Headline News
California Water Department Now Using Newly-Installed Smart Meters To Track And Prosecute
“The accuracy of the smart meters are just incredible, because we get the data the next day. We are using it specifically for an enforcement tool to go after customers” Wattier said.

“We are using it specifically for an enforcement tool to go after those customers who we’ve gotten lots of complaints about,” Wattier said.
Over the past two years, NTEB has brought you numerous stories about the drastic loss of privacy associated with the installation of smart meters to control water and electric services. But as you will see, they are really just about control.
LONG BEACH — Water authorities are using a new tool in a major effort to crack down on people and businesses wasting water in light of new water restrictions issued by Gov. Jerry Brown to fight the drought.
The Long Beach Water Department says sprinklers at a McDonald’s restaurant on Bellflower Boulevard went on for 45 minutes at a time, twice a night, for an undefined number of nights. Complaints continued to mount as water pooled and wasted. The department, however, could do little about the wasting.

The smart meters, created by a company called Innov8, cost $300. They connect to Verizon’s wireless network and upload statistics about water use every few minutes; that information can show the frequency and length of time a homeowner is watering their lawn, or help identify a leak or other issue.
That was before the smart meter.
Since its installation in February, Long Beach Water Department General Manager Kevin Wattier says he saw an immediate spike by tens of thousands of gallons, each time McDonald’s overwatered their property.
“It collects the data every five minutes, then after midnight, the cellphone that’s built in here comes on, makes one call, and calls it in to the database that we and the customer, through a password security system, have online access to their consumption,” Wattier said.
“The accuracy is just incredible, because we get the data the next day.”
Using this data, Wattier knew the precise moment to send his employees to videotape the infractions to use as evidence.
“We are using it specifically for an enforcement tool to go after those customers who we’ve gotten lots of complaints about,” Wattier said. Wattier says he believes the smart meter will be used in both businesses and homes to track water waste across Southern California. source
