WHAT HAPPENED City Administrator Ray Silver updated...
WHAT HAPPENED
City Administrator Ray Silver updated the City Council on the
timeline for property tax refunds.
WHAT IT MEANS
The Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn. and Huntington Beach resident
Chuck Scheid filed a lawsuit in 1999 alleging that the city was
illegally collecting a property tax to pay for employee benefits.
The city lost the suit and must now pay millions of dollars to
residents who paid the tax between 1997 and 2001.
As of March 5, the city has received about 45,000 refund claims,
2,700 of which are incomplete. All completed claims have been entered
into the city’s database and are ready to be verified against the
county’s database.
The city is in the process of working to resolve the incomplete
claims. Letters to incomplete claim filers are being mailed out this
week.
The City Council will be asked to approve a bond resolution and to
adopt a refund processing ordinance at an April 19 City Council
meeting.
City officials are hoping to start issuing refunds by mid- to late
September 2004.
WHAT HAPPENED
The City Council approved the installation of a traffic signal at
the intersection of Geraldine Lane and Slater Avenue.
WHAT IT MEANS
Parents packed the auditorium on Monday night to support the
traffic light, which will be installed adjacent to Lakeview
Elementary School.
The Public Works Department began evaluating traffic safety in the
area after a fatal accident at the intersection on Nov. 18 that took
the life of 9-year-old Jimmy Pham.
Jimmy and two others were hit by a pickup truck while walking in
the crosswalk. He died Nov. 26.
The signal will be installed east of the existing crosswalk and
operate as a pedestrian crossing, to provide safe access to the
elementary school. The signal will change to red for traffic when the
pedestrian button is activated.
The goal is to have the light installed and working by Sept. 1,
Public Works Director Bob Beardsley said.
WHAT HAPPENED
Mark Carnahan, a building inspector for the city, was honored with
the mayor’s award.
WHAT IT MEANS
Building and Safety Director Ross Cranmer and Mayor Cathy Green
presented the award.
As a building inspector, Carnahan inspects private construction in
the city, ensuring that houses are safe and built properly and within
city code.
Carnahan began working as a contract inspector for the city in
1998.
Within two years, he received his building, mechanical,
engineering, plumbing and electrical certifications. Receiving all
five certifications so quickly is impressive and unusual, Cranmer
said.
Carnahan’s most remarkable trait, Cranmer said, is his customer
service. He has been known to give his home to out to contractors and
has the ability to explain difficult code issues in a simplistic
manner.
WHAT WAS SAID
“He’s just a real approachable, likable guy,” Cranmer said.
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