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Fire protection tax and agency sent
to November ballot
By Joe
Naiman
The Alpine Sun
SAN DIEGO — A measure to create a regional
fire protection agency and establish a parcel tax for fire
protection will be on the November 2008 ballot.
A 5-0 San Diego County Board of Supervisors vote on
Aug. 6 placed the measure on the ballot. The San Diego Regional Fire
Protection Agency would be a joint powers agency (JPA) consisting of
10 board members while the parcel tax would apply to properties in
incorporated cities as well as in the county’s unincorporated area.
All eligible voters within the county will be able to vote on the
measure, which must receive two-thirds voter approval to pass.
“This gives our fire fighters a better chance to do
their job,” said Supervisor Ron Roberts, who is also the co-chair of
the interjurisdictional Regional Fire Protection Committee. “It is
simply the best thing that we can do now as we start to enter fire
season.”
“The timing is not perfect. The proposal is not
perfect. But one thing is certain,” said Supervisor Dianne Jacob.
“This proposal will make us better prepared for the next fire
season.”
Concerns included the timing of the election, the
governance structure of the proposed regional agency, and the annual
escalation percentage. The Regional Fire Protection Committee
recommended a 21-member governing board consisting of one member
from each incorporated city, one member of the Board of Supervisors,
and two members representing fire protection districts. The
supervisors and fire service representatives sought a more equitable
distribution between fire districts and cities, and the final
proposal includes a ten-member board consisting of one county
supervisor, one San Diego City Council member, four city council
members from the county’s four suburban regions (East County, South
Bay, North County Coastal, North County Inland), and four fire
agency board members.
The ordinance language specifies “independent special
district” rather than “fire protection district” for the fire agency
members, allowing board members from municipal water districts,
which also provide fire protection to be eligible to serve on the
JPA board.
The County Supervisor shall be from one of the two
districts encompassing the most unincorporated area in the county,
giving the board a makeup of five representatives from cities and
five from unincorporated areas. “People are going to have to work
together,” said Supervisor Greg Cox.
“It forces compromise. It forces us to work together,”
said San Diego mayor Jerry Sanders, who co-chairs the Regional Fire
Protection Committee with Roberts.
The board would also have five non-voting advisory
members from the California Department of Forestry and Fire
Protection, the U.S. Forest Service, an Indian reservation fire
department, the U.S. Navy, and the U.S. Marine Corps. The JPA may
also add additional non-voting members to the board.
The tax will begin at $52 per year for parcels not
exceeding 50 acres or 10,000 square feet. It will be adjusted
annually based on the Consumer Price Index for San Diego County. An
additional $0.01 per square foot for each square foot of improvement
exceeding 10,000 square feet (in addition to single-family
residential properties, the parcel tax would also apply to
apartments, condominiums, motels and hotels, commercial, office, and
industrial properties) and an additional $1 per acre for each acre
over 50 acres would also be assessed, although the total annual tax
would be limited to $1,000 per parcel plus the annual increase.
The parcel tax would become effective on July 1, 2009,
and would be added to property tax bills.
The initial proposal had a 2 percent annual escalation.
The escalation itself was not opposed by any county supervisors, but
Jacob felt that the equation to a dollar a week was misleading for a
30-year tax with an annual escalation.
“This is a tax. This is a $52 per year parcel tax and
one dollar per week only in the first year,” Jacob said.
The adjustment by the Consumer Price Index rather than
by an automatic figure means that the tax could increase by more
than two percent or by less than two percent. It would also provide
for consistent purchasing ability.
“It should have at least the same buying power from
year to year,” Cox said. “It will keep up with the cost of providing
services.”
The Regional Fire Protection Committee consists of two
supervisors, four mayors, and three fire chiefs and was formed in
January 2008. The committee’s duties are to assess the regional
needs for fire apparatus (including helicopters and other aircraft),
regional communications, and surveillance technology and to evaluate
possible funding sources, examine the initial and ongoing costs of
various alternatives (such as leasing versus buying equipment),
review government codes and other policies and ordinances as they
relate to fire protection, and consider short-term and long-term
options related to a regional fire authority.
The July 18 meeting committee recommended the lease of
four fixed-wing aircraft at a current annual cost of $6,381,660
(plus $102,500 for a program manager) and the purchase of three
helicopters, which would involve $35,000,000 for the purchase cost
and an annual operation and maintenance estimate of $2,700,000.
The purchase of 25 fire engines, which would be owned
by the regional authority but stationed at strategic locations and
staffed by off-duty fire fighters when needed, would address “surge
capacity” and would cost between $8 million and $15 million. The
cost of a regional training facility is estimated at $4.5 million.
The fire-related cost to upgrade the county’s Regional
Communications System is estimated at between $35 and $40 million.
In an effort to provide flexibility, the ordinance does
not include a specific spending plan, although the section on the
JPA’s powers provides a range of possible uses. Administrative
expenses are capped at 10 percent of revenues, and no JPA board
member shall receive per diem or mileage payments for meeting
attendance.
The functions of the JPA would include determining the
appropriate use of the parcel tax for regional fire protection,
providing regional fire protection primarily through aerial assets
and the additional fire trucks, and enhancing the quality of
regional emergency and communications equipment. The JPA would also
establish a technical advisory committee of firefighting
professionals and would have the authority to contract with other
jurisdictions (including the California Department of Forestry and
Fire Protection, the U.S. Forest Service, and reservation and
military fire departments).
The regional agency would receive half of the parcel
tax while the local fire protection agencies would receive the other
half.
While the JPA board could amend much of the ordinance,
the voters would retain the authority to change the amount of the
parcel tax, the method of application to parcels, the allocation of
revenues between regional and local needs, the purposes for which
the parcel tax may be used, and any increase in annual adjustments
or the duration of the tax. The tax is proposed for a 30-year
duration.
“I don’t like taxes. I don’t like parcel taxes,” said
Supervisor Bill Horn. “At the same time, I don’t see any other way
of solving the problem.”
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