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July 13, 2006

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Steve Smith

Not again! Mary Milanowski, where are you? I can't wait for Corky to impose this scheme on the suburban customers of the GR water system, too! Just think, another reason to move away from the city!

The Executive Director

Hi, Steve.

"Not again" is right. The city had this bright idea before, but it got nowhere. I'll be surprised if Corky's rain tax even gets serious consideration by the City Commission.

Of course, if Corky's going to be devising lame schemes like this, that raises the question of why the City Commission agreed in the first place to hire him for $150K a year.

Regards, Bill

Steve Goulet

Bill,

Do you have a link or a reference to a document that discusses Corky's intention to charge a "rain tax"? Or is that just your opinion of where this is headed?

Thanks!

--Steve

The Executive Director

Hi, Steve G.

As I opened this story, I heard of this from two different sources. I'll confirm that Overmyer discussed this with each of them, and it exactly isn't a secret that Overmyer thinks a rain tax would be good policy for the city.

Regards, Bill

Steve Goulet

I agree that it's a bad idea to charge a tax. My strategy would be to provide a tax break or some other incentive instead of punishing with a tax.

On the whole you've got to admit that rainbarrels are smart and efficient: http://www.harvesth2o.com/rainbarrel101.shtml

What a waste to let all your rain water flow down a sewer and then use filtered water instead. But if you want to go on wasting money and costing the city extra water, you are free to pursue that ideology instead. Have fun...

--Steve

The Executive Director

Hi, Steve G.

Yes, you're probably right that carrots work better than sticks. Although I think the best incentive is simply to reduce the cost of your water bill by using less. If that's not enough to motivate people, I'm not sure how an incentive will work better.

As for rain barrels, I'm not exactly sure how one's choice concerning water sources boils down to ideology, but the barrels are OK. Of course, if there's enough rain to fill them for sprinkling the lawn, then you probably don't need to sprinkle. Besides, at my place in Heritage Hill, most of the run-off already stays on my property. Elsewhere, we use a well (one of the few within the city limits) to water the lawn.

Regards, Bill

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