Council approves increase in fees
- Share via
Jose Paul Corona
While City Council members are still trying to decide what
programs to cut in order to balance the city’s budget, they did
decide to increase fees for some city services at a Monday meeting.
Council members unanimously approved a resolution Monday to
increase the fees residents pay for fire and medical emergency
services.
Residents who are taken to a local hospital by an ambulance will
soon have to pay $466 for that service rather than the current fee of
$292.50. The increase coincides with rates authorized by the county
and will pay for the cost of the ambulance program, said City
Administrator Ray Silver.
Unfortunately, that rate hike won’t even help the city’s depleted
coffers, said Councilman Peter Green
“Those fees all pay for the cost of service,” he said. “They have
increased primarily because there is more of a demand for service.”
Even with the hike, city ambulance fees are still below the county
standard, Green added, who said those fees were last raised in 1997.
The council also approved a fee increase for building, safety and
fire department licensing services, to help offset the annual
maintenance of a new city-wide permit system.
The cost of fire clearance and company safety inspections will
also go up, and a fee for fire extinguisher training will be imposed.
The service had previously been provided free of charge.
Silver also presented the council with a preliminary budget
overview and a list of proposed budget cuts that would help save the
city money.
On the table for consideration would be the elimination of HBTV-3
except for coverage of council meetings, the Senior Outreach Program,
one or all of the library branches and one lifeguard position.
The biggest potential cut, at $533,000, is slicing the police
helicopter program by a third, a suggestion that has been highly
controversial in the past. Not on Monday’s list, but not out of the
woods, were the Shipley Nature Center and the Drug Abuse Resistance
Education program. Decisions about the nature center were put off
until Aug. 26.
While none of the council members are happy about the cuts that
have to be made, they commend the city staff for giving them options,
said council member Ralph Bauer.
“We don’t like to cut, but we now know in some rational way how to
cut,” he said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.