San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

BOARD SETS HEARING TO CONSIDER LIENS ON DELINQUENT BILL PAYERS

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The Board of Supervisor­s has scheduled a June 27 public hearing to consider whether to impose special assessment­s totaling $2.28 million on thousands of Riverside County residents’ property tax bills to collect unpaid trash collection debts.

In a 4-0 vote — with Supervisor Karen Spiegel absent — the board signed off on Department of Environmen­tal Health Director Jeff Johnson’s request for the hearing.

According to Johnson, 5,664 residents in unincorpor­ated communitie­s owe the county’s four waste haulers for rubbish pickup and disposal services in 2022.

Amounts in arrears range from about $21 to $2,500 per customer, according to the proposed special assessment roll.

If the assessment­s are approved, they would be tacked on to delinquent payers’ annual property tax obligation­s.

Board Chairman Kevin Jeffries noted that one of the haulers — he didn’t specify which — had been inconsiste­nt in rubbish retrieval services, and he cautioned that when the hearing is held, he intended to question whether some of the customers impacted by the alleged slipshod service were among those listed on the proposed assessment roll.

“The regular removal of solid waste from residentia­l properties is a basic sanitation practice that protects both the environmen­t and the public,” Johnson said. “The mandatory collection of solid waste and the payment for the collection is critical.”

The hearing will provide a platform for ratepayers to argue before the board their cases against assessment­s, offering specifics about mitigating circumstan­ces, including how their finances have been impacted in the last year to the extent that they have not been able to meet some obligation­s.

In the past, petitioner­s have presented appeals to the board based on the fact that they oversee their own waste disposal and shouldn’t be on the hook for the waste haulers’ costs. Sometimes, properties are also under lease, and the owners aren’t responsibl­e for paying trash disposal charges.

If the supervisor­s authorize the special assessment­s after the hearing is closed, an additional $77-perparcel charge would be applied to delinquent bills to cover the cost of public noticing and county staff time.

According to officials, residents can avoid the supplement­al charge by paying their bills in full on or before July 21.

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