City to educate public about pipes
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Barbara Diamond
City officials are considering an ordinance to root out problems in
the sewer system -- at the expense of private property owners.
The council gave five nods on Tuesday -- but did not vote -- for
an “awareness program” to make private property owners aware of
deficiencies in the laterals -- the pipes from kitchens, bathrooms
and laundries to the city mains. Council members also reached
consensus on a fine schedule for negligent disregard of the
notifications that causes spills, and a requirement to videotape and
report on the condition of laterals in remodels that must have design
review.
Voting was postponed until next month, when a revised ordinance
will come back to the council.
Although the proposed ordinance most affects private property
owners -- they own the laterals, and repairs can be costly -- only
three members of the general public spoke at the meeting.
“People who bought homes here a long time ago cannot afford these
repairs or fines,” Gene Atherton said. “The city has the obligation
to finance this.”
Realtors were at the meeting in abundance to urge the council to
delete a staff recommendation to require a video inspection and
report on the condition of laterals when a property is sold. More
than 20 Realtors attended, but only a few spoke during the 16-minutes
of public comment in the one-hour-and-10-minute hearing.
“We don’t want to be the bad guys here,” Realtor David Schaar
said. “We just disagree with the point-of-sale requirement.”
The council delayed the requirement for at least a year.
“This is kind of an reward system,” Mayor Cheryl Kinsman said.
“You came down, and you didn’t take too long -- so you get rewarded.
We will review the ordinance in a year and see how it goes.”
The Laguna Board of Realtors offered $5,000 to help the city
educate the public about the proposed ordinance, which was made a
priority by the council on Tuesday.
“I still run into people who don’t know anything about it,”
Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson said.
The proposal is to notify owners of private homes, multi-unit
residences, businesses and remodels that require design review, of
problems discovered during city sewer projects. The notices would
include a list of qualified plumbers with whom the city will work to
ensure no concentration of clean-outs or repairs that could do more
harm than good.
“If we frighten people into running out and cleaning their
laterals [at one time], all the mains in the city would be clogged,”
Councilwoman Toni Iseman said, warning against untended consequences
of well-intentioned decisions.
Roots pushed out of private laterals during cleaning into city
mains are the major cause of spills in here, said David Shissler,
director of the Water Quality Department.
Property owners would have a 180-day grace period after
notification to make a “good faith” effort to make their laterals
functional. Routine cleaning is an acceptable effort, although the
water quality staff recommends permanent repairs as the best
approach.
Notified owner of nonfunctioning laterals that cause spills could
be fined maximums from $10-per-gallon of spill all the way up to
$10,000 for a beach closure.
Councilman Steve Dicterow included changes in the proposed
ordinance to make it clear that no fines would be imposed unless the
property owner was properly notified of problems.
The revised ordinance is scheduled to come back to the council at
the July 20 meeting. A second reading of the ordinance would be
scheduled and, if approved, go into effect 30 days later. The program
would officially start Jan. 1.
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