Sewer maintenance fees may be passed on to residents
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Residents may bear some of the cost of repairing
and maintaining the city’s sewer lines.
The City Council agreed Tuesday to study a possible maintenance fee
for residents to pay for the operation, rehabilitation, replacement and
maintenance of city sewer lines.
“There are certain basic sorts of things that we have to deal with and
the sewers are one of them,” said Councilman Ralph Bauer, who brought up
the issue. “The sewer system is a service just like water, and while we
charge for what goes in the front door to their homes, we don’t for what
goes out the back door.”
In 1996, the City Council voted down efforts for a similar fee that
would have cost residents and extra $1 per month and raise $1 million for
sewer upkeep.
If council members ultimately approve the sewer fee, city officials
said the cost could be up to four or five times that for residents.
A fee proposal, they added, should be ready by the Feb. 20 City
Council meeting, where various methods of assessing the charge will be
discussed. That includes an add-on to residential and commercial water
bills, and whether the cost will be based on flat rate or the percentage
of water usage.
According to an infrastructure improvement management plan prepared in
September, the city’s sewer system is facing $120.5 million in total
maintenance, operations, rehabilitation and replacement needs over the
next 20 years. About $39 million is required for immediate needs.
State water officials said the city generates 32 million gallons of
sewage per day, which runs through about 600 miles of pipeline.
“We have 28 sewage pump stations throughout the city, all of which
need to be reconstructed, and we need to slip-line sewer lines as we find
it’s needed,” said Robert Beardsley, the city’s public works director.
“But on the calendar we’re on now, sewer fees won’t probably appear on
residential water bills until November.”
City officials said study of the sewer component in city
infrastructure needs has been going on for a number of years, and the
system is among the most critical systems in Huntington Beach.
When council members first defeated the sewer fee five years ago, they
were concerned that since water rates had just been increased, any
additional charges would be too much.
But Bauer said it may have prevented city officials much angst.
“I like to think that had the fee passed, it could have prevented the
problems the city is now facing with the [Orange County] Grand Jury,” he
said.
The grand jury is investigating allegations that the city failed to
properly report massive sewage leaks in the 1990s. In 1996, city
officials first found sewer breaks in pipes running beneath the Downtown
and Old Town areas, with slip-lining measures to seal the holes just
recently reaching completion.
“City Council members have a responsibility to be sure that the city
can properly fund the projects that are needed most,” Bauer said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.