Wyoming City Is Trying To Collect

In the town of Cody, Wyoming, 219 utility accounts were sent to collection. Only four of the bills belonged to property owners. Some are thinking that the city believes that holding property owners are responsible for utility costs that their renters left unpaid. A policy like that could have added $180,000 to the city budget during the past five years, and furthermore, other utility users are subsidizing those that do not pay their bills. Landlords are offering fast and obvious objection, asking the city council why it should be their responsibility to pay for a bill that someone else racked up. Another plan has been proposed though, one that would require a deposit from every person opening up a utility account. This change in policy would involve a number of modifications like a rule that a property owner co-sign for a renter's account. Tenants would be billed under their own account but have alandlord account open for everu property. Unpaid bills would be transferred to the landlord's account if the tenant does not pay. Deposit requirements would go from $150 to $200, and would be required for all accounts, regardless of their credit history in the past. Property owners would be notified of late payments, and they would be encouraged to contact the city to see if the bill got paid before returning rental deposits. All property owners would have to keep utilities in their names. Supporters of the plan allege that it is not out of line with what other cities are doing, and it is a simpler and the most cost efficient way to collect debts. Collection agencies get about one third of what they collect in the city, and 60 percent of bills that go to collection remain unpaid. Whatever decision they arrive to, it should be rapid: city officials are noticing a trend toward fewer people making deposits and more accounts being sent to collection.
Mallory McGuinness is employed by a debt collection agency.

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