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03-29-2021 Council Minutes
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03-29-2021 Council Minutes
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MINUTES OF THE <br /> ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br /> Monday,March 29,20222. <br /> 6:00 o'clock p.m. <br /> PUBLIC COMMENTS <br /> There were no public comments. <br /> CITY ATTORNEY REPORT <br /> Mayor Walsh noted earlier in the week a brush fire was started and all the fire stations were called out. <br /> He said someone went into their house,did not pay attention to the fire and it spread quite a ways; <br /> apparently this was admitted.He asked under circumstances like that, does the City have the ability to <br /> charge the cost of services to go out versus the residents having to pay for it in a case like this when <br /> someone did not pay attention to their fire. <br /> Attorney Mattick replied in some communities the statute allows them to adopt an ordinance. He said in <br /> the past when communities would respond to a fire or a medical,they would charge a flat rate($300 or <br /> $500,for example)and the statute was clear they could set up an ordinance to establish that kind of rate. <br /> Orono does not have that,in part because the fire department is through Long Lake. If they were to <br /> pursue costs associated with this,they would have to be costs related to Orono,so one avenue is that <br /> Long Lake could conceivably pursue the costs involved in what they had to spend to respond to the fire. <br /> Attorney Mattick does not necessarily think the City could respond for the personnel involved in Long <br /> Lake because it is not a direct expense to Orono. His understanding is that some other things were <br /> impacted-perhaps some road,curb,or gutters. Attorney Mattick_said,granted,Long Lake's fire <br /> department is the one that did that but it was in response to a call; if the City wanted to pursue that he <br /> thinks they could involve the resident for that but the question becomes if the resident does not pay,what <br /> does the City do? The City does not have the right to assess it to their property but depending on the <br /> amount they could bring a conciliation court action. He noted the damage to the City's infrastructure <br /> would be a legitimate thing to pursue. <br /> Mayor Walsh said it is not just"there was some damage, should we go get it,"but it is more of a <br /> philosophical issue. In the future if something like this happened,where someone is causing issues and <br /> public works,fire, or police have to respond, and whatever damage is done because of the negligence of <br /> the homeowner—does the City want to be able to solve that by being able to chase them for the money. <br /> He said putting an ordinance in place that says the City will do this so other residents don't come in and <br /> say someone did all this and then they just walk away and now the residents are paying for other people's <br /> negligence. <br /> Printup asked what infrastructure was damaged and how great it was. <br /> Edwards would have to run more detailed calculations but basically the overweight tanker trucks that <br /> responded to the fire on Fox Street caused a pretty decent section of the roadway shoulder to slough and <br /> slide. The City has done patching for it but they would still have to work up the cost for a professional <br /> patch which may be in the$10,000 range. <br /> Johnson noted at the Police Commission meeting this week,that was a topic and he was surprised to find <br /> out there was not a penalty to the property owner. He could see the fire from his house,and it looked like <br /> it was about to get to another neighbor's house—he called the neighbor who was in Arizona so they had <br /> their caretaker drive over to see what was happening. Johnson noted the City received a thank you note <br /> from a parent whose daughter went off into the ditch on Fox which was because of the section of the road <br /> Page 2 of 4 <br />
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