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Bailed-Out AIG Forcing Poor to Choose Between Running Water and Food

by: Yasha Levine  |  AlterNet

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(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: Zoriah, habaneros)

Thanks to AIG, some of the poorest residents of rural Kentucky learned you can always be made poorer by corporate villains.

What are we getting in return for the bailout? So far, predatory credit card rates, exorbitant bank fees and obscene Wall Street bonuses. But we're being robbed in other, sneakier ways, too. It seems that taxpayers in the poorest, most vulnerable parts of the county are getting plundered by the same institutions they bailed out. One example is AIG's underhanded fleecing of residents of rural Kentucky.

Middlesboro and Clinton are two tiny, impoverished towns in southern Kentucky with a combined population of 12,000. In 2008, Middlesboro's per capita income was $13,189 a year, only a few hundred dollars more than the average worker earned in third-world Mexico. That is if they were lucky to even get a job. Real unemployment hovers somewhere around 30%, and the state is so broke that half the people eligible for unemployment benefits can't receive them. Life may be tough and most people live in poverty, but that doesn't mean they can't be made a little poorer. That's the lesson locals learned after bailed-out insurance villain AIG took over their water utility and instantly raised rates to squeeze an extra $1 million in profits out of its new customers, forcing some to consider choosing between running water and food.

The towns are so rural, their residents have yet to be touched by the Internet revolution. Forget comment sections or forum threads. In Clinton, you have to track down actual hand-written notes that residents filed with city hall to read their complaints about the rate increase. Luckily, city officials were nice enough to scan some of them.

Here's one, dated August 8, 2009:

My husband and I are on a fixed income and with everything going up in price this would be very a very large burden on us as well as most of the citizens of Clinton. Our town is mostly of people like us and this would be such a hardship for us. A 50.8% raise is outrageous on anything. Please do not let this happen. It would mean the difference in bringing buying food and medicine or paying a high water bill to make someone else's life easier.

Here is how the AIG takeover went down: In 2005, flush with cash from its shady dealings in the mortgage derivatives market, AIG announced that it was in the process of acquiring Utilities Inc., a holding company that controlled scores of small water utilities across 17 different states. With just 300,000 customers, the company wasn't huge, but it boasted of being the largest privately held water utility in the country.

"We have long considered water infrastructure as an attractive investment opportunity and an excellent complement to [our] existing energy infrastructure portfolio. Utilities Inc. is a leader in this industry and we are pleased that [we have] the opportunity to acquire this business,” AIG Chairman and CEO Win J. Neuger gloated in a press release.

AIG had reason to be pleased with its purchase. Water utilities are one hell of a profitable business, with international corporations easily making a 20 to 30% profit margin, according to a 2007 report by Food and Water Watch. In the US, federal regulations limit profits to 10%, a pesky rule that companies easily subvert by shuffling their income around and “investing” it in side businesses. These kinds of returns would be the envy of the pharmaceutical and oil industries. How do water companies do it? According to Food and Water Watch, they charge 50% more for services than public utilities and pocket the difference, thereby unleashing the potential of the free market.

People who have been ripped off by bailed-out banks' schemes to trick late fees out of their customers will recognize what Utilities Inc. did to the people of Middlesboro and Clinton. In the summer of 2008, as AIG was teetering and desperate for funds, it "upgraded" its billing system, and suddenly a slew of late fee charges hit the struggling locals.

Residents had been getting their water bills like clockwork for as long as anyone could remember, but confusion and disorder set in as soon as Utilities rolled out its new and improved billing system. Monthly statements started coming late or didn't come in for months at a time. People were double-billed and double-penalized for bills that never arrived. One month, a bill would include sewer fees, the next month it wouldn't—and you'd be charged if didn't catch the omission. It's obvious the new invoice system was designed for pure harassment, creating chaos and reaping the rewards of the late fees it generated.

Internally, Utilities referred to their revamp of the billing system as "Project Phoenix." It sounded eerily similar to the CIA's "Phoenix Program," which was designed to terrorize, kill and torture uppity Vietnamese villagers into submission during the Vietnam War. One month after Project Phoenix started wreaking havoc on locals, AIG collapsed and took the first of over $150 billion in taxpayer bailout funds. That meant Project Phoenix could still go on terrorizing locals—which it did.

Here is how a local newspaper described the new billing program in Clinton in March, 2008:

It wasn’t until the summer of 2008 that the new bills began to arrive and from Day One, they were messed up. Few customers here in Clinton [called] the water company because they got multiple bills. One business thought it got a break when its bill went down somewhat, only to discover that the bill hadn’t included sewer costs. This went on for several months. Finally, the [sewer bill] showed up – due in full – on one bill. Requests to spread out the payment fell on deaf ears. . . . Some of us were so confused by the bills, we paid them every time they came in. . . . Fears of bad credit reports and shut offs kept most customers paying whenever a bill arrived.

To make it harder for Clinton residents to file complaints, AIG closed the utility's local office as soon as it took over the company. Pleas made by phone were rejected.

Local citizens are angry, upset and fearful. Many senior citizens on fixed incomes are already stretched past the breaking point. Others living below the poverty line without hope of getting a job are worried about how to pay another rising utility bill.

Customers we’ve talked to “want to do something,” but say they cannot afford to file to intervene in the case. The trip to Frankfort is daunting and expensive. Some dare not leave the jobs or businesses they have for the time it would take to travel and attend a hearing in Frankfort.

In November 2008, right as AIG was recieving the second installment of its bailout and the economy was in a free-fall, AIG's water utility notified Middlesbro and Clinton residents that it would be raising rates by 51%. It would mean more than $750,000 in additional revenue a year, just from 8,000 customers. The money wouldn't be used to fund infrastructure improvements—none had been made and none were planned. No, according to a company spokesman, the utility was trying to recoup money it had invested in its "improved" billing system, in effect forcing the victims of the billing system to pay for their own fleecing. 

It seems Utilities was quite honest about explaining that a good chunk of the $750,000 would be transferred straight into the pockets of its investors, according to the West Kentucky Journal of Politics and Issues.

[Another] reason came from [the] company's financial expert, Pauline M. Ahern, who opined that a rate increase will allow [the utility] to “earn a range of common equity cost ratio of 11.60% to 12.10%.” In the present market, that is an attractive return on investment.

One million dollars may not seem like much these days, but it sure meant a lot to the poverty-stricken residents of Middlesbro and Clinton. There were quite a few bleak handwritten statements filed with Clinton's city hall during a public hearing on the water rates increase. It makes sense to quote them to get a feel for the level of despair that exists in rural communities like this all over the United States.

Here's one from August 8, 2009:

I get $675.00 a month, if they raise the water, or utilities, I can't pay them. I would have to go without water, etc. or gas. I'm disabled and I can't walk. Raising the utilities hurt a lot of people here in Clinton. Not just me but everyone. As it is I can't pay the water bills because its high. But I pay what I can.

And here is another from August 12, 2009:

I feel that a rate increase of 50.8% will add a heavy burden on our small rural community. Our citizin [sic] that lives in our city are on Social Security, have full time jobs that pay barely minimum wage or are working as many as 3 part time jobs to make their monthly budget.

And another from May, 2009:

“I always have a high bills [sic] to pay. I pay what I can. I am on disable. [sic] I try not to use too much water. But yet I have a high water bill. If the bill goes up, I will be lucky to pay them $10.00 instead of $80.00.

In the end, Kentucky's regulatory commission reduced the water rate increase from 50.1% to 30%. How long before they try raise the rate again? Or until the energy company decides to follow suit? It's hard to say. But one thing is for certain: AIG's takeover shows again that the American people were screwed by the bailed-out billionaires, who, instead of showing gratitude or willingness to reciprocate, have been preying upon the most vulnerable Americans like they are 15th century barons soaking the peasants.

And as our cities and states start leasing out and selling public infrastructure to pay off their municipal debts, we can expect banks to gain more control of public wealth. Middlesbro and Clinton are a glimpse into the future of post-privatized America.

All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.

  

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Comments

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The French had this cool

The French had this cool invention called the Guillotine. Maybe if we re-named them Freedom Blades they would make a big comeback in the US. I'm sure there are a lot of good deals on wicker baskets this time of year at some corporate big box retailer or other.

Soulless psychopatic

Soulless psychopatic swines. You see why the revolution is coming about.

'Soaking the peasants'. Time

'Soaking the peasants'. Time to sharpen the Freedom Blades (guillotine ) and get on with it. I will get out the new pitchfork and take some comfort in knowing my daughter is learning to knit. Seriously folks, enough is enough. We have called representatives, worked on campaigns and been ever so patient even with the people of the red state, Kentucky. Still our pockets are picked daily by the greedy robber barons of the twenty first century. We are at a crossroad and must decide what kind of culture we want to be. Do we support poverty and greed or do we want a strong commons and the peace of mind knowing our fellow citizens, even in those states we dislike, are living in at least some modest comfort in the modern world. Instead of the worst of times perhaps we should find a way for the best of times.

Why did Truthout use a stock

Why did Truthout use a stock picture of a black child to accompany the article, when Middlesboro and Clinton are 93% and 70% white, respectively?

This is exactly what brought

This is exactly what brought down the government of Bolivia. When the Bechtel Co. took over the public water company and raised the rates by 25% the people revolted. The Govt. sent in the army and police to put the revolt down. This only made the people irreversibly dedicated to the overthrow of that corporately run entity and in came Uvo Morales. The question then is, if the people of Kentucky revolt will the govt. send in the police and the National Guard to put it down and if they do will that mean the end of that government too and with it the U.S. Government? It should!

I, for one, will be giving

I, for one, will be giving thanks everytime I'm able to pour a glass of water and not be charged $5.00 for it. Bottoms up...I guess.

death to AIG executives

death to AIG executives sounds like the proper course of action

I am very grateful for many

I am very grateful for many of the changes Obama has brought to the direction of government, but continue to be baffled by his support of the "Bankers and their steamer trunks to the lifeboats first" bailout. I accept that it was economically immediately necessary to keep overgrown giants like AIG from collapsing, but why shield its leadership against the consequences of their own irresponsible business decisions? Clearly it is business as usual at AIG, at public expense.

Sorry, I cannot think of a

Sorry, I cannot think of a comment that does not advocate violence, civil uprising or revolution.

It's time to call in the

It's time to call in the loan on AIG. Tell them we want the money back by next week Friday, or we foreclose on them. Of course, it won't happen. That doesn't make this any less outrageous. Bastards.

This is sick! AIG needs to

This is sick! AIG needs to be euthanized and put our of our misery.

If there is a better

If there is a better definition of Economic Terrorism that this story, let's see it. No different than the Mafia showing up in Clinton, charging what they want, and threatening - not shut-offs and ruined credit - but broken knees and burned homes for nonpayment. Same. F**king. Thing. Yet one, somehow, is not only legal, but financed by the victims, who've already been forced by 'their' government to promise $90,000 (per American) in future tax revenues to the motherf**kers who stole - and blew - what they had left to begin with... hey - look over there: Santa!!!

A horror of a billing system

A horror of a billing system plagued Portland as well. Then we paid for an effort to cover our reservoirs with plastic, triggered apparently by Homeland Security and hired Ph.D.'s. Now an unfunded mandate is set to force debt beyond existing second liens to bury water to build the kind of centralized water system that failed in other cities. Our gravity-fed system from a pristine watershed should be a low-input model of what to do. Tens of local neighborhood and employers' groups oppose burying water and centralizing treatment. Our city officials appear to believe the feds will jail them if they don't do what burrowed-in federal officials demand, enrichment for certain contractors and debt-service nightmares for ratepayers.

I'm glad the Kentucky'

I'm glad the Kentucky' regulatory decreased the raise, but couldn't they have decreased it far more or said "no"? Surely 30% is also grossly unreasonable? And wasn't the bailout money supposed to trickle down?

I'd like to hope that the

I'd like to hope that the legislatures, city councils & mayors who are thinking about privatizing this and that formerly public or gov't function will read this article. Perhaps then they will finally be able to see the heavy costs of privatizing. I have never understood why the "private sector" is always held up as being a model of efficiency--for every incidence of gov't "inefficiency" you could find at least two instances of private sector rip offs & inefficiency. No doubt people in TX and anywhere else utilities have been privatized have similar stories of much higher costs accompanied by less service, less attention paid to infrastructure, etc. To add insult to injury, some of these same rip off privatizations will probably get "stimulus" loans or grants without being required to pass on cost reductions, etc., to the taxpayers whose taxes & future debt is used to offer that assistance. As with AIG.

So, the U.S. Treasury is the

So, the U.S. Treasury is the Goose that lays a golden AIG, for the sake of... what?.. its shareholders & upper management? No business entity ever was More deserving of bankruptcy & dismantling! ^..^

Does the Montgomery bus

Does the Montgomery bus boycott present a potential response? Could money be found to drill a town well in Clinton and have folks step up and carry water to one another's homes? There may still be some media that would cover such an example of democracy in action, eventually shaming the Kentucky Public Utilities Commission into doing its proper job of safeguarding consumers. Congress might consider a law that water, including its safe delivery, is an essential right and may not be privitized without very strict regulation. The EPA might investigate and force AIG to upgrade the water delivery infrastructure. But until there is genuine reform of the US financial system, these horror stories of greed and lack of morality will continue. We depend on Truthout to keep publicizing the injustices.

It's all about resources and

It's all about resources and it is going to get worse. Someday people will kill each other for clean drinking water.

gotta love bailouts!

gotta love bailouts!

This is unconscionable! The

This is unconscionable! The predators need to be hunted down and removed -- incarcerated in the most foul prison that can be found. Maybe THIS is a worthwhile purpose for retaining the policy of extraordinary rendition; these slime-bags should be rounded up and shipped off to prison in Egypt or Syria or Iran. No notice, no trial, no reprieve -- give them the same "due process" they give the inhabitants of Middlesbro and Clinton: NONE! Oh, and confiscate their "loot" and return it to the citizens of these two towns. ALL utilities should be publicly owned and locally managed non-profits, with enough income to cover costs, and a rainy-day fund to pay for repairs and essential up-grades - no more. Of all utilities, however, water should NEVER be privatized, under ANY circumstance!

Anything ''good'' Obama does

Anything ''good'' Obama does is to be compared to anything''good' that the Rockefellers have done. Empty smoke and mirrors. He is a neocon. There is no 2 party system. He obeys ''people'' higher on the chain than him. He makes no decisions. So if we stick to the left vs right nonsense, they will continue to tighten the noose. They must laugh it up about a ''black'' president tightening the noose on old white people. There is no more dialogue, or any hope for dialogue. It is [surprise surprise] the ultra wealthy vs everyone else. It has been that way for a long long time. Smile! you're on candid camera.

When the working class [that

When the working class [that likes to pretend its middle class] stops thinking we have common interest with these robber barons, perhaps we will make solidarity our motto, and transform our nation. But as long as race, social issues, and religion divide us, we will remain conquered.

I'm afraid the wealthy and

I'm afraid the wealthy and powerful in the country will not rest until they pay no taxes, fees or interest and the entire burden of the government rests of the shoulders of the poor and powerless. These unfortunates are just too easy to take advantage of.

Where's Eleanor Roosevelt

Where's Eleanor Roosevelt when you need her?

Now, THIS might be a

Now, THIS might be a legitimate use of waterboarding. Give them a karmic lesson. You guys want water? Here you go.... I'm furious, as are we all. And I hope the people against "big gov't" and think the free market is so wonderful somehow see this, and start thinking. I also like the Freedom Blades idea. That's how pissed I am.

Liberty, Equality,

Liberty, Equality, Fraternity! Storm the Bastille!!

"The towns are so rural,

"The towns are so rural, their residents have yet to be touched by the Internet revolution." Is the author joking? Both of these towns have multiple broadband internet providers. And I'm with Mike. What's up with the starving black child photo for a story about rural and white Kentucky? Insert photo of impoverished child here........

Obama is a corrupt coward

Obama is a corrupt coward for rewarding AIG with more and more free money. Obama is on the side of big business, not the common poor person. As far as I'm concerned, he's a total idiot, not an "elite."

rapethepoor, you are

rapethepoor, you are retarded.

Where I live our energy

Where I live our energy company just upgraded their billing system and already people have been getting billed more. They said it would help people save money on their bill, well it hasn't. I live in a well populated area so it's not just small town Kentucky getting screwed by utilities company's. I agree with whoever said, he couldn't comment without wanting to revolt, fight back or state a bunch of bad words about AIG. This is BS all the way.

Time to nationalize.

Time to nationalize.