Sewer tax not at forefront
Barbara Diamond Coastline Pilot
Five residents showed up Saturday to the Water Quality
Department’s workshop on possible revisions to the city’s sewer tax
for single-family homes.<252>”I wasn’t surprised,” department
head David Schissler said. “I can only recall six or eight telephone
calls to complain.”<252>Schissler will present sewer tax
options, including input from the public meeting, to the City Council
in March. <252>Options run the gamut from a tiered system based
on water usage and fixed city costs, about 79 percent of the total,
with a cap, to a tiered system based on low, medium and high water
usage. <252>”We don’t want to have a billing system that
doesn’t take fixed costs into consideration,” Schissler said. “That
is not good planning. We have to have a predictable revenue stream
and residents should be able to predict their bills.”<252>The
city charges a flat sewer fee, billed with property taxes.
<252>”It is ridiculous that I pay the same rate as a mansion
with six bathrooms and a big lawn,” South Laguna resident Eleanor
Henry said.<252>She is frugal with her water, draining the
washing machine in her small home to water plants.
<252>However, Schissler said, home size is not always the best
indicator of water usage. One resident inside a 6,000 square-foot
home that takes up the whole lot might use less water than a large
family in a small home with an average yard. <252>”You just
can’t fairly bring up comparisons between large homes and cottages,”
Schissler said.<252>There will be some inequities no matter
what fee system is used, according to Schissler. <252> “I
attended the workshop and the proposed increase in sewer taxes would
basically increase my property taxes by one-third,” John Kountz said.
<252>Kountz owns his property outright and his property tax is
among the lowest in Laguna, Schissler said. <252>”Consequently,
the sewer fee is a larger percentage of the property tax for him,”
Schissler said. <252>Schissler said the council will hold a
public hearing on the options prepared by the Water Quality
Department and then put it out for a protest vote -- unless the
council opts to do nothing. <252>Any rate change would affect
about 6,100 single family homes. Multi-family homes have not been
included in the proposed program.
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