Source · SPSO (Scottish Public Services Ombudsman)

Business Stream

SPSO (Scottish Public Services Ombudsman) Upheld Reference 201205165 Sector Water Category charging method / calculation Decided 01 November 2013

Full decision

Summary

Mr C's business moved into their current premises in 2005, and Business Stream created a water account for them in December of that year. In 2013, Mr C noticed that his water bills had suddenly increased. He was advised to check for a leak, but none was found. Eventually, it was discovered that his premises' pipework was shared with a number of residential properties, and Business Stream's policies required that his premises be treated as 'dual use premises'. This meant that Mr C could not install a second water meter to separate his water usage from that used by the residential properties. Although Mr C did not own or manage any of the residential properties, he would be billed for the water for all the properties and would have to sub-charge the residential properties for their share of the water charges. As they were already paying for water through their council tax, it would be up to Mr C to arrange for them to cancel the water charges from their council tax and to have any amounts paid refunded to him.

We found that, historically, Mr C's premises had been part of a larger property attached to the residential properties with a shared address and rateable value. However, at the time of Mr C's water account being created, the properties had been split and the assessor had given Mr C's property its own rateable value. As such, we did not consider that his property fitted the 'dual use premises' model. We noted that Business Stream's policies did not address circumstances such as Mr C's and there was no mechanism for customers in his position to have their water meters relocated or a secondary meter fitted. We considered it unfair that the result of this was that the customer was required to make complex arrangements with unrelated residential property owners to charge for water that was already being paid for through council tax. We upheld his complaint, as we found that Business Stream and Scottish Water did not do enough to find a common sense solution to the situation to ensure that Mr C's business was charged fairly for its water consumption.

Recommendations

We recommended that Business Stream: and Scottish Water jointly reconsider Mr C's case to ensure that his business's billing arrangements reflect that his premises are no longer 'dual use'; and Scottish Water reconsider their policies to allow for situations similar to Mr C's; and consider backdating the revised billing arrangements for Mr C's business to December 2005.

Related reading

View Decision Report 201205165 as a PDF (13.4 KB) Updated: March 13, 2018

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Other decisions involving Business Stream

Reference Date Summary Outcome
202101632 01 Mar 2023 C complained about Business Stream's communication regarding their account. There was also disagreement between C and Business Stream over the … Resolved / Early Resolution
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201900738 01 Dec 2021 C complained that Business Stream had not billed their business accurately. C said that they had been told by an … Not Upheld
201806006 01 Jul 2021 C purchased a former business premises for conversion to domestic property. At the time of the original purchase the business … Resolved / Early Resolution
201808488 01 Nov 2020 Mr C complained that Business Stream incorrectly arranged for a meter to be installed at a vacant property belonging to … Not Upheld
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