Date: Fri 15-Dec-1995
Date: Fri 15-Dec-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
sewers-assessement-WPCA
Full Text:
WPCA Considers Increase In Proposed Sewer Rate
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
Water Pollution Control Authority (WPCA) members were slated to discuss
increasing the sewer assessment for residential properties by three percent
from $9,600 to $9,900 at a WPCA meeting on December 14 in Town Hall South.
The session was scheduled to start after the deadline for this edition of The
Bee.
The sewer assessment is the amount of money that residential property owners
will pay the town across a 20-year period to cover the construction costs of
the town's $30.4-million sanitary sewer system now being built. Property
owners will be able to get federally subsidized loans at a two percent annual
interest rate to pay off their sewer assessments.
WPCA members already have set the residential sewer assessment at $9,600 for
houses in the sewer district with up to four bedrooms. Under the $9,600
scheme, the owner of a five-bedroom house would be charged $12,000, and the
owner of a six-bedroom house would be charged $14,400.
But WPCA Chairman Peter Alagna told WPCA member Richard Zang that members of
the Legislative Council's finance committee at a recent meeting endorsed a
flat $9,900 sewer assessment for residential properties, provided that higher
charges not be levied against houses with more than four bedrooms. The finance
group is recommending the $9,900 figure to the full Legislative Council.
Mr Alagna and Mr Zang discussed the sewer assessment topic at a December 6
meeting of the WPCA's sewer assessment subcommittee.
Getting the finance subcommittee members to hold the residential sewer
assessment down to $9,900 was "a big achievement," according to Mr Alagna.
The WPCA chairman said the final residential sewer assement should not be any
higher than $9,900.
It would be "unrealistic" to have a residential sewer assessment any higher
than $9,900, Mr Zang added.
Mr Zang suggested that existing multifamily housing in the sewer district be
treated like commercial property for sewer assessment purposes. Commercial
sewer assessments will be based on the results of individual property
appraisals.
After the WPCA sets its residential sewer assessment rate, its membership is
expected to attend a Legislative Council meeting to discuss the assessment
topic. Although the WPCA has the legal authority to set the sewer assessments,
Mr Alagna has stressed he considers cooperation between the WPCA and the
council an important aspect of the sewer assessment process. The Legislative
Council functions as the town's board of finance.
WPCA members have used statistical information from Lesher-Glendinning
Municipal Services to help in fashioning what members hope will be a workable
residential sewer assessment formula.
Besides the sewer assessments levied against property owners in the sewer
district, a portion of sewer system construction costs will be covered by
property taxpayers at large in town through the town's annual budgets over the
next 20 years.
The WPCA will be developing commercial and industrial sewer assessments in the
coming months. Such assessments will be based on the results of appraisals of
individual properties as well as water usage.
The sewer assessments seek to establish the level of benefit, or amount of
value, by which properties will increase due to access to sewer lines.
