A letter in support of the Arbor Valley expansion

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By Kathy Kelly

Osceola

A petition with 255 names, now 323, was presented to the Clarke County Reservoir Commission at the Oct. 4 meeting. The CCRC grudgingly agreed to have D. Beck, project coordinator, look at preliminary data regarding an Arbor Valley expansion as a valuable alternative.

The petition recalled the local option sales tax (LOST) passed with city and county leaders promising, “no increase of property tax or water rates to fund a reservoir.” In regards to a potential property tax increase, Commissioner B. Trickey condescendingly said, it’s “only $58.” His remark, based on a possible 58 cents per $1,000 of assessed valuations, was not only ill informed, but wrong from the perspective of a farmer or business taxpayer.

After agreeing to look at preliminary data for Arbor Valley expansion, commissioners scheduled a Dec. 6 public hearing/meeting where they will pass the resolution to declare Squaw Creek Site 4B to be the chosen reservoir site. It is a formality required to move forward condemning multiple homes and farms. The commission’s true intent is to disregard the request of the petition signers and the many who have not had a chance to sign. It is an example of a government entity run amuck with desire and power to override the will of the people for whom they work. We pay their bills, approaching $2 million taxpayer dollars, but the CCRC does not have to answer to us. Truly, this is not our lake. It is “their lake” at our expense.

A petition presentation to Clarke County Supervisors on Oct. 8 met with utmost rudeness. A mere 45 seconds into it, and 10 feet away, Supervisor Reasoner answered his cell phone and continued talking on it for several minutes with the presenter finally stopping until he ended his conversation.

The county is asked in D. Becks financial plan to issue $13 million in revenue bonds payable with LOST proceeds. Bonds would not be written until 2014-15. There is no guarantee the currently low-interest rate will continue. If rates increase, LOST ability to pay would require less bonds being issued, making property-tax payers responsible for a general-obligation bond to complete construction began with a “conceptual” financial plan that can only be supposed in theory might work.

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