baby totoaba into the Gulf of California

0
The Environment Ministry, working with the private sector and civil society, has been conducting a repopulation project that included the recent release of 40,000 hatchlings.
crematorium in Ciudad Juárez

2 arrests made after 383 bodies found piled up at Ciudad Juárez crematorium

0
The crematorium, which had the permits to operate, was housing corpses for as long as five years and reportedly gave relatives of the deceased "other material" in place of ashes.
a person registering their fingerprints

Senate grants Security Ministry broad data access powers, sparking ‘police state’ fears

8
The federal government argues that the National Investigation and Intelligence System Law, popularly referred to as the "Spy Law," is required to bolster the state's capacity to combat organized crime.