A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Utilities should terminate bankrupt nonresidential customers and seek payment rather than tolerating nonpayment as an allowed operating expense.
Water utilities should implement aggressive credit and collection strategies to minimize bad‐debt expenses from nonresidential customers. Before customers file for bankruptcy, utilities should have favorable laws and tariff provisions in effect and should implement such provisions for each customer. When customers file for bankruptcy, utilities should intervene and protect their pre‐ and postpetition interests. In a competitive economic climate, such a policy would make sense for utilities.
Utilities should terminate bankrupt nonresidential customers and seek payment rather than tolerating nonpayment as an allowed operating expense.
Water utilities should implement aggressive credit and collection strategies to minimize bad‐debt expenses from nonresidential customers. Before customers file for bankruptcy, utilities should have favorable laws and tariff provisions in effect and should implement such provisions for each customer. When customers file for bankruptcy, utilities should intervene and protect their pre‐ and postpetition interests. In a competitive economic climate, such a policy would make sense for utilities.
Reducing bad‐debt expenses
Hamberg, Gilbert L. (author)
Journal ‐ American Water Works Association ; 87 ; 101-104
1995-04-01
4 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Revenues , Accounting , Costs , Utilities
Montague Process: Plant Modifications Remove Nitrogen while Reducing O&M Expenses
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2012
|Wiley | 1992
Wiley | 2021
|Wiley | 1932
|