Middletown not considering
streetlight assessments in 2017
Mike
Rutledge
Staff Writer
5:51 p.m Monday, Oct. 24, 2016
MIDDLETOWN
A plan to
assess residents and businesses for streetlights — even those without such
lights on their streets — has fizzled, at least for now.
During the
Jan. 23 Middletown City Council retreat, City Manager Doug Adkins suggested
that if elected officials implemented such assessments “ one of the things you
could do is start using it for paving in ’17.”
And in Mayor
Larry Mulligan Jr.’s State of the City speech in March, the mayor called
streetlight assessments “a key element of the solution” for repairing the
city’s streets.
“Council will
be evaluating this in the coming months, and much needs to be considered for a
fair and equitable assessment,” Mulligan added at the time.
Adkins did
not place streetlight-assessments in his proposed 2017 budget and Mulligan said
he has felt no push from his council colleagues on the streetlight issue.
Adkins in an
email Monday to the Journal-News called the streetlight-assessment idea
“something that was just a concept to be explored at some later date before 2020.”
The idea was
to levy about a $3-per-month assessment on homes and businesses that would be
used to pay the city’s street-lighting bills, which city government now pays to
Duke Energy at a rate of about $750,000 per year. If residents and businesses were
paying that amount, city government would be free to spend it on paving, Adkins
explained.
By the year
2020, Adkins hopes city government will have enough extra revenue that it can
pay for $3.59 million in paving. Adkins’ proposed 2017 budget includes $1.2
million for paving of local streets.
“I don’t know
that we ever really had a plan to institute it,” Mulligan said. “We’ve talked
about it off and on for years, as a way to offset that cost. But it’s just
always been under consideration or evaluation. I don’t think anything’s a
foregone conclusion, that we’re going to be doing it.”
Mulligan said
when he mentioned in March that the council would be taking up the concept this
year, “one of the reasons I put it in there was to get the dialogue going.”
“I think the
response hasn’t been that strong, either, from Doug, that we need to do it, or
from council, that we need to say, ‘Hey, let’s go forward.’ I just haven’t from
anybody about it.”
Mulligan said
some residents have pushed for the collections so paving could be done.
Adkins said
via email one way the city is exploring cost-savings is to “convert our street
lights to LED (light-emitting diodes),” the way Hamilton started doing over 10 years in 2015.
“This has the potential to save several hundred thousand dollars a year in
electric costs each year after we pay for the conversion,” he wrote.
“Saving money
in street-light electric costs frees up the money currently being spent without
having to charge our citizens,” Adkins added. “We will be exploring this
(switch to LEDs) in 2017 and intend to move forward next year with this
project.”
Council
Member Talbott Moon said converting street lights to LED in the near future
should lead to significant savings on electric costs.
“Those
savings could be spent on other city priorities, with my preference being
street paving,” he said, adding “I will need to see the financial implications
of LED conversion before beginning any real discussion on an assessment.”
“I think it
would be a good idea,” said resident Emma Ferrigan. “I think citizens
definitely should be paying for street lights because how many wrecks have
there been in Middletown?
I would definitely do it next year.”
Debbie Egner,
also a Middletown
resident, also thought more spending on street repairs — even coming from her
pocket — is a good idea: “They’re not real good at all,” she said of the roads.
“There’s a whole lot to be done. Anything would help, I guess.”
Adkins said
when he visited Kansas City for a national city manager
conference, he learned that city is experimenting with motion sensors on street
lights in quieter neighborhoods, which cut the lights to 50-percent power when
there is no motion for 30 minutes.
Most
communities charge for streetlight costs, Adkins wrote. But: “If economic
development is going gangbusters, there may not be any need. If we are still
looking for paving funds, some future council may want to consider the topic
further. We have a lot of homework and projects to complete before this would
even be considered a possibility.”
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