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The tables below represent the feedback collected via the regionalization study’s general input survey. Blank responses were deleted and responses were edited only for spelling errors. Please reach out to the study team at regionalizationstudy@sog.unc.edu with questions.

General Input Survey Responses as of October 1, 2025

QuestionResponse
NameAndrew Foy
Are you answering on behalf of an organization?Yes
Organization TypeUtility serving a population between 501-3,300
Please describe your organization.(blank)
Describe your interest in regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.As a small utility that already has contracts in place for purchased water and wastewater treatment, I am interested in the potential impacts to our ratepayers should we consider a complete merger with some of our regional partners to facilitate O&M of the distribution and collection systems, billing, management, etc.
What factors serve as impediments or drawbacks to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Cost of connections, availability of partners, willingness of elected officials and management to consider shared control of infrastructure.
What factors serve as motivators and/or supporters of regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Cost of capital programs, availability of staff, specialized skills required to operate and maintain utility infrastructure.
What changes (legal, regulatory, financial) might encourage or ease burdens related to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Unsure/Unknown.
Use the space below to provide any other input regarding regionalization in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.(blank)
QuestionResponse
NameChristopher Doherty
Are you answering on behalf of an organization?Yes
Organization TypeUtility serving a population between 10,001-100,000
Please describe your organization.(blank)
Describe your interest in regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.economies of scale and one number to call
What factors serve as impediments or drawbacks to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?POLITICS (especially rural)
What factors serve as motivators and/or supporters of regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Economies of scale and the larger utilities helping the smaller utilities
What changes (legal, regulatory, financial) might encourage or ease burdens related to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Legal, who owns what in each city/county, finances
Use the space below to provide any other input regarding regionalization in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.needs to be encouraged from the legislature and DEQ
QuestionResponse
NameJunaluska Sanitary District
Are you answering on behalf of an organization?Yes
Organization TypeUtility serving a population between 501-3,300
Please describe your organization.(blank)
Describe your interest in regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.In general, we recognize that in certain areas regionalization can benefit certain systems. In our area there are great concerns about regionalization and currently do not see this as a viable solution. Unfortunately, politics play a lot into this and it would not be in the best or correct/right interest of our customers and the county as a whole. Regionalization would only be supported when it is Voluntary by all parties. For our area there is too much “territorial” and control issues. Systems would have to be and willing to be partners and currently that is not the case in our specific area.
What factors serve as impediments or drawbacks to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Control, partnerships and politics
What factors serve as motivators and/or supporters of regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?None in our area. Could be for helping systems that need and ask for it.
What changes (legal, regulatory, financial) might encourage or ease burdens related to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?It must be a Voluntary situation
Use the space below to provide any other input regarding regionalization in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.(blank)
QuestionResponse
NameKevin Howell
Are you answering on behalf of an organization?Yes
Organization TypeUtility serving a population over 100,000
Please describe your organization.(blank)
Describe your interest in regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.Highly Interested
What factors serve as impediments or drawbacks to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Collaboration with others who may think they are losing control of their utility. The costs associated with regionalization such as assuming the debt and Maintenance of dilapidated infrastructure.
What factors serve as motivators and/or supporters of regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Providing affordable drinking water to all citizens. Smaller utilities are not able to maintain their systems due to staffing and funding. Compliance regulations are a burden on smaller utilities.
What changes (legal, regulatory, financial) might encourage or ease burdens related to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Infrastructure funding opportunities provided by the State or Federal Government. Consistency in the political environment such that regulations aren’t changing every 2-4 years. This should be a non-partisan effort.
Use the space below to provide any other input regarding regionalization in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.PWC feels that regionalization is a benefit to NC, however it will come with challenges such as funding and collaboration with other utilities.
QuestionResponse
NameRandy McNeill, PE
Are you answering on behalf of an organization?Yes
Organization TypeConsultant/Engineer
Please describe your organization.(blank)
Describe your interest in regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.Assisting City’s and County Governments with evaluating potential regional water and sewer systems, and in evaluating expansion of regional systems. Services would include PER, ER, Grant. Loan applications and management, permitting, design, bidding, construction management, and resident engineering services
What factors serve as impediments or drawbacks to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Lack of utility owners giving up control, complex permitting, inter basin transfer requirements, available funding for implementation of regional systems. etc
What factors serve as motivators and/or supporters of regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Opportunity to increase systems reliability, reduce O&M cost and rates, increase opportunities for grant loan funding. etc
What changes (legal, regulatory, financial) might encourage or ease burdens related to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?(blank)
Use the space below to provide any other input regarding regionalization in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.(blank)
QuestionResponse
NameScott Kidd
Are you answering on behalf of an organization?Yes
Organization TypeUtility serving a population between 501-3,300
Please describe your organization.(blank)
Describe your interest in regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.We are in conversations with Randolph County as well as the City of Greensboro about regionalization of water and wastewater – getting close to our first interlocal agreement to start moving forward
What factors serve as impediments or drawbacks to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?My Council is concerned over control and water quality – they are also concerned in overall cost to customers
What factors serve as motivators and/or supporters of regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?we are on wells currently and have spray fields for land apply of wastewater – we have a special order of consent for wastewater and have minimal expansion options and we have no water back up
What changes (legal, regulatory, financial) might encourage or ease burdens related to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?financial help on connection to a regional partner – we have completed a WWTP planning grant as well as are looking at various grants to help pay for this
Use the space below to provide any other input regarding regionalization in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.As your article eluded to – our council is concerned of losing “control” but are concerned of lack of growth if we do not find a regional partner
QuestionResponse
NameShannon Becker
Are you answering on behalf of an organization?Yes
Organization TypeOther
Please describe your organization.Aqua NC is an investor-owned water and sewer utility regulated by the NCUC.  Aqua NC is one of the eight Aqua states with water and sewer operations wholly owned by Essential Utilities (NYSE: WTRG).  Aqua NC owns and operates more than 750 PWSIDs (1/3 of all PWSID’s in NC) and 60 wastewater plants in 51 counties across North Carolina.  We have approximately 86,000 water and 26,000 sewer connections serving an estimated population of >300,000 people.  Our average water system size is 117 connections.  Regionalization of utility systems is effectively what we have successfully done and who we are.
Describe your interest in regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.Aqua NC, along with other NC based regulated investor-owned utilities, can be a potential solution to North Carolina’s water and wastewater regionalization efforts.  We are already doing it.
What factors serve as impediments or drawbacks to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Impediments to regionalization include: 1) Local decision makers may resist consolidation due to concerns about loss of control growth, rates increases, and perceived issues with service delivery and customer service, 2) Lack of awareness of options and benefits outside of the neighboring municipality, 3) concerns with continued employment for local resident utility workers, 4) Equity – Concerns that well-managed systems pay for the failures of poorly managed systems.
What factors serve as motivators and/or supporters of regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Current System Owner Motivators to regionalize include: 1) reduced need to raise capital/increased access to capital for infrastructure needs 2) utility managed by dedicated operations, compliance, engineering utility experts to efficiently manage costs and minimizes risk, 3) rates set based on actual costs, 4) economies of scale via shared certified operators, 5) minimize risk of compliance (compliance with SDWA, PFAS), 6) improved capital planning, 7) improved access to technological advances (monitoring software, capital management systems,  operating systems), 8) stabilizing rates via consolidating rates across a larger population, 9) access to extended support systems/personnel during emergencies.
What changes (legal, regulatory, financial) might encourage or ease burdens related to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?1) Official designation of troubled utility systems that provides access to a streamlined acquisition/transfer process, 2) a streamlined acquisition/transfer process, 3) Inclusion of IOU’s in the regionalization process and awareness of IOU’s as an option.
Use the space below to provide any other input regarding regionalization in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.Regulated IOUs, like Aqua NC, are well-capitalized, professionally managed, and have the ability to absorb and offer natural regionalization throughout the state. Aqua alone maintains an operations presence in 51 counties across the state and can additionally expand into new areas with some customer density to sustain necessary incremental field operational needs; typically fulfilled by mutual agreement to hire all/most existing utility employees (which also minimizes utility system concerns as to what happens to their current employees).  IOU functional support teams (management, engineering, compliance, IT, accounting, billing/collections, and customer service) are centralized and readily available to be effectively applied anywhere we choose to serve.  Additionally, systems interested in regionalizing will receive financial support that, at a minimum, will pay off any existing utility debt and likely additional amounts based on the FMV of their utility system.  IOU’s offer a natural, flexible regionalization opportunity to professionally manage most existing utilities. 

Economies of scale
Access to capital at lower cost
Improved planning and risk management
Revenue stability [NC Trouble…ept 4 2024]

These attributes make IOUs uniquely positioned to take on the challenges of small, non-viable systems that lack technical, managerial, or financial capacity.
QuestionResponse
NameVictor D’Amato
Are you answering on behalf of an organization?No
Organization Type(blank)
Please describe your organization.(blank)
Describe your interest in regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.I am the supervisor of the Viable Utilities program in the Division of Water Infrastructure
What factors serve as impediments or drawbacks to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Board resistance and reluctance to weaken decision making powers of local governments. Lack of will to change business as usual model unless the challenges are severe. 
What factors serve as motivators and/or supporters of regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?Funding incentives (priority points in application ratings, grant funding/earmarks for specific regionalization projects), Education about types of partnerships and provision of assistance to ensure that local government needs and values are maintained.
What changes (legal, regulatory, financial) might encourage or ease burdens related to regionalization efforts in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems?More funding, as full merger projects can be very expensive. 
Use the space below to provide any other input regarding regionalization in North Carolina’s water and wastewater systems.Happy to help as applicable!