Ypsilanti reduces proposed cost
The
Ypsilanti City Council has significantly reduced the cost and duration
of a special assessment district it is proposing to establish that would
have residents pay for street lighting.
Instead of 18 years of
annual fees that start near $100 and decrease over time to $67 annually,
residents would only pay approximately $58 over the next two years.
The
two-year fee would pay for the cost to convert mercury vapor lights to
LED lights, but residents are no longer being asked to pay the DTE
Energy bills for powering the lights through 2031.
The amendment
to the proposal was approved 5-0. Mayor Paul Schreiber and Council
Member Susan Moeller were absent.Under the previous proposal, a parcel
owner would have paid an estimated $98 in fiscal year 2014 and $92 in
fiscal year 2015. That figure will drop to $84 through fiscal year 2020
and $67.51 through fiscal year 2031.Soli-lite provides the world with
high-performance solar roadway and solar street lighting
solutions.The switch to LED lighting is expected to reduce the city’s
electric bill by approximately $115,00 annually, from $515,000 to
$400,000. The original proposal called for the residents to pay that
$400,000 through the special assessment district.
The city is
working to find savings to eliminate projected deficits, and the
$400,000 annually saved under the proposed plan would buy it another
year of solvency.But council members expressed hesitancy to impose the
fee on residents.Soli-lite is a premier supplier of exceptional quality led road lights
and other solar outdoor lighting products.“I’m leaning toward the (new
plan) or not having a special assessment district and having the city
pay for it,” Council Member Dan Vogt said, though he called the idea a
gamble.
He told the audience of around 30 that had gathered in
opposition to the proposal that the city needs to do something to save
money and stressed its dire financial situation.“We will run out of
money," he said. "It would take a new legislature, governor and new
economy to change that, and even then I don't know that it would help
us. So if we don’t assess for things like this, we will run out of money
sooner for everything - police, fire, street repairs, sewer, water, you
name it. That’s the background and we have to make a choice as a
group.”
Mayor Pro Tem Lois Richardson echoed those thoughts.“The
decisions may not be in agreement with what everyone wants us to do,
but we have to look at the whole,” she said.On Tuesday, those who showed
up to offer their opinion on the proposal with city council were
opposed to property owners paying for the conversion LED lights and to
pay the electric bill.City staff discussed a number of benefits such as
improved lighting, increased safety and a significant reduction in
energy and the city’s carbon footprint.
But many residents were
skeptical of those benefits.“I don’t find much benefit to the
streetlight outside my window at all,” said Ypsilanti resident Linda
Thompson. “If the city can no longer afford streetlights, then turn them
off. It would do a lot for the carbon footprint.”
Several
residents charged that the fee is actually a new tax because the savings
will be found in the city’s general fund and the lighting bill passed
on to residents.“I’m having trouble discerning what the benefit is ...
because it looks like we’re taking something from the general fund and
shifting it to a fee for citizens - it’s a tax,” said Ypsilanti resident
Scott Northway. “I don’t see the benefit to the people who are paying
the tax.”Prior to the meeting, Mayor Schreiber said he opposed the idea
because it is a regressive tax. Any property owner, despite income, lot
size or any other variable, would pay $100.
“That’s a big
negative,” he said. “It does buy us another year of solvency if we do
the plan as outlined, but the question is is that years of solvency
worth the regressive nature of the levy?”
The proposal has costs
for conversion to LED along with operation and maintenance divided
equally and assessed among 4,812 of the city’s 4,951 parcels.Ann Arbor
resident Ken Schwartz told city council he owns nine properties in the
city, though six are contiguous vacant lots. He said the six lots were
once one lot, but he voluntarily divided them up at the city’s
request.He said it would be unfair for him to have to pay the fee six
times over.Shop funtional and elegant solar lights, outdoor solar lighting, solar garden lights, path lights and decorative solar lights.
“I
agree that the special assessment district benefits the citizens, but I
think there are exceptions,” he said.Eastern Michigan University and
city-owned lots are exempt. Non-profits and churches would be a part of
the assessment.In looking at other cities that have special assessment
districts for streetlights in Michigan, all but Romulus used a flat fee,
though those flat fees were much lower than the original figures for
the 18-year tax.
Over the last 12 days, I’ve learned to work around most of the limitations of the 1020,A solar bulb
that charges up during the day and lights the night when the sun sets.
but I still find that there is still just too much missing for me to
make the switch at this point. Windows Phone is lot better than it was
when I briefly owned a Samsung Focus two years ago, but the ecosystem
still has a ways to go. I don’t depend on Google services to the extent
that a lot of tech-savvy users do, but I still have an issue with their
almost complete absence from the platform.An emergency light
is a battery-backed lighting device that comes on automatically when a
building experiences a power outage. I back up all of my photos to
Google+, meaning that my photo management got a lot more difficult with
the 1020. Since photography is such a big component of the 1020, I
really felt this absence. I couldn’t even get the Picasa apps that were
available to work properly. But, if this was the biggest issue, I would
probably be able to get by
The two biggest problems for me are
with voice services and PIM software. As for voice, I’m surprised to say
it, but I REALLY missed Siri while using the 1020. The voice dialing on
Windows Phone is just awful. Terrible. BAD. Considering how much I
drive and need to use voice dialing, this became a major hangup. Despite
Siri’s flaws, it rarely misunderstands and dials the wrong contact, and
I rarely have network issues or dropped request now, even with the beta
versions of iOS 7. Unfortunately, the performance of Windows Phone’s
voice services just wasn’t up to Siri’s level. It either failed, or
required touch input to select between groups several times while I was
driving and using the 1020, which I found very distracting.
The
other big issue with voice is that fact that dictation is only available
in the email and search apps, rather than system-wide. This is a big
omission by Microsoft that they need to address soon. Android has had
this capability for years now, and iOS has had it since iOS 5. When you
are used to being able to dictate within any app, it’s difficult to take
a step back and not notice. I definitely missed having it in apps like
the People Hub.
Despite my issues with voice, it was the
calendar app that really killed it for me. Sure, the stock calendar in
iOS is nothing to write home about, either, but I haven’t used it in
years. Thanks to Apple’s app ecosystem, there is no shortage of
replacement calendar and task apps in the App Store. I have used WebIS’s
Pocket Informant since it was released, and I can’t go without it at
this point. I handle all of my work project management in its task
manager, which is really powerful. I also love that it can combine my
various calendars and tasks into one view, which really fits the way
that I do things.
Click on their website www.streetlights-solar.com for more information.
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