Flushing of transmission main begins April 26, 2021

Wow! Some actual news about the RCR! Good to hear that the water is high enough for the Water plant to start operation. The sooner we can quit buying water from Cobb, the sooner our bills can come back down!
 
Wow! Some actual news about the RCR! Good to hear that the water is high enough for the Water plant to start operation. The sooner we can quit buying water from Cobb, the sooner our bills can come back down!
Dream on! I'm a gonna start the stockpiling of water after I put in a reverse osmosis system. I foresee another Flint Michigan in our future, just sayin'.
 
Wow! Some actual news about the RCR! Good to hear that the water is high enough for the Water plant to start operation. The sooner we can quit buying water from Cobb, the sooner our bills can come back down!

Dream on! I'm a gonna start the stockpiling of water after I put in a reverse osmosis system. I foresee another Flint Michigan in our future, just sayin'.
I hope your bills come down... but I am ever the pessimist that the elected leaders will ever reduce the burden of our bills.

The money they could be austair with and reduce our bills is instead, used to fund other pet projects; parks, schools, a free lunch, or a whole laundry list of giveaways... so that the people will vote for them again - which assures they maintain their power.

People have an innate need to spend all the money collected, or all the money in a budget, even if it is unnecessary or not needed in a specific year. Look at Americans, most have an average debt of $5315 on their credit cards.

Why would elected officials be any better at spending money they did not earn or toil for than their own personal money?


Abrams wrote an op-ed for Fortune in April, in which she argued her personal debt shouldn’t disqualify her from running for governor. She owes more than $227,000 in credit card debt, student loan debt and back taxes. She also owes $178,500 in real estate debt and $4,434 on a car loan (but since those are assets as well as debt, we haven’t included it in our breakdown of what she owes).

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Brian Kemp's financial disclosure form does not show student loan debt or credit card debt, but it does list a great deal of “notes payable to others,” including more than $1.2 million to various individuals. One of those notes was a debt to RLP Investments, LLC for $500,000. That investment firm sued Kemp in June for failing to repay the debt.
 
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