These are some of the items the...
These are some of the items the Huntington Beach City Council will
consider at its next meeting:
BUSINESS IMPROVEMENT DISTRICTS
The council will consider a plan that allows Downtown businesses
to form a special assessment district and tax themselves for
improvements that will go toward cleaning up Main Street and making
it a desirable tourist destination. The city’s automobile dealers and
hotel/motel owners use similar systems.
The assessment district will use an aggregated fee schedule based
on its overall size, location and customer volume. The money can also
be used for infrastructure repairs, marketing and events to bring
more traffic to the Downtown area.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Downtown business owners were recently mailed ballots to gauge if
a majority of them wanted the assessment district. The city’s
Economic Development Department uses an assessment formula to
determine how much each business should pay based on the benefit they
will derive from the assessment district. If more than 50% of
business owners representing the total assessed value vote against
the formation of the district, it will be vetoed.
The vote tally will be presented at Monday’s council meeting. If
it succeeds, the council will most likely enact the assessment
district into law.
CELLPHONE NOISE BAN
The council will consider banning the emission of amplified sounds
in most areas of the city’s public libraries. Talking on the phone
will also be illegal.
Anyone caught violating this ordinance can be issued a $100 fine
by library personal. The new ordinance is needed to combat an
increase in rude behavior in the city’s public library system,
director Ron Hayden said.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The council is expected to pass this ordinance. A majority of its
members spent about 40 minutes at the last meeting hammering out its
details. Hayden originally asked the council to make it a misdemeanor
to use cellphones in the library, punishable with a $500 fine and up
to six months in jail.
The new law would only be used in extreme cases, Hayden said. Most
people caught talking on cellphones will be asked to stop or go
outside.
WILDLIFE SIGNS AT THE PIER
Connie Boardman is asking the council to post signs on the Pier
advising visitors and people fishing how to deal with bird species
that feed along the coast.
Boardman said that each year, dozens of birds die on the nesting
islands at Bolsa Chica when they return with fishing line trailing
from them. The birds nest closely together and can become tangled up
in the line and starve to death.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The cost of the signs is not listed, but it won’t likely be very
substantial. They’ll advise people fishing on the pier to reel in
birds as close as they can, before cutting their lines free. This may
seem cruel, but it prevents the bird from returning to the nest with
a long string around it.
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