Date: Fri 08-Nov-1996
Date: Fri 08-Nov-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
sewer-assessments-commercial
Full Text:
with assessment tables:
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
An appraisal firm has calculated a partial list of preliminary sewer
assessments for non-residential properties in the sewer district.
The sewer assessments represent the amount of money that non-residential
property owners with access to sanitary sewers will pay across a 20-year
period, plus interest, to cover some capital costs of municipal sewer system
construction. Sewer users will pay off their loans at a federally-subsidized
two percent annual interest rate.
The sewer assessments don't include the money which sewer users will pay to
discharge waste water into the sewer system, or the cost of physically
connecting their wastewater drains to the system.
Most of the sewer system's non-residential users are located on a handful of
streets. They are: Church Hill Road, Commerce Road, Glen Road, Main Street,
South Main Street, Queen Street and Riverside Road.
Non-residential sewer customers include municipally-owned buildings, churches,
businesses and industries.
The non-residential sewer assessments reflect 90 percent of the increase in
appraised real estate market values that sewer access will add to those
properties, according to Peter Alagna, chairman of the town's Water Pollution
Control Authority (WPCA).
(These sewer assessments are shown in the accompanying tables beneath the
heading "net benefit." The net benfits reflect how much money owners of
non-residential properties with access to sewers will pay across a 20-year
period for sewer system construction, plus two-percent annual interest costs).
The sewer assessments don't reflect 100 percent of the appraised increase in
real estate market values in order to provide the town with a 10 percent
"comfort zone" or "cushion" in calculating the sewer assessments, Mr Alagna
said.
The non-residential sewer assessments account for more than $7 million of the
overall $34.3 million in bonding approved by voters in 1992 for sewer system
construction.
Of the $7 million in non-residential sewer assessments, more than $1.3 million
covers municipally-owned properties, such as town offices and public schools.
The accompanying table doesn't include the town's multipurpose center or the
Sandy Hook Firehouse, both of which are on Riverside Road.
Lesher-Glendinning Municipal Services, a firm which performs appraisals for
cities and towns, prepared the non-residential sewer assessments.
Lesher-Glendinning also performed the town's last revaluation of properties.
The Church Question
At a recent meeting, WPCA members considered a proposal to give churches a
discount on their sewer assessments.
But determining what constitutes a "church" or "house of worship" could open
up a "can of worms" for the WPCA in deciding who is and who isn't eligible to
receive a sewer assessment discount, Mr Alagna cautions.
In the past, Mr Alagna has suggested that churches be given assessment
discounts. But he now says he has reservations about such discounts.
Other WPCA members, though, noted that the churches' sewer assessments are
among the highest sewer assessments to be levied by the town, saying discounts
should be considered.
Whether churches should get assessment discounts should be decided by the
Legislative Council, according to WPCA member Gary Sheehan. The council would
have to review it because any assessment discounts granted by the town would
increase the local property tax rate across a 20-year period, according to Mr
Sheehan.
"My inclination is to treat everyone equally," Mr Alagna said, adding that
providing preferred treatment to certain organizations such as churches could
put the WPCA into "compromising situations."
John Valente of Lesher-Glendinning recommended that WPCA members get legal
advice about sewer assessment discounts for properties which are exempt from
property taxes, such as churches.
The aggregate sewer assessment for all church properties in the sewer district
exceeds $600,000, excluding financing charges.
An Explanation
WPCA member Richard Zang urged that members formulate a clear regulation to
explain how the WPCA arrived at the various non-residential sewer assessments.
He stressed that the assessments are not based upon how much wastewater
various properties will discharge down their drains.
Peter Grose, the sewer project manager for Fuss and O'Neill, Inc, the town's
consulting engineer, asked that Lesher-Glendinning provide the town with a
list explaining the land use at each of the properties on the non-residential
sewer assessment list, such as: store, factory, restaurant, school, church,
and so forth.
Mr Valente said he will provide the town with sewer assessments for about 20
properties which haven't yet been placed on the assessment list.
Earlier this year, after wrangling for months, WPCA members set residential
sewer assessments at $9,900 for each of the almost 700 homes that will connect
to the sewer system. The residential share of sewer system capital costs is
roughly $7 million.
Unlike residential customers which are all charged the same sewer assessment,
non-residential customers are charged widely varying assessments because
non-residential properties' access to sewers will create widely varying
increases in those properties' potential market values.
Town taxpayers will cover about $4 million of construction costs for the sewer
system at large. Beyond that, town taxpayers also will cover the sewer
assessments, sewer connection charges, and sewer user costs for
municipally-owned buildings lying within the sewer district.
The town is under a state Department of Environmental Protection order to
rectify longstanding groundwater pollution problems in the borough, Taunton
Pond North, and Sandy Hook Center. The sewer system is expected to be
completed in about a year. Construction began in November 1994.
