Council passes sanitation franchise fee
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Deirdre Newman
After being considered for the second time, city leaders Monday
approved implementing a nonexclusive sanitation franchise fee for
waste haulers to use the city’s roads.
The added fee could be passed along to customers.
After any action on the sanitation franchise fee failed July 6,
when the council deadlocked, Councilman Mike Scheafer, who was absent
at the prior meeting, cast the deciding vote Monday in favor of the
fee.
Costa Mesa is one of only three cities in the county that doesn’t
assess a sanitation franchise fee. Use of this revenue could be used
by the city for any purpose.
The council approved the fee over the objection of some residents,
who feel they will ultimately have to absorb this cost.
“The fact of the matter is, residents will end up paying for this
in one way or another,” said Beth Refakes.
The county average fee rate is 5% for residential customers and 7%
for commercial/industrial customers. This would raise about $1
million a year. Staff members will negotiate with the waste haulers
in the city to decide on a rate they believe is reasonable and will
return to the council within four months for action.
The council also rejected further exploration of increases in the
transient-occupancy tax and business-license tax, both of which would
have to be approved by voters. Mayor Gary Monahan suggested looking
only at the business-license tax at first, because he was afraid that
putting two tax increases on the ballot in 2006 would cause them to
compete against each other, and they would ultimately both be
defeated. But he could not muster support for his idea, so the vote
on putting the two tax increases on the ballot failed, with Monahan,
Councilman Chris Steel and Councilman Allan Mansoor dissenting.
The business-license tax rate -- a maximum of $200 regardless of
gross receipts -- has not changed for more than 20 years. Similarly,
the transient-occupancy tax rate of 6% has not changed for more than
22 years.
Former Mayor Sandy Genis said she supports an overhaul in the
business-license tax.
“The system we have now is very regressive, and the proposed
system will exacerbate that.... I urge you to increase it or change
it to a flat percentage of revenue,” Genis said.
The revenue sources considered Monday are not designed to fix this
year’s budget shortfalls but would increase revenues in future years.
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