County Commissioners Dump 'Unfair' Garbage Fees BY TERRY POPE In a surprise move Monday, Brunswick County Commissioners voted unanimously not to charge coun ty residents a fee for garbage disposal. The decision clears the way for the printing and mailing of property tax bills, which arc running about a month behind schedule. Tax Administrator Boyd Williamson said a Cary firm will print the bills this week. They will be mailed no later than Sept. 1, which is the state deadline, he said. Commissioners have studied the parcel fee bill closely since it passed the N.C. General Assembly in July, but they didn't like what they saw. 'This bill would nol have been fair," said Commission Chairman Kelly Holdcn. A large number of mobile home owners and renters would legally avoid paying a fee, said Holdcn. House Bill 86 would have given the county authori ty to charge each of its 29,000 improved parcels, or lots with a dwelling or structure on them, an equal fee to raise the SI. 8 million the county will pay this year for garbage disposal and recycling. A person owning a mobile home park or apartment complex would pay the same fee as a person with a single home on several acres of land. Individuals in the mobile home park, or renters that also generate trash, would not have to pay. "It's noi what we asked for," said Holdcn. Brunswick County had asked the General Assembly lor a bill that would allow the county to charge a one time fee for all property owners in the county, not just for improved lots. The lee would have ranged from S15 to $20. It had asked that the bill expire before the next budget session. County Manager David Clegg said other counties jumped on Brunswick County's proposal and it be came open game. To charge improved parcels and to raise the SI. 8 million, the fee would now be close to $60, he said. Holdcn said he did not know if there is a county in the suite dial got what it actually wanted w ith the re vised parcel fee bill. Hie item was a hot topic at the N.C. Association of County Commissioners' conven tion in Winston-Salem this weekend, he added. "I don't know of any county that's charging the fee," said Holden. The county must now turn to other areas to fund the solid waste department. A N.C. Supreme Court ruling last week will return S25(),(KX) to the county from the Lower Cape Fear Water and Sewer Authority that will now be used to fund solid waste disposal, said Holden. Clcgg said other funds will come from state sales tax revenues, the capital reserve fund, budget cuts and the county's fund balance. (See COMMISSIONERS, Page 5-A) Tiir nnp Bm L_ |#l# I lit I5K ^ Twenty-ninth Year, Number 4 em 1 TMf MO^SWXDC if AC ON Shallotte, North Carolina, Thursdoy, August 22, 1991 ^^i(V 50