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<br />Duane Schwartz <br /> <br />From: <br />Sent: <br />To: <br />Subject: <br /> <br />John M. Kysylyczyn Oohnk@usfamily.net] <br />Tuesday, May 30, 2006 1 :57 PM <br />Duane Schwartz <br />something for you and the commissioners <br /> <br />I thought you might enjoy the article below. I thought it was pretty interesting... <br /> <br />John M. Kysylyczyn <br />3083 Victoria Street, Roseville, MN 55113 <br />E-mail: johnk@usfamily.net <br />Home office: (651) 484-1384 <br />Cell: (651) 398-5337 <br /> <br />K Solutions LLC, owner <br />Mayor of Rosevillel MN 2000-2004 <br />www.Kysylyczyn.com <br /> <br />Misconduct Taints the Water in Some Privatized Systems When cities hire firms to run <br />utilities, they seek quality at lower cost. <br />They may get ethics scandals, violations and irate consumers. <br />By Mike Hudson, Special to The Times <br />May 29, 2006 <br /> <br />INDIANAPOLIS - In recent years, cities across the U.S. have turned over a vital public <br />service - providing safe drinking water - to private enterprise. <br /> <br />Driving the trend was the idea that for-profit companies, mainly European conglomerates, <br />could operate water and sewer systems efficiently, keeping water quality high and costs <br />low. <br /> <br />In some places, private-sector management helped trim bureaucracies and replace decaying <br />infrastructure, local officials say. But in Indianapolis, New Orleans, Atlanta and other <br />cities, privatization has been accompanied by corruption scandals, environmental <br />violations and a torrent of customer complaints. <br /> <br />In Atlanta, residents began complaining of brown, brackish drinking water soon after the <br />French company Suez and a subsidiary began running the water system under a $428-million, <br />20-year contract. It later emerged that Suez had treated then-Mayor Bill Campbell, who <br />championed the contract, to a $12,000 Parisian holiday. <br /> <br />In New Orleans, officials blamed a subsidiary of Veolia Environnement, another French <br />company, for illegally discharging sewage into the Mississippi River on dozens of <br />occasions. The president of a related Veolia subsidiary was convicted in 2002 of bribing a <br />New Orleans sewer board member to support renewal of its contract. <br /> <br />In Milwaukee, a Suez subsidiary caused 107 million gallons of untreated sewage to be <br />discharged into streams and Lake Michigan, a 2002 state audit found. The company triggered <br />a series of overflows by shutting off sewer tunnel pumps during hours of peak electricity <br />demand, saving itself $515,000, the audit said. <br /> <br />A lawsuit by Wisconsin's attorney general blames inadequate maintenance for an even bigger <br />discharge in May 2004, when more than a billion gallons of sewage gushed into local <br />waters. <br /> <br />Indianapolis reached a $1.5-billionl 20-year agreement with Veolia to run the city's <br />waterworks in 2002. The contract is the largest of its kind in North America. <br />