HASSO HERING

A perspective from Oregon’s mid-Willamette Valley

Rain tax sidelight: A little mystery?

Written September 5th, 2016 by Hasso Hering
This storm drain was draining, but draining what?

This storm drain was active on Labor Day, and I wondered how come.

The campaign to prepare Albany ratepayers for a rain tax continues. I was reminded of the city’s plan for a “storm water utility” on Monday when I passed a storm drain from which flowed a thin but steady stream. The mystery: Where was that water coming from since it’s been days since we’ve had not a “storm” but a few summertime sprinkles.

The last substantial rain in the mid-valley was on Aug.9, when the inch total recorded at the Hyslop Weather Station was 0.11, which ended up the total for all of August. Then, on Sept. 2 and 3, the station reported another 0.04 inch. So how could this pipe, which discharges into Cox Creek just before the creek reaches into Waverly Lake, still have that much water in it?

As far as mysteries go, this one seems on the lame side, I know. But when you’re reporting on municipal developments like a “storm water utility fee,” you take what you can get.

What developments? Well, the city has been stuffing water bills with notices explaining that the council, largely because of pending new state requirements, is considering a new “utility fee” to pay for taking care of its system of pipes and ditches that carry away the runoff when it rains. The plan is to adopt the new charge this fall and have it take effect next spring. For most households, it will amount to a few dollars a month. For the biggest property owners it may mean thousands.

To explain further, the public works department is inviting the public to an open house from 5:30 to 7 on Tuesday, Sept. 13, at the Albany Senior Center.

The proposed fee has all the earmarks of a city tax because the only way to escape it is to move out of town. But other cities already have similar charges, so escaping altogether may be tough. Unless you move outside the city limits, that is.

Rural areas don’t have elaborate systems of storm sewers. But for areas near the Albany city limits, Linn County is facing the same state requirements as Albany under a proposed new state permit for handling rainwater. Benton County has been covered for some time and also faces requirements under the proposed new permit. Still, Benton County has no rain tax, and Linn County Commissioner Roger Nyquist says Linn won’t have one either.

If the new permit would require Linn to spend more than $14,000 a year to comply, Nyquist says the county will challenge the state for imposing an unconstitutional “unfunded mandate” on local government. (The dollar amount is some kind of a threshold as far as the county is concerned.) Albany Mayor Sharon Konopa has written to the Department of Environmental Quality with a similar point. She said the new permit as proposed goes well beyond federal requirements “and may represent an unfunded mandate as defined by the Oregon constitution.”

If any of this seems complicated, which it is, you might take in the Sept.13 open house and get somebody to give you the full background there. Or you can get the condensed version by typing “rain tax” in the search field of hh-today and reading the stories so far. (hh)

 





4 responses to “Rain tax sidelight: A little mystery?”

  1. hj.anony1 says:

    Here we go! Lots-o-Legs to this story. The key phrases that stand out to me:

    “…but a few summertime sprinkles.” = Why is the water table so high in this area?
    “..may represent …” = possible dismissal
    “…only way to escape…move out of town.” = rural property price hikes
    “…and reading the stories so far.” = looking forward to many more

  2. Max stalnaker says:

    Nice picture. Sewage? Water pipe in disrepair?

  3. Jackson Cauter says:

    Perhaps the City Fathers and Mothers should reconsider their ill-advised vote to ban recreational pot sales. Had they done so, they could have also passed the 3% local Pot Sales Tax, using those funds to lower or maybe even negate the proposed water runoff tax.

  4. Richard Vannice says:

    Maybe someone was trying to grow concrete. How often have you seen sprinklers watering the sidewalk and street?

 

 
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