Sewer, trash fees raised
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The Costa Mesa Sanitary District board unanimously approved higher
rates for trash collection and sewer services Thursday, district
assistant manager Thomas Fauth said.
Rates were raised to cover higher volumes of garbage collected and
to meet a mandate from environmental regulators to keep grease out of
sewer lines.
“We’ve experienced a significant increase in the amount of trash
collected,” Fauth said.
In the last five years, the volume of trash hauled by the district
has gone up from about 35,000 tons annually to more than 42,000,
Fauth said. The numbers Fauth quoted represent an increase of almost
17%.
For a single-family home, trash fees went up from $225.86 per year
to $239.41 per year.
In 2002, the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board
ordered Orange County cities and sewer agencies to reduce sewage
spills. That same year, the sanitary district mandated that new
restaurants inside its boundaries install grease interceptors to trap
oily sludge before it slides into sewer lines. The district also
required restaurants with grease problems to install interceptors.
Thursday, the board followed up on that move by levying a new fee
on its customers. Restaurants serving hot food must now pay $150 per
year in addition to a small increase to their basic sewer charge.
For restaurants serving only cold food, the new fee is $60. The
new fee for residential and industrial sewer users is $2.31. The new
charges went into effect retroactively to July 1 and are assessed
with property tax bills.
The new fees were levied to pay the district’s permitting and
inspection costs related to grease efforts. Fauth said those expenses
are about $172,000 per year.
Friday, sanitary district board president Jim Ferryman said he did
not want to raise fees, but, he said, the district passed the
grease-related charges to customers because it cannot absorb the
costs.
According to the Orange County Healthcare Agency, 63% of Orange
County beach closures between 1999 and 2004 were caused by blocked
sewer pipes. Agency statistics show that grease caused 26% of those
blockages.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at
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