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704 N 24TH ST RICH - 5PM - ACCIDENT CITY PROPERTY - FEMALE FELL THRU A WATER METER COVER ON THE SIDEWALK
25th street closed, vehicle fire.

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FOR RENT: 2100 E. Broad St. UP $575 Must See!!! 1Bdrm, Fresh paint, Off Street Parking, shared W/D, hardwood floors. Email abaisey@rbvainc.com or 804-649-2162
Sustainable Design Consulting is subleasing 624 SF of the company’s open office space in the Buggy Factory located in Shockoe Slip. Contact Adair Borba, Operation Manager at 804.644.3880 extension 1103. Email: Adair@sustaindesign.net
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307 Chimbo Blvd - Spacious 2 br/2 ba condo has beautiful hardwood floors, LR, eat-in kitchen w/new appliances, lots of closet space, back deck, front porch. $1050 includes w/s. Go to www.smallrealestate.com for more info.
3310 O St: Beautiful renovation with heart-pine floors throughout, all new roof, siding, insulation, plumbing & dual zone heating & air. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, approx 2100 sq ft + unfinished basement. This house is gorgeous! Contact Garrett 804-247-0566.
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October 13, 2009

Storm Water Assessments mailed to citizens

The previously mentioned Storm Water Assessments are hitting mailboxes around the city. WTF is the Storm Water Assessment you ask?

Just like water, sewer, gas, and other vital utility services, users are charged a fee for the service of controlling stormwater. The stormwater management fee would apply to all developed properties, including homes, businesses, and non-profit organizations. These fees would be a dedicated revenue stream, which would be restricted for use only on stormwater system maintenance and operations of stormwater management devices, for stormwater systems planning and construction.

Posted by john_m at 6:11PM under environment, government | Tags:

23 Responses to “Storm Water Assessments mailed to citizens”

  1. posted by Bullwinkle at October 13, 2009 11:37 pm [#]:

    If this is really such a huge problem that each and every citizen has to be billed for it, then maybe the city should stop replacing our gravel lined (under the bricks) sidewalks with solid concrete ones. The new walks sure ain’t permeable.

    Kinda seems like this one is just a city run scam, plain and simple.

  2. posted by ann at October 14, 2009 8:16 am [#]:

    I certainly agree with #1…hitting city residents for a tax against impermeable roofs and patios while constantly installing impermeable sidewalks is the epitome of DUMB and dumber…but is the way any government entity works.

  3. posted by Bezo at October 14, 2009 8:24 am [#]:

    If we refuse to pay, will they leave the water on our property?

  4. posted by Brandon at October 14, 2009 8:51 am [#]:

    I wonder how much VCU will be paying to the City for all their impermeable surfaces?

  5. posted by Scott Burger at October 14, 2009 7:17 pm [#]:

    http://www.oregonhill.net/2009/07/09/the-spigot-is-turning/

    Now we need some FOIA’s to fact check….

  6. posted by PointCounterPoint at October 16, 2009 3:00 pm [#]:

    The reason this is a “fee” is that it can be passed onto all normally tax exempt properties like VCU and churches. So finally, they get to pay their share.

    As a residential taxpayers, we get stuck as this is a “fee”, not a real estate tax and is, technically, not deductible on our tax returns.

    It is interesting they only allow 2 weeks to pay the bill. I would have thought it would have been a month.

  7. posted by Mark at October 20, 2009 6:41 am [#]:

    Is this a monthly fee? I remember the intial mailing but did not give it a second thought.

  8. posted by john_m at October 20, 2009 6:47 am [#]:

    It’s a yearly hit.

  9. posted by Gordo at October 20, 2009 7:49 am [#]:

    It is a stupid tax being levied to protect those dumb enough to locate their busineses in flood prone shockhoe bottom.

    Since I was smart enough to live on top of church hill instead of below it, I should not have to pay for their stupidity.

  10. posted by Alice at October 30, 2009 1:27 am [#]:

    I am upset about the fee. It will be collected every year. I have lived in the same place in Richmond for 20 years. There has never been a flood near my home. When hurricane Isabelle came, I was out of my house for 2 wks. because there were no street lights and no electricity in the house. Also, no shelters were available. In red letters the notice threatens to put a lien on your house if you do not pay. Can a lien legally be brought about for $45? This sounds like a hoax – stormwater. Next they will charge a fee because the sun shines. I would rather pay a fee for shelters in times of weather emergencies.

  11. posted by Shannon at October 30, 2009 9:29 am [#]:

    Wrote my $45 check last night, and fantasized the whole time about doing something disgusting to it before I put it in the envelope. I know – it’s not the envelope-opener’s fault. Just saying, this seems real ridiculous.

    Interesting question about the lein, because I don’t think that would really even matter until you go to sell.

  12. posted by Paul Hammond at October 30, 2009 11:21 am [#]:

    My understanding is this is at least partially mandated by the Feds as part of the clean up of Chesapeake Bay. Anybody know more about this?

  13. posted by Sundagger at October 30, 2009 12:26 pm [#]:

    #12 is close. For more than 25 years, the city ignored its physical infrastructure and spent its money on the social infrastructure. Drainage was always the last thing funded in the GF budget. By the middle of this decade, the EPA and the DEQ were getting restive at Richmond’s lack of progress in meeting environmental goals. Deadlines set years ago come due in the next couple of years. The utility is an attempt to “depoliticize” the funding process for stormwater manzgement. No longer must it compete with social programs, schools, streets and policing for funding. Now there is a revenue stream that pays for annual maintenance programs, and a guaranteed revenue stream that permits bonding to pay for stormwater infrastructure programs. And now there is a plan to show that Richmond is serious about its obligations. Remember, only about 48% of Richmond property pays real estate taxes. Everybody pays the stormwater utility fee.

  14. posted by Scott Burger at October 30, 2009 3:04 pm [#]:

    This also goes back to when Rudy McCullom was Mayor. Remember his ‘lemonade from lemons’ when it cam to correcting sewer overflow problems and the Canal Walk? Part of our utility bill surcharges went into Canal Walk construction as part of sewer overflow fixing. I always wondered how much was legitimate, and how much was more corporate welfare scheming. After that came the $50 million loan to Cordish for the ‘Power Plant’ development on Brown’s Island. How many of those new buildings are still vacant? I know some people regard me as a nonstop nag as far as this downtown corporate welfare issue goes, but citizens need to make the connections and see how much they ultimately costs us.

    PointCounterPoint and Sundagger are right, at least the stormwater fee is supposed to cost everyone (yes, even you , VCU) and not just residents. As citizens we need to make sure that the fees are correctly collected (there have already been some questionable exemptions for certain West End neighborhoods- I am looking at you, Bruce Tyler) and the money is used exclusively for alieviating stormwater issues.

    Again, ultimately, we all do have a responsibility to bring the Chesapeake Bay back to life. There are lots of things that can be done to help stormwater in Richmond, porous sidewalks and parking lot materials (look at old cobblestones as well as new materials like like the green pavers at Cheswick Park in Henrico County), green roofs and alleys, rainwater gutter barrels, rain gardens, cleaner and more open streams (hello Shockoe Creek), MORE TREES (hello Urban Forestry), etc.

  15. posted by Shannon at October 30, 2009 9:32 pm [#]:

    The thing is this – the choices about allocation of the funds already available are, and have always been, questionable. And as long as people are feeling like the basic needs of citizens are not being met with the money already there, there will naturally be some resentment about giving more.

  16. posted by Brandon at October 31, 2009 10:12 am [#]:

    I also noticed that, included in the envelope with the assessment bill, was a pamphlet noting the City is boostering its replacement of some of the historic cobblestone alley materials in the city with porous paving – if the cobblestones are set in sand or gravel, isn’t that a porous surface treatment? Seems like its stupid and a massive waste to remove a 200-year old paving material. Also, if this is done in an O&H district (where the cobblestone alleys may be contributing features), isn’t that a change that could be a violation of the guidelnes? And could possibly result in the removal of the district from the National Register?

    #14: Where can I get more info on these West End neighborhoods that may have received exemptions? How is that legal?

  17. posted by Scott Burger at October 31, 2009 3:04 pm [#]:
  18. posted by Tamara Smith at November 2, 2009 10:26 am [#]:

    I cannot see one storm sewer in visible sight of my property, the rainwater goes right through the groud. If it actually went through a sewer drain nearby I might understand why I am being taxed. Who are these assessors? where is this money going?

  19. posted by Brad at November 2, 2009 11:29 am [#]:

    Though I agree with the sentiment expressed in #14, it appears that the link provided in #17 is an exemption (appropriate or not) to water and sewer bills, not the stormwater management fee. From the one public meeting I attended regarding the fee (hosted by the Sierra Club – thank you!), no property owner is exempt from paying the fee (no matter the type of institution, land use, income level, etc. All non-profits, religious institutions, VCU, MCV and all other state buildings and parking lots must pay the fee). Our bill was $25, which is the minimum for residential units. I think there is a lot of storm water management improvements needed in the City and doing this work properly and a timely manner will only help to improve the health of the James River and the Chesapeake Bay. $25 a year seems a fair price to pay to be a responsible property owner in the James River and Bay watershed.

  20. posted by Scott Burger at November 2, 2009 1:58 pm [#]:

    You are right, Brad, I accidently mixed some apples and oranges there. But the exemptions are notable- we need to get closer to paying for what we use/have- stormwater and water in general. I will also note that Richmond City continues to have the highest minimum water rates in the country while the counties buy water from the City and sell it more cheaply to their residents.

  21. posted by Sundagger at November 2, 2009 2:53 pm [#]:

    Scott,
    Apples and oranges again. The counties subsidize the per gallon rate with a high connection fee. The city has had historically a low connection fee and a higher per gallon fee. That’e changing as the city is moving toward a lower rate schedule for small users, and an increased connection fee. On top of that though are the requirements of a city agreement with DEQ/EPA to increase investment in water/sewer treatment.

  22. posted by PlumboJumbo at November 2, 2009 3:14 pm [#]:

    This is just plain dumb! I know that city had meetins about this but I couldn’t attend. I had to get my big gulp on. Now I gotta pay? Thanks city council!

  23. posted by Scott Burger at November 2, 2009 4:47 pm [#]:

    Brad, now you are the one bringing in apples and oranges. There’s been some reform and there is a connection to connection fees, but the fact is we still have the highest minimum water rate in the country while the counties still buy water from us and sell it more cheaply to their residents.


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