Florida
Apparently this happens all the time as I've found but I find it incredible that it's normal for people to get stuck with such high water bills for water that gets accidentally used and how easy it is for the amounts to add up as with mine $600 within a few days of a leak I didn't notice. If they were selling you cows which you accidentally infected with a disease or something I understand you couldn't expect to be able to return them for a refund but does the water actually cost them anything? And if it were about avoiding being taken advantage of by water thieves, is this such a problem at all? I don't even have a pool. I'd think that such a service would require a failsafe like a system of alerting customers when the meter exceeds a specified usage, otherwise we have this situation where these utility companies are making a killing off often unavoidable leaks which may be okay according to their policies but not ethical at all in my view. Is there any recourse? There must be some protections for the consumer here. Depending on the circumstances, a person in a dire financial bind + simply a busted underground pipe + a few days gone by could result in a really bad but unnecessary damaging situation.
Apparently this happens all the time as I've found but I find it incredible that it's normal for people to get stuck with such high water bills for water that gets accidentally used and how easy it is for the amounts to add up as with mine $600 within a few days of a leak I didn't notice. If they were selling you cows which you accidentally infected with a disease or something I understand you couldn't expect to be able to return them for a refund but does the water actually cost them anything? And if it were about avoiding being taken advantage of by water thieves, is this such a problem at all? I don't even have a pool. I'd think that such a service would require a failsafe like a system of alerting customers when the meter exceeds a specified usage, otherwise we have this situation where these utility companies are making a killing off often unavoidable leaks which may be okay according to their policies but not ethical at all in my view. Is there any recourse? There must be some protections for the consumer here. Depending on the circumstances, a person in a dire financial bind + simply a busted underground pipe + a few days gone by could result in a really bad but unnecessary damaging situation.