If there was any doubt ...
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DANETTE GOULET
Each week I receive various e-mails and phone calls about my column
-- some people love it, others not so much. That’s to be expected and
I appreciate the response either way.
Once in a while, the unfortunate subject calls to discuss my views
and set me straight.
This week I received one such e-mail, the irony of which is so
great I can’t bring myself to regret the error.
In case anyone doubted how difficult to read the city’s new fee
schedule really is, let me provide the perfect example.
As I explained last week, the city provided the council with
multiple lists of city fees -- old and new, proposed and actual. The
council, and interested public presumably, was expected to decipher
these lists and understand what the new fees are that will bring in
an additional $2.6 million in revenue in 2003-04.
In preparing my column last week, I looked over the those lists. I
reported a figure from one list that contains three categories. Under
the first column, “fee description,” it reads Fire Truck Company
Response. Under the second column, “fee amount,” it states $269 per
hour. The third column, “comments,” is blank.
So, just because a fee is on the list does mean it is charged.
(Makes perfect sense, right?) Of course, why there are fees listed
that are not charged I haven’t the faintest idea.
Fire Chief Duane Olsen wrote to me this week and asked that I
clear up this matter. Residents are not charged for emergency fire
responses “and for residents to think so could be detrimental to
public safety,” he wrote.
He is absolutely correct, and I hope no one really thinks I will
be putting out my own fires. I have the utmost respect and admiration
for firefighters and know they are far better equipped to handle
their job than I am.
I’m not so sure I could say that about everyone.
Despite this list of fees Olsen assured me, “The hourly fees
currently charged for fire engine and fire truck responses are for
illegal discharge of hazardous materials, responses to DUI incidents
and special events that require an engine company to stand by.”
And those fees are based on the unit that responds as it pays for
personnel and apparatus used.
I asked Olsen to further clarify any fees actually charged to
residents, such as for medical responses, but I guess he’s busy
putting out fires.
Whether residents are charged any of the other “fees” on this list
is anyone’s guess. But I guess that’s the point.
* DANETTE GOULET is the city editor. She can be reached at (714)
965-7170 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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