Changeflow GovPing Courts & Legal AG Challenges 154% Sewer Rate Hike for Robson R...
Priority review Enforcement Added Final

AG Challenges 154% Sewer Rate Hike for Robson Ranch Utility Customers

Favicon for www.azag.gov AG: Arizona Press Releases
Filed March 31st, 2026
Detected April 3rd, 2026
Email

Summary

Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes filed an application for rehearing with the Arizona Corporation Commission on March 31, 2026, challenging the Commission's March 4 decision approving a 154% sewer rate increase and 23% water rate increase for Robson Ranch residents. The AG argues the Commission violated its constitutional duty by approving rate increases without considering customer impact and by refusing to review documents from the November 2024 sale to a private equity firm.

What changed

The Arizona Corporation Commission voted 3-2 on March 4, 2026 to approve dramatic rate increases for Picacho Water Company and Picacho Sewer Company customers at Robson Ranch retirement community: 154% for sewer and nearly 23% for water. The utilities were sold to a private equity-backed investment company in November 2024, months before rates skyrocketed. AG Mayes argues the Commission made two critical errors: staff witnesses testified under oath they gave no consideration to ratepayer impact, and the Commission refused to obtain documents from the private equity sale, depriving itself of information relevant to setting a fair rate of return.

The filing asks the Commission to subpoena the purchase transaction documents and hold a full rehearing that weighs both customer impacts and shareholder interests as required by Arizona law. Residents are captive customers with no ability to switch providers. The AG is exercising oversight authority to enforce the Commission's constitutional duty to set just and reasonable rates.

What to do next

  1. Review pending utility rate increases for captive customer communities in your service area
  2. Ensure rate-setting processes document consideration of customer affordability impacts
  3. Request and review transaction documents when utilities are sold to private equity firms before approving rate changes

Source document (simplified)

Attorney General Mayes Challenges Massive Rate Hike for Robson Ranch Utility Customers

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

PHOENIX — Attorney General Kris Mayes yesterday filed an application for rehearing with the Arizona Corporation Commission, challenging a recent decision that approved dramatic water and sewer rate increases for residents of Robson Ranch, a retirement community south of Casa Grande.

The Commission voted 3-2 on March 4 to approve rate increases of nearly 23% for water service and a staggering 154% for sewer service — increases that will hit every residential customer in the community. Attorney General Mayes argues the decision violates the Commission's constitutional duty to set rates that are just and reasonable for both customers and shareholders.

"The Arizona Corporation Commission exists to protect ratepayers from exactly this kind of rate shock," said Attorney General Kris Mayes. "Approving a 154% sewer rate increase and a nearly 23% water rate increase while Commission staff openly admitted they never considered the impact on customers is a failure of the Commission's constitutional duty."

The filing argues the Commission made two critical errors. First, Commission staff witnesses testified under oath that they gave no consideration to the impact of the increases on ratepayers. One witness even stated that "Staff doesn't set rates based on affordability." Second, the Commission refused to obtain or review documents from the November 2024 sale of the utilities to a private equity-backed investment company, depriving itself of information relevant to setting a fair rate of return.

The utilities' previous owner, the homebuilder that developed Robson Ranch, held rates artificially low for 27 years, possibly to attract homebuyers with low utilities. However, months after a private equity firm acquired the utilities in November 2024, rates skyrocketed. Residents who bought homes with affordable utility costs in mind now face bills that bear no resemblance to what they planned for.

“Robson Ranch residents have no alternative utility providers, they are captive customers of Picacho Water Company and Picacho Sewer Company, with no ability to shop for better rates or switch to a competitor,” said Attorney General Mayes. “Arizona's founders enshrined the Corporation Commission in the state constitution specifically to protect consumers from exploitation by monopoly utilities. When the Commission fails to fulfill that role, my office will step in to protect Arizonans."
The filing asks the Commission to subpoena the purchase transaction documents and hold a full rehearing that weighs both customer impacts and shareholder interests as required by Arizona law.

A copy of the filing is available.

News

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
AZ AG
Filed
March 31st, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Consumers Government agencies
Industry sector
2213 Water & Wastewater
Activity scope
Utility Rate Setting Consumer Protection
Threshold
Residential customers of Picacho Water Company and Picacho Sewer Company at Robson Ranch retirement community
Geographic scope
US-AZ US-AZ

Taxonomy

Primary area
Consumer Protection
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Utilities Rate Regulation

Get Courts & Legal alerts

Weekly digest. AI-summarized, no noise.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when AG: Arizona Press Releases publishes new changes.

Optional. Personalizes your daily digest.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.