City Council, Water board discuss proposed water-department building, utility-billing office

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
OST photo by AMY HANSEN This is a view of Osceola's water treatment plant on West Clay Street.

The purpose of the joint Osceola City Council and Osceola Water Board of Trustees meeting was to make sure everybody was on the same page.

On the meeting's agenda was the proposed building for the water department and proposed utility-billing office.

"One of the things in this whole process is, you know, we originally were going to build a building out at the treatment plant because we need more storage, said Bill Freeman, chairman of Osceola Water Board. "The building over here isn't big enough. We've looked at a lot of different options."

Freeman added, "Obviously, it wouldn't make sense to build it out (of town) if you're going to have a utility office, it wouldn't make sense to build it out at the treatment plant out away from the public. But, on the other side, we need facilities to store equipment, and what have you. So, there's a lot of evaluation that needs to go into this. My opinion is I didn't want to get the cart ahead of the horse and make sure we have an open discussion about it."

The city's water plant is on West Clay Street. The distribution shop is on Ayers Street.

Council woman Sarah Truitt clarified the topic of discussion was the potential issue of separating the water utility from the city's responsibility. She then asked about the benefits of the scenario.

The water board is a separate entity from the city, but it pays a portion of the salaries at city hall because the utility billing is done there. An option is to move the utility billing office out of city hall and into a water-department building.

"It's designed to be separate, if you look at the state regulations, it's all designed to be separate," Freeman said. "My personal opinion, if you want it, I would hope it would create a little bit better relations … just difficulty with the finances and understanding what's going with things and trying to get answers."

Efficiency

He added, the overall purpose is to serve the public better and make good business decisions.

Councilman David Walkup said he's interested in seeing facts and figures.

Previous Page|1|||

Comments


Reader Poll

Do you think Clarke County Hospital should start a building-expansion project?

Yes
No
Undecided