Sometimes I agree that our laws and regulations around ballot questions need to be tightened up to make it really hard for out of state crackpots to doing something really stupid. Here's a story in part from Colleen Quinn of the State Huse News Service.
Homeowners and businesses across the state could see a new surcharge on their water bills, under a plan being considered by a legislative commission charged with looking at the state’s water infrastructure needs and financing.
The proposal, still in the works and dubbed the Blue Communities Act, would charge 1/10th of one cent for every gallon of water used to create a fund that would redistribute money to cities and towns for water infrastructure projects. The proposal, modeled after the state’s Green Communities Act, creates incentives for communities to adopt environmental and management practices in order to be considered “blue communities.” In return, they would be eligible for payments, grants and loans.
The surcharge is estimated to bring in approximately $230 million a year, according to members of a subcommittee on the Water Infrastructure Finance Commission.But in addition to the opposition that forms naturally to any new consumer charges, the plan could be derailed by a proposed 2012 ballot initiative to cap water and sewer rate increases at 2 ½ percent annually or require voter approved overrides in communities looking for larger increases.
The ballot initiative was filed by a signature-gathering firm, National Ballot Access Inc., based in Duluth, Georgia. Heidi Verougstraete, the firm’s president, and an attorney representing the group, William McDermott, from West Roxbury, did not return repeated phone calls. The petition was submitted by 15 people, most from the Burlington and Woburn areas. A handful of signers did not return phone calls.
Sen. James Eldridge (D-Acton), the Senate chair of the water commission, said the ballot question would work counter to what the commission is trying to do – come up with plans to address unmet water infrastructure needs around the state and devise ways to pay for them.“This ballot initiative would cripple the ability for water districts and towns and cities to provide a clean water supply and to treat water for their residents,” Eldridge said after a recent Water Commission meeting at the State House.
Rep. Carolyn Dykema (D-Holliston), said she thinks thehe ballot question, if approved, would put communities in a very difficult position when trying to pay for water needs.
“I appreciate the sentiment behind it. I believe there are pressures on people coming from many sides,” Dykema said. “But water infrastructure is a critical component of public health and public safety.”.
Goodness I sound like a crackpot myself. Thank Heavens we've got some sensinlble leaders in the Legislature about this.
But I think theres is some changes that can be made in the laws. Maybe we can do it by initiatve petition. Only kidding.