Global Water Resources, Inc. Appoints Timothy J. Sabo as Regulatory Counsel and Promotes Heather Krupa to Controller, Supporting Growth Strategy
August 30, 2018 at 01:35 pm
Share
Global Water Resources, Inc. has appointed Timothy J. Sabo to the new position of regulatory counsel and promoted Heather Krupa to controller. Sabo brings to Global Water more than 16 years of experience in successfully representing water and wastewater utilities with their legal and regulatory affairs, including regular appearances before the Arizona Corporation Commission involving utility rate cases, rulemakings and certificate applications. Sabo has a long relationship with Global Water, having served as their outside regulatory counsel since 2005. Sabo previously served as an attorney at Snell & Wilmer in Arizona, where he led a number of high-profile cases and other utility matters. He served as a lead attorney for the water utility industry in the ACC 2016 water policy workshops, which resulted in the development of new water policies. Before Snell & Wilmer, he was an attorney at Roshka, DeWulf & Patten, where he represented water, electric, gas and telecommunications utilities in proceedings before the ACC, as well as in complex federal litigation, state litigation and arbitration matters. Earlier, Sabo served as an attorney for the ACC, where he represented the regulatory agency in appeals, federal and state court litigation, proceedings before the FCC and FERC. He also represented the ACC Staff in numerous rate cases and other proceedings before the ACC. Prior to her appointment as Global Water’s controller, Krupa has served as the company’s director of financial reporting and as interim controller since April 2018. She brings to the position more than 12 years of accounting experience. She began her career as an auditor with Ernst & Young LLP in Chicago, Illinois, with a focus on the oil and gas industry and experience in mergers and divestitures.
Global Water Resources, Inc. is a water resource management company. It owns, operates, and manages 29 water, wastewater, and recycled water systems in strategically located communities, principally in metropolitan Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona. It seeks to deploy an integrated approach, referred to as Total Water Management. Total Water Management is a comprehensive approach to water utility management that reduces demand on scarce non-renewable water sources and costly renewable water supplies, in a manner that ensures sustainability and communities both environmentally and economically. It treats water to potable standards and also treats, cleans, and recycles wastewater for a variety of non-potable uses. Its water supplies are derived from groundwater. It serves more than 82,000 people in over 32,000 homes within its 408 square miles of certificated service areas. It provides water and wastewater utility services under the regulatory authority of the Arizona Corporation Commission.