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Residents can expect to see a hike in their water and sewer bills
starting in October after the City Council approved a new sewer usage fee
Monday night that will pay for the maintenance and repair of the decrepit
sewer system.
It will be a flat fee of $5.30 per month for single-family homes,
$4.40 a month for apartments, mobile homes and townhouses and $6.15 for
most businesses.
The fee, which was approved by a 6 to 1 vote, will raise about $5.6
million annually, with $1.1 million of that to be used for maintenance
including cleaning, videotaping and operating life stations. The
remaining $4.5 million is earmarked for capitol improvements including
slip lining and pump-station replacements.
“This fee was necessary if the city was going to be able to fix all
the sewers and do what we need to do to comply with the orders of the
quality control board,” said City Administrator Ray Silver.
The majority of council members agreed that the fee was the only
viable way to address the widespread and costly problem.
Councilman Dave Garofalo cast the single dissenting vote, saying that
he didn’t feel residents believed there was a problem and so it should be
put to a public vote.
An additional $700,000 will come out of the general fund each year,
the council decided on a 5 to 2 vote. That money will be used for sewer
maintenance.
The vote comes four months after Mayor Pam Julien-Houchinpleaded
guilty on behalf of the city to three violations of state water laws by
failing to report leaks to state and county health officials.
Orange County Supreme Court Commissioner Martin Engquist put the city
on five years’ probation, during which time officials must cooperate with
a cleanup order, which already had been filed by the Santa Ana Regional
Water Quality Control Board.
They city was also fined $75,000 for violating sections of state water
code governing negligent and intentional discharge of pollutants.
In a plea agreement, the city also was fined $250,000 to assess and
clean up damage from the leaks.
Prosecutors said the city allowed as much as 71,000 gallons of raw
sewage to leak every day for several years in the late 1990s and failed to report the leaks to three local and state agencies as required by law.
But even before that settlement the city was trying to deal with the
problem, said city officials.
“We were working very hard to find funds and on identifying problems,”
said Bill Workman, assistant city administrator. “A citizen group had
recommended operation and capitol needs but we also recognized very
clearly that the adoption of a sewer fee was important to assure both
those agencies that Huntington was working toward a resolution of aging
sewer pipes.”
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