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has a program that allows the restaurant owner to pay 20% down and finance the remaining <br />over afive-year period of time. <br />Councilmember Sullivan questioned and confirmed with Ms. Wagner that the DSRSD fee has <br />two components; the Livermore/Amador Valley Water Management Agency (LAVWMA) portion <br />is $7,015, which is comprised of Dublin, San Ramon, Pleasanton, Livermore and a small portion <br />of the unincorporated portion of Alameda County, and DSRSD wastewater treatment plant fee is <br />approximately $5,985 for the debt of the repair, replacement and expansion of their facility. <br />LAVWMA issued $150 million in bonds to expand and repair the pipeline, which starts in Dublin <br />and goes to the Bay in San Leandro. Those debt service payments of $8 million annually are <br />paid for strictly with connection fees. So ratepayers pay only a small portion of the repair and <br />replacement of a portion of the pipeline. She said on the operating side is the user charge, <br />which pays for staff time. <br />Vice Mayor Thorne pointed out that this is something Pleasanton does not control, and <br />questioned the protest procedure if the Council did not like the connection fee. Ms. Wagner said <br />Pleasanton represents more than 50% of their customers, the Proposition 218 protest hearing <br />only applies to the user fee component and does not apply to increasing connection fees. <br />However, the DSRSD Board, not comprised of Pleasanton boardmembers, adopted the rate <br />increase on May 5, 2008, and contractually, Pleasanton is obligated to adopt their fees within 60 <br />days or effective July 1, 2008. <br />City Manager Fialho reiterated the residential fees were decreasing, as well as a majority of the <br />commercial rates. The connection fees are not subject to Proposition 218 and the City can pass <br />on comments to the Board if concerned. <br />Mayor Hosterman reminded the Council that the facility has incurred problems necessitating <br />repair, capacity expansion and replacements, and this is a way to pay for that infrastructure. <br />She said the pipeline is completed and is serving the community well, and the debt must be <br />paid. <br />Mayor Hosterman opened the public hearing. There were no speakers, she closed the public <br />hearing. <br />Councilmember McGovern supported adoption of the fees under protest, and asked staff to <br />pass along the concern about businesses paying what she believed to be a significant upfront <br />fee to DSRSD. <br />Motion: It was m/s by Sullivan//Thorne to adopt Urgency Ordinance No. 1979 amending Section <br />2 (part) of Ordinance 1082, as amended, by adding Section 15.08.285 and amending Sections <br />15.20.030, 15.20.040 and 15.20.180 concerning User Rates for Sewer Service and declaring <br />the urgency thereof to take effect July 1, 2008, and Resolution No. 08-213 amending Resolution <br />No. 92-100 (Master Fee Schedule) to establish revised regional sewer rates, fees, and charges. <br />Motion passed by the following vote: <br />Ayes: Councilmembers McGovern, Sullivan, Thorne, Mayor Hosterman <br />Noes: None <br />Absent: Councilmember Cook-Kallio <br />Abstain: None <br />NOTED PRESENT: Councilmember Cook-Kallio joined the meeting 8:35 p.m. <br />