Mayor tries to revive project
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June Casagrande
The final phase of renovations in Balboa Village was planned around
the assumption that property owners would vote to move utilities
poles underground. But now that owners have voted down a plan to tax
themselves for the work, improvement plans are on the brink of death.
Mayor Tod Ridgeway, a longtime proponent of the renovations, said
he’s searching for ways to revisit the matter.
“We’re looking at re-designating the assessment district to bring
it back for another vote,” Ridgeway said.
How to do that is unclear. Laws governing assessment district
votes might not be flexible enough to allow the city to hold a new
vote within a year.
Ridgeway said he is talking with property owners in the village to
convince them to change their votes. He believes that the owners of
some large properties might be persuaded to change, he said.
Michel Pourmussa, owner of the Balboa Inn, voted against the tax
to move the utilities underground, but now says he regrets the vote
because he misunderstood the terms for paying his property’s $17,000
assessment.
“I didn’t understand that it’s paid over years; I couldn’t have
afforded that all at once, but because it’s paid over time, it’s
something I would like to see happen,” Pourmussa said, adding that he
supports the idea of moving the utilities underground and would like
a chance to vote in favor of the work.
With owners of a few of the larger properties changing their
minds, the previous vote could be overturned, Ridgeway said. That is
because the taxes and the votes are weighted differently for each
property depending on parcel size and the types of utilities each
property uses.
The owners of 93 properties in the area were asked to pay between
$965 and $53,626 over a 15-year period to finance the work. Of the 66
property owners who cast ballots last week, 33 voted no. But because
of the complicated formula used to measure the burden each would
carry, the 33 no votes were weighted as 54% opposed.
“I hope they do bring it back,” said Catalina Flyer co-owner Bob
Black, who voted to pay more than $53,000 to move the utilities
underground. “The area needs it. When you put the utilities
underground, it makes your area look so much better.”
The third phase of the improvements for Balboa Village would have
included work on the street, sidewalks and gutters in the assessment
district area, which is between. The work was not yet funded -- city
officials were seeking grant money -- so a date to start the work had
not been set. Their plan was to do the renovation work at the same
time as the utilities work to save the expense of tearing up
sidewalks and streets twice.
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