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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
City
to share sewer costs with residents After
weeks of postponement, the Sisters City Council cast a 3-1 vote Thursday,
October 9, to approve a sewer connection and reimbursement agreement with
residents of Maple Street in the Buck Run Phase III subdivision.
The approved measure was the
least costly to the residents of a pair of options under consideration
by the council.
Councilor Lon Kellstrom voted
against the decision because he believes it takes too much taxpayer money
to benefit a minority. Councilor Deborah Kollodge was absent.
All five of the property owners
signed documents confirming their consent to pay an estimated $26,000
or a third of the estimated $80,000 city project to replace their existing
septic systems with 426 linear feet of an eight-inch sewer pipe. The city
will also cover a third of the cost.
Buck Run developer Mylon Buck
agreed to pay an additional $8,000 and property owner George Tosello agreed
to pay an additional $8,000. The developers of the adjacent Coyote Springs
subdivision agreed to pay a $15,000 flat fee. They need the sewer to move
forward to complete their development.
The sewer will be located
on the east side of Maple Street, between Tyee Drive and Coyote Springs
Drive.
The residents were not included
in the city's original sewer plan for the City of Sisters, which only
charged residents up to $3,000.
This agreement charges each
property owner an estimated $4,400 per lot (one person owns two lots),
which is $9,000 less than what they would have paid if they had not protested
the city's initial proposal in August.
"We really didn't have any
other choice but to do this," said Virginia Gundersen, a property owner.
"We were discriminated against. The rest of the city already got their
sewer. When we built our property three years ago, we were told that we
would only have to pay a $3,000 Systems Development Charge. We're not
being treated fairly like the rest of the city.
"At least it's done with.
It was too much of a hassle to go on with it. We're retired residents;
we don't have that much money."
The residents hired attorney
Michael Peterkin to represent them in August, after each resident received
a letter from the city stating they might be charged $13,000 to reimburse
the city to build a sewer which would allow the second phase of the Coyote
Springs subdivision to proceed.
Kellstrom objected to what
he considers a taxpayer-funded subsidy.
"I just don't think you should
take taxpayer money from a majority to benefit a minority," Kellstrom
told The Nugget. "The residents were not included in the original sewer
project because the city had to make an estima-tion on how much the city
population would grow by a certain date (and it had to stop somewhere)."
Kellstrom said the city will
also now end up using another chunk of taxpayer money to install a sewer
on Tyler Avenue for a small number of residents. The city is estimated
to pay about $20,000 for the estimated $60,000 project, Kellstrom said.
Bob Boyd, a property owner
on Tyler Avenue, said he will end up paying about $9,000 for the sewer
with the $4,400 charge plus undetermined fees for hook-up, the Systems
Development Charge and laterals. Still, he said he appreciates the city's
help.
"It was a very hard decision
for everybody to make," Boyd said. "The city contributed, (as well as)
the developers and the homeowners. It's not easy for anyone, including
the city because they have another one coming down the road on Tyler.
"We're appreciative of the
council's work and the developer's contribution and we're very happy it's
behind us," he said.
"It was not a satisfactory
decision for any of the parties, but it was the right thing to do," Boyd
said. |
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