Colorado Springs Utilities agrees to provide water to customers of the Cherokee Metropolitan District

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From The Colorado Springs Gazette (Eileen Welsome):

The Colorado Springs City Council has tentatively OK’d a deal that will enable its city-owned utility to provide water to a troubled district located in an unincorporated area of El Paso County. That agreement means homeowners living within the Cherokee Metropolitan District will have a reliable source of water for the next two years, but they’ll be paying 22 percent more than what Colorado Springs residents pay. “It’s expensive,” Kip Petersen, Cherokee’s general manager, said Wednesday…

In recent years, the district’s been plagued by problems after losing a total of 60 percent of its water rights in two rulings in Water Court. As a result, homeowners have seen their water bills skyrocket…

In order for Colorado Springs Utilities to provide water to the Cherokee district, city councilors agreed in a 6-2 vote to temporarily suspend a portion of the City Code that forbids the utility from providing water to customers outside the city limits unless certain conditions are met. That provision was enacted to discourage development that would siphon off the city’s share of sales tax collections. But with the construction of the $1.1 billion Southern Delivery System about to begin, Utilities is looking at developing regional partnerships. Councilman Tom Gallagher, who cast one of the dissenting votes, suggested that any changes in the City Code need to be approved by the public. “My job is to abide by the City Code, not change it at the convenience of Utilities,” he said Wednesday. “We’ve now established a precedent.”[…]

According to a fact sheet on the Cherokee Metropolitan District’s Web site, it will cost the district $1.8 million to obtain 500 acre feet of water from Utilities…

Utilities officials said the revenue from the Cherokee agreement will not be considered surplus, but will be used to offset the cost of current operations. “It’s a good deal for both of us,” said CSU spokesperson Patrice Quintero.

More Arkansas River Basin coverage here.

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