Residents may be paying to keep water clean
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Alicia Robinson
Orange County residents have paid the price of urban runoff when they
get sick from swimming or their beaches are closed, but they may soon
be asked to pay in cash.
Orange County Sanitation District staff members have proposed
charging residents a fee, which could range from $25 to $50 a year
per household, to help clean up urban runoff.
Runoff water from urban areas can contain fertilizers, pesticides
and fluids that leak from cars and other toxic materials.
Local city officials said they would likely support paying for
runoff treatment improvements by charging residents a fee.
“Politically, I think it’s acceptable to our citizens because we
live and recreate in the lower and upper harbor, so it’s important to
us,” said Newport Beach Mayor Tod Ridgeway, who is on the ad hoc
committee. “Clearly I’m supportive of moving forward with a fee for
urban runoff.”
The proposal is still being mulled over, but so far an ad hoc
committee of the Orange County Sanitation District has discussed up
to $25 million in improvements that could include diverting more
runoff water to sewage treatment systems, building wetlands to
naturally treat runoff or putting filters at the end of storm sewer
pipes.
“As this program is developed little by little, this idea of
pulling things together as a countywide program has come to the
fore,” said Bob Ghirelli, director of technical services for the
sanitation district. “We’re really early in the game to be talking
about what this could cost.”
At an April meeting of the ad hoc committee Ghirelli suggested
polling residents in the sanitation district’s service area to see if
the necessary 50% of property owners would vote for a fee to fund
runoff improvements if it were on the ballot. Another option would be
to implement a county-wide plan to clean up runoff and charge
residents a fee. In that case, the Orange County Board of Supervisors
would take the lead on the issue and put a proposed fee on a ballot.
The supervisors will be discussing how to solve runoff issues at
an Aug. 24 meeting, said Don Hughes, executive assistant to
Supervisor Jim Silva. County officials will involve each of Orange
County’s 34 cities as well as the area’s three sanitary districts, he
said.
“This isn’t just the county going out on its own and doing this
thing,” Hughes said.
Costa Mesa City Councilman Mike Scheafer said residents are likely
to question a new fee, but that doesn’t mean they wouldn’t support
it.
“We need to be able to justify anything we do to the citizens with
facts,” he said. “I think [the fee is] fair if they present their
case, and they can make a good case for why they’re charging it.”
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