Sewer assessment not flush with interest
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The tremendous turnout last Saturday at City Hall for the workshop
for equitable consideration for special sewer assessment, was
pathetic due to a grand total of five people (including myself) who
could be bothered to show up.
Unbelievable that only five people in the entire town were
concerned about lowering their annual tax assessment.
The discrepancy being: a 15,000-sqaure-foot estate with seven
bathrooms and a guest house with two bathrooms on the ocean is being
assessed the same as a 600-square-foot one bedroom, two-bath shack
out in the canyon.
Also, the fact that a large percentage of this special assessment
is going to be used to replace old with new pumping stations and
generators for the exclusive use of the privileged few living on the
ocean. This divine entitlement belief system is not shared by me.
The homes using the pump stations and generators (below Pacific
Coast Highway sewer main elevation) should be specifically assessed
and only paid for by those who use them (or in most cases -- the
family heirloom trust).
I wish this article was of a more interesting and lofty subject
matter, but it is not. This apathetic lack of concern is a sad
commentary on Americans regarding taking charge and making change: on
a local municipal level, but also it is apparent on a national
political stance.
We are blessed living in a Democracy with freedoms shared by all.
“I believe one person’s poverty is not caused by another person’s
wealth.” -- John Howard, Jan. 2, 2004
I agree with John, with the exception of:
1) Outsourcing jobs;
2) Living trust set up by granny to protect granny (from runaway
real estate prices equals property tax). But granny has been dead for
35 years. Now who is benefiting is some lackluster, underemployed
Republican offspring who has obviously used up all the possibilities
inherent to youth;
3) and, of course, this stupid sewer issue.
The complacency of the fluff bubble we have all grown to love
called Laguna Beach is accompanied by the shallow ennui of
make-believe, self-imposed serious problems: for instance, which pair
of shoes goes best with this outfit, or the edgy dilemma of, “Should
I drive the BMW today, or might it be the Hummer with the lighted
spinning hubcaps shouting out “Look at me -- look at me -- I’m very
important.” (Size does matter.)
Well, I’m looking at you and you can’t stand yourself. That’s why
Prozac is a big seller.
This is not a dress rehearsal! Get involved.
Christopher N. Nelson
Laguna Beach
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