Date: Fri 08-Sep-1995
Date: Fri 08-Sep-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
sewer-residential-assessment
Full Text:
WPCA Sets Residential Sewer Assessment Rate
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
Water Pollution Control Authority (WPCA) members have hammered out a sewer
assessment formula they consider to be an equitable mechanism to divide sewer
system construction costs among residential sewer users, non-residential sewer
users, and town taxpayers.
WPCA members August 31 selected $9,600 as the amount for "one residential
sewer assessment unit," the standard of reference which would be used to
calculate the size of 20 annual payments to be made by residential sewer users
to cover the costs of sewer system construction.
WPCA members had been considering setting the assessment amount at $9,500,
$9,900, or $11,000, but after reviewing assessment data on the residential
properties to be sewered, they decided that $9,600 is a more equitable amount.
Under the $9,600 sewer assessment formula, the local share of sewer
construction costs would be divided roughly into thirds. About one-third of
the local costs would be covered by residential sewer users; approximately
one-third would be covered by non-residential sewer users; and roughly
one-third would be paid by town property taxes, according to WPCA member
Richard Zang.
Some $18.5 million is the local share of the overall $30.4 million sewer
system construction project.
Categories
The $9,600 residential sewer assessment would be paid off by the owners of
residential properties with sewer service in 20 annual installments at a 2
percent subsidized interest rate.
The sewer assessments for non-residential properties will be set by the WPCA
during the next year, Mr Zang said. Those assessments are to be set based on
case-by-case appraisals of those non-residential properties.
The $9,600 residential sewer assessment is based on the increase in market
value that access to sewers will provide to houses with four bedrooms or
fewer.
In the sewer district, there are 567 residential units. Of these, 360 units
have less than four bedrooms; 152 have four bedrooms; and 55 have more than
four bedrooms.
The sewer assessment plan may require properties with more than four bedrooms
to pay proportionately higher sewer assessments than the $9,600 figure.
The kind of numbers which the WPCA is using for its sewer assessment plan are
"good numbers" for assessment purposes, said Peter Grose, the sewering project
director for Fuss and O'Neill, Inc, the town's sewer consultant.
Lesher Glendinning Municipal Services, the town's real estate appraisal
consultant for the sewering project, states that a sewer assessment formula
based on a $9,600 residential assessment is "defensible" in court if
individuals who believe their sewer assessments are too high file court
challenges against the town, according to Mr Alagna.
The WPCA was scheduled to present its residential sewer assessment formula to
the Legislative Council on September 6 for council review.
"The council has a voice and a strong voice in this," Mr Alagna said of the
council's review of the sewer assessment formula.
"We're going to fight for this (assessment)," Mr Alagna said.
