Committee chairman Buzz Busby called the meeting to order and passed
out an outline of a proposed discount program that could be offered
during the amnesty period to customers who pay their bills in full.
He stressed to the group that the proposal was a starting point for
the discussion and certainly subject to change. Currently the city
of Lincoln has approximately $116,000 in unpaid sewage bills. Busby
said that he had a two-page report from the city clerk's office
showing who is in arrears and the amount. He said that the majority
of those accounts owed in excess of $1,000.
He also said that he has asked the clerk's office to provide this
report to the full council in the future.
Busby said that he had a meeting scheduled Wednesday with
Illinois American Water. That company would present a proposal for
doing water shut-offs for these delinquent accounts. He said that in
addition, Environmental Management Corp., the company that is
contracted to the city for the waste treatment facility, will
prepare a proposal for the same thing.
He stressed that the city had to have something in place so that
there would be a certain consequence for not paying the sewage bill.
The idea is that the city will offer a 45-day amnesty program
when those arrears can be caught up and discounts given to those who
participate. If the delinquent accounts are not settled in that
period of time, then the water will be shut off at that address.
The initial plan
The initial plan includes a 20 percent discount for sewage bills
that exceed $200 and a 10 percent discount for account balances less
than $200.
In addition, he added a pre-pay requirement of $80. He explained
that adding the pre-pay as a part of the amnesty program would
guarantee the city at least the next four months' payment before
customers stopped paying their bills again.
Busby went around the room and asked each alderman to comment on
the proposal.
In general everyone is in favor of an amnesty program.
Alderwoman Marty Neitzel said that she was in favor of the
amnesty program but wondered if the 20 percent discount was enough.
She suggested bumping it up to 30 percent.
Alderman David Wilmert agreed that 20 percent might not be
enough. Looking at the document Busby had handed out, he said that
on a $1,000 debt, the discount was $200, but then the addition of
the pre-pay made the final bill $880, only $120 less than the
arrears. He wondered if it was enough to motivate customers to pay.
Later Wilmert would also point out that the 10 percent discount
along with the $80 pre-pay on debts less than $200 would actually
cost the customer $260 to get out of arrears. He's doubtful that
anyone will do that.
Alderwoman Stacy Bacon asked how many of these accounts were aged
out beyond five years, and Busby answered that approximately half of
them are.
She asked if any of the people on the list Busby has now have
ever contacted the city to work out a payment plan or a settlement,
and Busby said no.
He also stressed that had any of them said they wanted to work
out a payment plan, the city would have gone along with that.
Bacon said she wondered if customers who have made no attempt in
the past to deal with their delinquent account would really make an
effort now, even with an amnesty program.
"We're hoping they will," Busby responded.
Busby went on to say: "I'm willing to try almost anything. I
really don't know what other alternative we have."
Can we send a letter?
Alderwoman Joni Tibbs suggested that the city might send out
letters to delinquent accounts, expressing the city's desire to work
with customers to clean up the arrears.
She said that as the charges add up, the customers are probably
just tossing the bill in the trash because they know they can't do
anything about it.
She said that they should know that the city will take partial
payments, weekly or whatever would help them to pay up the account.
City attorney Bill Bates said that he really didn't know that it
would do any good. He said that for the most part, those who are not
paying their bills just don't care that they owe the debt.
Bacon agreed with Bates, saying: "I doubt that with an amnesty
program these people who are blatantly not paying their bills for so
many years are going to step forward and pay up now."
Busby said that the city has told people for years that they can
make partial payments. On the other hand, he said that it may not be
well-publicized that the sewage bill can be paid via credit or debit
card.
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Should we rethink the penalty?
Alderwoman Melody Anderson said that she was in favor of the
amnesty program, and considering the percentage of the total debt
that is accumulated penalties, she believes that a discount of 25
percent on balances over $200 would be better.
She also wondered if the city should rethink the late penalty
charges. She said that adding the $25 penalty just made the bill all
that much harder for the customer to pay. "If they can't pay the
$80, they are not going to be able to pay the $105, and it just gets
worse from there," she said.
Are we doing this backward?
In the proposal that Busby handed out at the beginning of the
evening, he had set an amnesty period to begin Dec. 1 and run
through to Jan. 15, 2010.
Bates said that as of now there is no incentive to pay other than
the discount. He feels that the shut-off program needs to be
established before the city offers the amnesty program.
He explained that being able to shut off the water immediately
was a strategic advantage for the city and an added incentive to the
customer to participate in the amnesty program.
Bates said: "Then, when you present your amnesty program, you can
say, 'If you don't participate in the program and pay your past-due
bills, we're going to turn off your water.'"
Bates also noted that based on his own experience with
collections, the holiday season is a very poor time to try to
collect a debt. He said that people won't care because they are
spending for Christmas.
Busby said that he had been thinking more along the line that
people receiving their year-end bonuses would be more likely to have
the money to pay the debt.
Bacon said that initiating the program at tax refund time might
be even better.
Landlord versus tenant
Mayor Keith Snyder asked about situations where the landlord is
not paying the sewer bill, but the tenant is paying the rent and
fully expecting the sewage account to be paid.
He wondered if there could be a publication of the list of
delinquent accounts.
Bates said that it would be legal to publish the list, but
Alderman Jeff Hoinacki wondered what it would gain, as publishing
only the name would not necessarily let the tenant know that it was
his or her home that was going to be shut off.
Bacon suggested that perhaps the publication could include the
property address.
Wilmert wondered if then the tenant could come to the city and
offer to pay. Busby said that the city has always dealt with the
landlord, but Wilmert said perhaps there was a good tenant who paid
his rent but had a bum landlord who didn't pay the sewerage. He
said, "Couldn't that tenant come and say, 'I'll pay the bill if you
won't shut me off'?"
Bates said that as he recalled, the last time the city considered
doing shut-offs, this was the problem they ran into, and Busby added
that at that time, the company they were working with to do the
shut-offs didn't want to deal with that kind of hassle.
Can we write up a program?
Busby started drawing the meeting to a close by asking if the
committee could go ahead and write up the program.
He said he didn't feel that the time frame he had put in the
original proposal was going to work, but he wanted something drawn
up and ready to implement once the shut-off agreements were worked
out.
Neitzel made a committee motion that the program be put in
writing with discounts changed to 30 percent for balances exceeding
$200 and 20 percent for those below that amount.
The motion also included maintaining the $80 pre-pay as part of
the program.
Sewer committee members present were Busby, Neitzel, Wilmert and
Bacon. Alderman David Armbrust was absent for the evening. Other
aldermen present were Hoinacki, Anderson and Tibbs. Alderwoman Kathy
Horn and Alderman Nathan Turner were not present for the meeting.
With an aye or nay vote, the motion carried unanimously.
The committee will write the program and continue working with
Illinois American Water and the Environmental Management Corp. for
shut-off agreements. Those proposals will be reviewed and voted on
at a later date.
[By NILA SMITH]
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