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Welsh Water writes to thousands of customers telling them their bills are going up

Welsh Water writes to thousands of customers telling them their bills are going up

Yahoo22-02-2025

Welsh Water customers are getting bills through their doors telling them how much their bills are going up by. Household water bills in Wales are set to increase by 42% over five years.
From April, people in Wales are set to see their water bills go up on average from £503 to £639, which is around a 27% increase. Some residents are seeing bills rising by as much as 33% - one bill payer in Cardiff has seen monthly payments go up from £85.30 to £113.83.
Another customer in Swansea said: "I've had a letter that says my direct debit payments will rise this year to £67.50 a month. Last year we were paying £44.50. That's a staggering rise and by calculations more like 34%. How is that justified?"
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The increase has been described as "significant" and "higher than expected" by one financial expert. For the latest Welsh news delivered to your inbox sign up to our newsletter.
The nation's largest water company, Welsh Water Dwr Cymru, will be allowed to increase its bills from an average of £455 this year to £645 in five years time. Water companies across England and Wales have said that the increases will lead to more investment to deal with problems like leaks and sewage overflows. Hafren Dyfrdwy, which serves about 87,000 customers along the Wales-England border is increasing bills by 32% from April.
The letters that are going out to all customers are accompanied by a letter explaining why the bills are increasing this year and over the next four years. Chief executive Peter Perry says in the letter: "Over the last 15 year, bills have not risen in line with inflation.
"To ensure we continue to provide sustainable services and deal with risks such as those created by climate change, we need to increase investment in our water and wastewater infrastructure."
He also explained why the bills are amongst the highest in the sector, saying that it was "primarily due to the wastewater infrastructure" they had to build in coastal areas following privatisation.
Mr Perry said: "Up until the last 1990s, nearly 50% of sewage in Wales was discharged virtually untreated into the sea. Since then, our investment has contributed to more Blue Flag beaches in Wales than ever before. But as there is more to do, for us to improve service delivery, adapt our networks to the impacts of climate change, and to protect our rivers and seas, we now need to increase the level of investment."

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How Ryan Reynolds Rewrote the Script for Celebrity Entrepreneurs
How Ryan Reynolds Rewrote the Script for Celebrity Entrepreneurs

Time​ Magazine

time3 days ago

  • Time​ Magazine

How Ryan Reynolds Rewrote the Script for Celebrity Entrepreneurs

Pari Dukovic for TIME Ryan Reynolds is trying to focus on our conversation. But all he can think about is the script pulled up on his laptop. The screenwriting software Final Draft has frozen so he can't plug in his latest ideas for a project that he has asked me not to share. He reluctantly abandons his computer but can't help but fidget. Reynolds knows he'll only have a few hours later to return to the story before he's on dad duty. 'I'm obsessive,' he says. 'Even right now I'm thinking what I have after you, and if I can get back to it again.' His schedule after our interview is packed: a business meeting; someone is coming to fix Final Draft; then a walk-and-talk with Deadpool & Wolverine director Shawn Levy to discuss Levy's upcoming Star Wars movie starring the other Ryan—Gosling. We're sitting in the Tribeca home Reynolds shares with his wife, actor and entrepreneur Blake Lively, and their four children. The living area is lit by lamps with fringed shades, and the walls are covered in moody paintings that evoke Madonna and Child. Even the TV sits in a museum-worthy frame. Behind him, a bottle of Aviation Gin, one of many now-lucrative companies Reynolds invested in, sits prominently on a kitchen counter. While most people know him as the sardonic superhero Deadpool, Reynolds is also a wildly successful businessperson. Plenty of celebrities attach themselves to products. But Reynolds' production company and marketing firm Maximum Effort is a viral content machine. He takes hefty stakes in seemingly disparate small companies, promotes them—and has them promote each other—with playful quick-turn ads he calls 'fastvertising,' and then sells the businesses for millions. He has invested in Aviation Gin, the discount telecommunications company Mint Mobile, Welsh soccer team Wrexham AFC, and the cybersecurity app 1Password—to name a few. The companies he co-owns or has sold are valued at over $14 billion, according to Forbes . Reynolds has carried over his Hollywood playbook to the world of advertising: respect the audience's intelligence and have a little fun. 'Consumers know they're being marketed to, so acknowledge it,' he says. Levy, who has made three movies with Reynolds, believes that Reynolds' ability to create narratives for his businesses is his friend's superpower. 'He's really identified a core component to entrepreneurial success,' Levy says. 'And it connects back to our day jobs, which is storytelling.' He built this empire on his specific and identifiable brand: Reynolds is the popular guy, blessed with Canadian affability and a cynical sense of humor. He frequently collaborates with celebrities like Hugh Jackman and Channing Tatum with whom he seems to have developed genuine friendships. He and his famous wife flirt online. His social media is perfectly calibrated: he's either writing self-consciously sophomoric posts on social media about shots of monkey penises in a nature docuseries he's producing or pranking Wrexham AFC co-owner and fellow actor Rob McElhenney. He knows when to deploy snark and when to be earnest. And after years as a movie star, he's built a public profile that's less heartthrob and more everydad: He sports glasses gifted to him by David Beckham and loves to crack jokes about how, now that he's pushing 50, he won't always be able to squeeze into the skin-tight Deadpool suit. Reynolds does admit to a deep-rooted need to be liked—probably related to being the youngest of four brothers vying for validation from a withholding cop father. 'I am people-pleasing by default, as is my wife, as are our first two children,' he says.'The third was, you know, born flipping the bird. And the fourth is TBD.' Reynolds knows the trait is a double-edged sword: 'Your boundaries can kind of melt and that's not necessarily healthy.' When Reynolds drops his kids off at school, he likes to remind them, 'Disappoint one person today!'' Reynolds admits he struggles to follow his own advice. But at least he's figured out a way to channel this perceived weakness into a strength: He knows how to charm A-listers, CEOs, and—crucially—the consumer. In another life, Reynolds would have been the chief marketing officer of a Fortune 500 company. He just happened to become one of the world's biggest movie stars instead. Photograph by Pari Dukovic for TIME Buy a copy of the TIME100 Companies issue here Reynolds spent 45 minutes at college before he dropped out and drove to Los Angeles with dreams of joining the famed improv group The Groundlings, only to be told he'd need to pay for classes. Undeterred, Reynolds eventually found a steady gig on the sitcom Two Guys, A Girl, and a Pizza Place and established a reputation for playing smart alecs that carried over into comedies like Van Wilder and The Proposal . 'I didn't get famous until I was older,' Reynolds says. (For reference, he was named Sexiest Man Alive by People Magazine at 34.) 'Thank God. I would be dead if it happened in my early 20s.' His transition to superhero, a rite of passage for leading men in Hollywood in the '00s, was rocky. He snagged supporting roles in Blade: Trinity and X-Men Origins: Wolverine . In the latter, he played Deadpool—a fourth-wall-breaking wiseacre that perfectly aligned with Reynolds' sense of humor—only for the writers to make the bizarre decision to sew the character's mouth shut. It took more than 10 years for Reynolds to push his version of the Merc With a Mouth onto the big screen—and only after test footage for a Deadpool solo film mysteriously leaked online and went viral, forcing the studio's hand. Fox granted Deadpool a relatively small budget. That was fine by Reynolds. After starring in the 2011 box office bomb Green Lantern he learned that bloat is the enemy of creativity. 'I saw a lot of money being spent on special effects, all sorts of stuff. And I remember suggesting, 'Why don't we write a scene the way people would talk? I don't know, it could be a fun exchange of dialogue that doesn't cost anything?'' The flop also taught him to take control of his own destiny. 'When it failed, it's not the director's name out there. It's my name,' he says. 'I want to be the architect of my own demise or the author of my own success.' Reynolds put his money where his (no-longer-sewn-shut) mouth was. He paid to fly the writers to the Deadpool set because he needed to work with them in person to finesse the movie's comedic tone. With a modest budget, Reynolds drove crowds to the 2016 movie with surprising strategies like advertising on Tinder. Last year, the third entry in the franchise, Deadpool & Wolverine , became the highest-grossing R-rated movie ever, grossing $1.3 billion dollars and saving the flagging Marvel Studios from a grim year at the 2024 box office. Despite Deadpool's massive cultural footprint, Green Lantern remains his toddler son's favorite film. Ryan Reynolds greets fans during the Deadpool & Wolverine World Premiere on July 22, 2024 in New York City. Noam Galai—Disney/Getty Images Maximum Effort, co-founded in 2018 with former Fox head of digital theatrical marketing George Dewey and named for a line in Deadpool , was forged from the bootstrap promotion of the first film. 'Maximum Effort' also serves as Reynolds' life motto. 'I can't say I've invested every cell of my body into something that failed,' he admits. 'The things that I've failed at, I usually didn't fully believe in.' That same year, Reynolds invested in Aviation Gin. Rather than just lending his face to the brand, Reynolds pitched a cheeky marketing strategy that riffed on his own persona—he filmed a Father's Day commercial in which he invented a cocktail called 'the vasectomy.' Maximum Effort's 50-some employees frequently collaborate with MNTN, the advertising platform for which Reynolds serves as chief creative officer. Mark Douglas, MNTN's CEO, recently had lunch with Reynolds and ambassadors from a brand. 'They were describing themselves and what they do, and right at the table he created a commercial in front of them,' Douglas says. 'He just imagined how he would tell this story in 30 seconds on television.' The year after Reynolds' investment, Aviation increased its volumes by 100%. The U.K.-based Diageo bought the liquor company for $610 million in 2020. Next, Reynolds bought 25% of Mint Mobile, a discount telecom company with little brand recognition. Mint Mobile raised revenue by nearly 50,000% from 2017 to 2020, according to TechCrunch, thanks in no small part to Reynolds' omnipresent ads. Mint sold to T-Mobile for $1.35 billion in 2023. Many actors care as much or more about building their brand as honing their craft. When I tell Reynolds that some skeptics object to the practice of pursuing commercial gain to the possible detriment of artistic achievement, he squints in surprise. 'You think that there are young actors who are like, 'I want to get famous so I can own a brand that sells lots of stuff?'' he asks. I do. 'I'm not saying I'm the exception to the rule, but I love marketing,' he says. 'It's diet storytelling. You can look at a commercial through the same prism you would look at a movie. I get a lot of creative fulfillment out of that. You cannot be as precious about it, because it's just a f-cking commercial. But as long as you acknowledge to the consumer they're being marketed to, then there's an authenticity to it.' That earnestness helps Reynolds stand out in a crowd of celebrity spokespeople. 'When people say, 'What's he really like?' I say exactly what you think,' says McElhenney. 'There's no higher compliment you can give someone in our business than they're exactly who they say they are because so many people create a public persona that is not congruent with who they really are. With Ryan, you don't feel like you're being sold a bill of goods.' __________________________________________ When Reynolds is stopped on the street, he doesn't just take selfies with fans. He asks who the most important person in their life is, and records a video for that person. He can't seem to help himself. Over the course of several weeks, I watch him walk into room after room and pitch jokes, marketing concepts, and movie ideas to anyone and everyone. He exchanges horror stories with a photographer about tantrums at school drop-off and compares notes with me about the techniques we learned in our respective toddler CPR classes. That approachability can create problems in his real life, like when he visits his kids' school and their classmates start asking him about Deadpool. 'I see my daughter's lips tighten,' he admits. 'I don't want to be closed off to the other kids. So I don't really know how to play it.' But it benefits his bottom line. When an ill-advised Peloton ad that featured a husband monitoring his wife's fitness journey went viral in 2019, Reynolds called up the actress and convinced her to appear in one for Aviation Gin. The commercial's star, Monica Ruiz, took a good deal of convincing. But Reynolds can talk anyone into just about anything. Or just about: After the photoshoot to accompany this story, Reynolds repeatedly pitched TIME's editors on a cover featuring the back of his head instead of his face. Ryan Reynolds behind-the-scenes at his TIME cover shoot in April in New York City. 'Oftentimes I create, perhaps too much, an accessibility,' he says. 'I don't like a filtration system. A game of telephone is a terrible way to communicate. They need to hear your voice. They need to feel your emotional investment. They need to feel your gratitude if they've done something great.' That instinct to build connections has served him well in turbulent moments. If you've glanced at social media in the last year, you probably know that Lively filed a sexual harassment and retaliation complaint against Justin Baldoni, her co-star and director of the film It Ends With Us in December 2024: According to a New York Times report, Baldoni hired a crisis PR manager who had previously represented clients like Johnny Depp. Baldoni then sued Lively, Reynolds, their publicist, and the Times for defamation and conspiracy to damage his career with what he said is a false accusation . A judge recently threw out Baldoni's countersuit, and is allowing Lively's suits to proceed. But the situation has taken on a life of its own in the tabloids and on TikTok. Even my celebrity-agnostic relatives asked about it when I mentioned I was interviewing Reynolds. The couple is declining to speak about it. Still, I ask Reynolds whether the tabloids and online discourse have impacted his bottom line. He is, after all, the face of all these companies. That visibility has perks—like being able to deploy Deadpool in commercials—but surely some CEOs get nervous about gossip. 'I can read something that says, 'He should be drawn and quartered. I could read something that says I should win a Nobel Prize. Both are meaningless,' Reynolds says. 'None of us are comprised of our best moments. None of us are defined by our worst moments. We are something in the middle.' A week later, when I push him on whether headlines can affect his brand and business relationships, he's more pointed. 'Accessibility and accountability are a big part of how I do things,' he says. 'The people that I work with know me, so there's never a question of anything like that. If you operate with some degree of core values and integrity, they're going to help you up. If you're an asshole, they're not. And that's pretty simple.' Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds attend 2025 TIME 100 Gala at Jazz at Lincoln Center on April 24, 2025 in New York. Paul Bruinooge—Just then, Lively pops into the room wearing leggings and an oversized shirt. She wants to check in with Reynolds about coordinating their schedules for 10 minutes of catch-up time. As they compare their calendars, Lively offers me her favorite snack, sour dried blueberries that she says taste like Warheads and begins to rummage through their drawers trying to locate them. Reynolds leaps up to help her. 'You're chewing into your time,' Lively jokingly scolds her husband. But Reynolds seems rather zen about any tumultuous turns in his public life. He attributes this perspective to an incident early in his life when he got into a brawl with a friend. 'I skipped rehab in my 20s and decided to go to conflict-resolution workshops in Santa Fe,' he says. 'Conflict resolution changed my life in a way that I can't quantify. You don't have to agree with the person. You can empathize, you can validate. You can do all those things and get closer to them without having to just blindly agree or win or lose.' __________________________________________ Reynolds has been on a hot streak lately. MNTN went public in May with a valuation of $1.2 billion. In April, Wrexham AFC made history as the first team to ever achieve three consecutive promotions up the ranks of a brutal British pyramid system. McElhenney pitched Reynolds on sponsoring a soccer team in 2020 during the pandemic. But when Reynolds heard McElhenney's larger vision for a docuseries about a downtrodden town whose fortunes were inextricably tied to the long-suffering club, he immediately knew the story had mass appeal. He suggested they buy the team together. 'Ryan's involvement took this from a very small endeavor to a very large endeavor overnight because he has the ability to connect with millions and millions of people,' says McEllhenney. 'And I don't just mean on social media. I mean spiritually.' McElhenney and Reynolds had never actually met in person, just texted about collaborating some day. 'I made sure to call around and talk to people he worked with, and you heard the same words over and over again. How optimistic he is, how driven and ambitious he is, but not at the cost of his own values. When things get dark, as they often do for everyone, he is a beacon of light I know I can count on. I think other people feel that.' Wrexham's revenue last year reached £26.7 million, a 155% increase on the year prior. Welcome to Wrexham , a show Maximum Effort produces chronicling the team's rise, has won eight Emmys in four seasons. While the project's mission was noble—to boost a struggling mining town—it also served as a Maximum Effort flex: It could make American consumers, historically agnostic toward soccer, care about a down-and-out Welsh football club. Wrexham players now feature in Super Bowl commercials for SToK Cold Brew with Tatum and make cameos in Deadpool movies. Betty Buzz, Lively's beverage company, became a sponsor for both the men's and women's teams, as did Aviation Gin. Wrexham co-owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney celebrate after Wrexham scores on April 26, 2025 in Wrexham. The team won against Charlton Athletic 3-0, earning a promotion to the Championship league. Martin Rickett—Reynolds claims he still knows very little about soccer, let alone the ins and outs of an IPO. 'I was a lousy student,' he admits. 'I was in remedial 10th grade math when I was in the twelfth grade. It was humiliating.' But it also taught him humility. 'We don't pretend to be football experts. The average four-year-old in Wrexham knows more about football than we ever will. But we can invest in players, invest in character over talent—that's more valuable than a poisonous person in a locker room who scores a lot of goals. And we can tell their story.' They hope to repeat the formula: McElhenney and Reynolds have now teamed up with Eva Longoria to invest in a Mexican soccer team that will become the basis for another series. They went in on an F1 team with Michael B. Jordan, and Reynolds just bought a sailing team with Hugh Jackman. Meanwhile, Wrexham is just one season away from competing at soccer's highest level. 'Thinking back to that first press conference there and saying, our objective is to make it to the Premier League. And you know, everybody tittering and laughing a little, and that's okay. I'm not judging them for that. But then now it's starting to look very, very real,' Reynolds says. 'I am feeling elation but also panic. Growing is great but growing too fast is a frightening proposition.' But Maximum Effort must grow. Next up, the company is producing a documentary about Reynolds' fellow Canadian comedian John Candy that will open the Toronto Film Festival. Reynolds isn't abandoning his acting career anytime soon. During our talk at the TIME100 Summit he teased that he 'thinks' Deadpool will show up in Marvel films again, though he believes that the character works better as a supporting player than a leading man: 'I'm writing a little something right now that is an ensemble.' At 48, his entrepreneurship is, perhaps, a buffer for the inevitable decline in fame. 'All those years living in LA, they will always take your name down from the marquee. That's going to happen like death and taxes,' he says. 'It's not a great feeling. That's why inevitably we are in New York because there's more than one industry here.' And when Reynolds' name is no longer in lights, he has, as McElhenney puts it, alcohol-baron money to fall back on. Reynolds insists his value isn't tied to any single venture. 'It comes from having four kids and a good marriage,' he says. Besides, he's too busy to worry about it. He's got a script to work on and a family meeting to squeeze in before his jaunt around Manhattan with one of Hollywood's most in-demand directors. 'My self-worth isn't farmed out to any one thing that isn't under the roof of my home.'

Wrexham opens next season against ex-Premier League side Southampton
Wrexham opens next season against ex-Premier League side Southampton

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Wrexham opens next season against ex-Premier League side Southampton

FILE - Wrexham players celebrate after winning the English League One soccer match between Wrexham and Charlton Athletic at the Racecourse ground in Wrexham, Wales, April 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Jon Super, File) FILE - Wrexham co-owners Rob McElhenney, center, and Ryan Reynolds, second right, celebrate at the end of the English League One soccer match between Wrexham and Charlton Athletic at the Racecourse ground in Wrexham, Wales, April 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Jon Super, File) FILE - Wrexham co-owners Rob McElhenney, center, and Ryan Reynolds, second right, celebrate at the end of the English League One soccer match between Wrexham and Charlton Athletic at the Racecourse ground in Wrexham, Wales, April 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Jon Super, File) FILE - Wrexham players celebrate after winning the English League One soccer match between Wrexham and Charlton Athletic at the Racecourse ground in Wrexham, Wales, April 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Jon Super, File) FILE - Wrexham co-owners Rob McElhenney, center, and Ryan Reynolds, second right, celebrate at the end of the English League One soccer match between Wrexham and Charlton Athletic at the Racecourse ground in Wrexham, Wales, April 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Jon Super, File) MANCHESTER, England (AP) — Wrexham will play relegated Premier League team Southampton in its opening game of the season. Wrexham will begin its first campaign in 43 years in English soccer's second tier away at St Mary's on Aug. 9. Advertisement The Welsh team has enjoyed a spectacular rise under celebrity co-owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney. Just two years ago, Wrexham was playing non-league soccer in England's fifth tier. After three straight promotions, it is one tier below the Premier League and faces a Southampton team that was rubbing shoulders with the likes of Manchester United, Liverpool and Arsenal last season. The game will be screened live in the U.K., another sign of the growing interest in Wrexham. Fixtures for the second-tier Championship were published on Thursday. Wrexham plays former Premier League champion Leicester on Sept. 30. Advertisement It plays Ipswich, also relegated from the top flight last season, on Nov. 22 and Sheffield United on Boxing Day. The Championship is renowned as one of the toughest divisions in soccer. That was illustrated last season when Luton — in the Premier League a year before — dropped down to the third tier after back-to-back relegations. ___ James Robson is at ___ AP soccer:

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signs historic $20 billion water investment bill, talks state impact
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signs historic $20 billion water investment bill, talks state impact

Yahoo

time19-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signs historic $20 billion water investment bill, talks state impact

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott visited Lubbock Wednesday to sign into law the largest generational water investment in state history, addressing a multi-year water crisis and leaving it up to Texans to codify the bill in an election this November. Senate Bill 7 and House Joint Resolution 7 will allocate $20 billion over a 20-year period to offset water infrastructure and development costs through the Texas Water Fund Advisory Committee. Others are reading: Patrick, Perry defend proposed Texas THC ban after smoke shop exploit hemp loophole Authored by State Sen. Charles Perry, R-Lubbock, the bill comes at a much needed time, he said, as nine cities across the state this year have declined development permits, citing lack of supplies as their reason. "Here's what I know,' said Speaker of the House Dustin Burrows, a Lubbock Republican. 'They show up, and they turn on that spigot, the water doesn't come out — those U-Hauls are going to go the absolute opposite direction.' With nearly 1,000 people moving to Texas each day, Abbott said it's important the state's water infrastructure meets the growing population's demand. Story continues after gallery. 'I'll add this: My hometown, Wichita Falls, almost ran out of water a couple of years ago,' Abbott said. 'This is something I got to see occur just a few days away from losing water, and that's where it became a very real understanding. We have communities like that across the state that have this need that has to be addressed.' Perry said irrigated crops in the Panhandle and Rio Grande Valley are the largest areas depleting water resources, and second is municipal use. City water is often pulled from the same sources farmers and ranchers use, Perry said. SB 7 encourages cities to reach a new supply of water further in the ground on the brackish, marine level, creating a more stable water resource for residents and increasing production again for agricultural use. HJR 7, authored by Rep. Cody Harris, R-Palestine, proposes a Texas constitutional amendment that will help fund those long-term water resource projects. While funding has always been available, Executive Director Bobby Bazan with Texas Ground Water Association said funding has never been available in such a large capacity. 'We have an aging infrastructure that is outgrowing its usefulness, timeline, and this money is going to go toward helping improve some of that, making sure, like the governor said, when somebody turns a faucet on, there's going to be water there,' Bazan said. $1 billion will be allocated annually to the Texas Water Fund Advisory Committee over the next 20 years, but Perry said he believes the fund will last far longer than its intended time frame. 'What I know about the legislature is if you prove what you said was going to happen, and it's working, and there's support — it'll be another 10 to 20 years.' The law would not fully go into effect unless Texas voters codify it at the polls - OK'ing the proposal in the upcoming November state constitutional amendments election. What does this mean for Lubbock ? Lake 7, located near Buffalo Springs Lake and 50th Street, is one of many projects Lubbock Mayor Mark McBrayer said SB 7 and HJR 7 will help fund. The proposed lake will be filled with directly reused city water. The water will then go through a treatment plant before it becomes potable water, said Raquel Mullen, customer relations manager with the City of Lubbock. In addition to Lake 7, the bill will help address needs with Lake Meredith and Lake Alan Henry through respective city projects, McBrayer said. 'This bill is going to be very beneficial for Lubbock as well,' McBrayer said. 'We're happy to have it.' McBrayer said he worked with Perry to achieve some of the bill's amendments, such as adding and defining lake-ready projects. 'He took advantage of that, and he saw that need,' McBrayer said of working with Perry. 'He addressed that need in the bill and made some changes, so we're so very happy he worked with us on it.' Perry said just as he met with Lubbock representatives, there was also an effort to meet with all 254 counties in the state to ensure their needs were met. This article originally appeared on Lubbock Avalanche-Journal: Gov. Abbott signs $20 billion water bill, discusses statewide impact

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