Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Colorado Springs Utilities' Tag

REDEVELOPING VACANT HOUSES, BUILDINGS COULD GET BOOST FROM UTILITIES

November 20th, 2011, 11:31 am by

Chip Landman testifies before the Colorado Springs City Council, sitting in its dual role as the Utilities Board, on Sept. 21, 2011.

In 2006, Chip Landman bought a dilapidated building out of foreclosure and started making plans to restore it — exactly the kind of “infill” development City Hall has promoted for years.

Due to the recession, the building sat until 2009 when Landman learned from Colorado Springs Utilities that it would cost him thousands to reconnect the water and sewer services, which had been shut off when the bank took the property back years earlier.

The huge cost of essentially turning a water valve created what Landman called “a chilling effect on redevelopment of old blighted properties.”

It seems most of the Colorado Springs City Council agree and will consider slashing fees for restoring utility service based on sweeping changes suggested by Utilities staff.

Colorado Springs City Council president Scott Hente

“I’ve heard support for bringing this forward to City Council,” council President Scott Hente told the staff at an Oct. 19 meeting of the council, sitting as the Utilities Board. The council is expected to consider the new fees Dec. 13.

Besides making it cheaper to redevelop commercial property, the proposed fee reductions would apply to residential properties, which have gone into foreclosure by the thousands.

For decades, Utilities didn’t charge to restore utilities unless a property sat disconnected five years or longer. At that point it was deemed abandoned and fees imposed.

In 2006, the codes changed and service was not considered abandoned until 10 years elapsed. Also, Utilities instituted a two-year grace period, after which service restoration fees were imposed. Beginning in 2010, the abandonment period was extended to 20 years.

Dave Munger, president of the Council of Neighbors and Organizations

Under the proposal Utilities proposed, the two-year grace period would grow to five years. And fees would drop. For example, instead of paying about $10,000 to reconnect residential service deemed abandoned, it would be capped at $3,008.

Savings would be even greater for commercial customers. For a 2-inch meter inactive 10 years, reconnection would drop from about $14,000 to about $4,600. And restoring abandoned service would plunge from the current $116,000 to $14,000.

The proposed fee reduction is welcome news to neighborhood activist Dave Munger, president of the Council of Neighbors & Organizations. He said he’s heard many complaints about the fees.

“It’s in everyone’s best interest to figure out ways to encourage infill,” Munger said. “I’m glad to hear Utilities is rethinking its position on reconnection fees.”

Andrew Knauf stands outside his house on West Pikes Peak Avenue. He turned off the utilities in 1993. When he called to get service reconnected about three months ago, he was told it would cost more than $11,000. He is appealing.

It’s unclear if the new fees will help Andrew Knauf, who turned off utilities in 1993 to a house he owns on West Pikes Peak Avenue.

When he tried to restore water and sewer a few months ago, he was told it would cost more than $11,000. He is appealing.

“We’re talking about turning a valve,” Knauf said. “I can’t afford $11,000.”

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PUEBLO WEST RESIDENTS FEEL INSULTED BY SPRINGS UTILITIES

January 30th, 2011, 12:02 pm by
Dwain Maxwell, 73, may be from Georgia and live in the countryside of Pueblo West.
 
But don’t mistake him for some dumb hick.

He thinks Colorado Springs Utilities may have done just that when it approached him and his neighbors to “negotiate” the sale of 50-foot permanent easements across their land to bury a 66-inch water pipeline as part of the $2.3 billion Southern Delivery System project.

Dwain Maxwell of Pueblo West rallied his neighbors after Colorado Springs Utilities launched efforts to buy 50-foot easements so it could bury its 66-inch water pipeline as part of the $2.3 billion Southern Delivery System project. Photo by Chris Fryer/The Pueblo Chieftain

Actually, Dwain is a retired hazardous waste product expert who came to Pueblo West five years ago after a career in Arizona’s Department of Environmental Quality.

So he was well-prepared with questions for CSU’s negotiators when they came to visit to explain their need for his land as they build a 66-mile pipeline from the dam of the Pueblo Reservoir north to Colorado Springs.

 They apparently were not prepared to give him or other neighbors answers.

Dwain said they were polite, professional and friendly. Still, they were insulting in their responses, he felt.

He wanted assurances, in writing, about how CSU would handle the dust its construction equipment would generate.

How it would protect his grandhcildren playing in his backyard from equipment and chemicals.

 How it would safeguard pets and wildlife.

How it would prevent stormwater from ruining his septic system and flooding his basement.

Pueblo Reservoir

CSU’s answers were less than satisfying, Dwain said.

“It was ‘My way or no way’ to everything,” he said.

Next-door neighbor Herbert Walsh was angered by utilities’ approach to him.

“They think John Q. Public down here is stupid,” Herbert told me. “We we’re not stupid.”

Maxwell, Walsh and other neighbors decided to stand firm against CSU and refused to take the $2,200 or so they were offered for a permanent easement to bury the pipeline and a temporary, one-year 50-foot easement for construction.

Walsh figures his land is worth much more. And he wants to be compensated for the loss of his property value, which he said is diminished by the easement which prevents him or any future buyer from building a horse barn or shed.

High-voltage power lines run along an existing utility easement, along with a buried Fountain Valley Water pipeline, on property behind Pueblo West homes. Colorado Springs Utilities plans to bury its own 66-inch Southern Delivery System pipeline on a 50-foot strip adjacent to the existing powerlines and pipeline.

Neighbors say CSU shouldn’t appraise their land as “unimproved” because that implies there is no home, utilities or landscaping.

And they want written assurances about how things will happen during construction and promises of how it will look when they are done.

Here’s an aerial view from Google Earth of the area:

Here you can peruse the Gazette’s archive of stories on SDS.

Read a timeline of the project at this link.

Here’s a link to an interesting engineering story about the project.

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NEIGHBOR MOURNS LOSS OF LONGTIME FRIEND

March 3rd, 2010, 3:00 pm by

OK, this is not what you think. Nobody died.

It’s a post about Colorado Springs turning off 10,000 of the city’s 25,500 streetlights to save $1.25 million.

Crews from Colorado Springs Utilities are in the process of darkening lights all over the city.

 As of Wednesday, 3,106 streetlights had been deactivated, achieving $499,000 in savings.

There is a long way to go to reach the goal.

So far, crews have shut off about 48 percent of the targeted lights along arterial streets — major roads.

Only about 28 percent of the targeted residential streetlights have gone dark.

What are the adoption fees?

For an entire year of service and maintenance lower-wattage (under 175 watts) lights cost $100 and higher-wattage (over 175 watts) cost $240. Higher-wattage lights are usually found along busy, multi-lane roads. Currently, citizens may adopt a lower-wattage light for $75 for the rest of the year.

 Citizens who adopt a light after July 1, 2010 will be charged $50 for lower-wattage lights and $120 for higher-wattage lights. For further information about fees call 385-5903.

Among those upset is Art McDonnell, seen here with his light, who lives on a cul de sac in Village Seven.

He’s owned the home 22 years and used to take the light for granted.

Then, as president of the Village Seven  Homeowners Association, he started to realize how lucky he was to have the light when other neighbors complained about living in the dark and asked for streetlights.

He discovered they are expensive and began to appreciate his solitary beacon.

Now he’s upset the light is out.

He said folks using a nearby entrance to Village Seven’s network of greenways will risk being hit by cars as they come and go in the dark.

And he finds it ironic the entrance will be dark but the greenways are lit because Village Seven homeowners pay for private lighting.

The city feels it has no choice because is trying to bridge a $28 million overall budget gap.

Turning off streetlights is one of many cost-cutting steps being taken.

 Already, a police helicopter has been sold.

 Bus service is being curtailed.

 Community centers shuttered. Pools closed.

 Trash cans removed from parks. 

 McDonnell is considering filing an appeal to get his light turned back on. Folks can do that by appealing in an e-mail to askcity@springsgov.com. You can learn more about the program on the city’s Street Deactivation page at SpringsGov.com.

And watch the page in coming days for information on an “adopt a streetlight” program the city is developing so folks like McDonnell and his neighbors can pay to keep their light burning.

Crews are doing more than just disabling each light’s photo cell that automatically turns lights on at dusk, said Bryan Babcock, who oversees streetlight maintenance at Springs Utitilies.

In the process, they are swapping out old, inefficient mercury vapor bulbs with newer, more energy-efficient high-pressure sodium bulbs. About 2,500 of the old mercury vapor bulbs still remain in the city.

The photo cells are being replaced by $3 plastic plugs. Once removed, the cells are being tested before storage.

McDonnell said neighbors are burning porch lights in the absence of their streetlight. He said lessons he learned during Neighborhood Watch programs put on by the HOA have convinced folks of the value of lights in deterring crime.

In fact, in 2008, the U.S. Justice Department published a 50-page report that concludes streetlights deter crime.

Scientist John Bullough of the Light Research Center at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute reportedly disagrees. He was quoted last August in USA Today saying that there is little evidence to suggest streetlighting deters crime.

Bullough did warn cities not to darken intersections because lighting prevents traffic wrecks.

The USA Today article described how cities across the country are turning out streetlights to save money.

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BUYER BEWARE applies to foreclosed houses

May 13th, 2009, 6:30 pm by

Welcome to Crockett Lane – a bizarre collection of houses, garages and barns converted to living space and jammed together along a dirt road amid big, beautiful trees in a low-lying area that was adjacent to Fountain Creek before Interstate 25 was built.

In the photo below is vew of Crockett Lane taken from the Vanguard School, a new charter academy built by the Cheyenne Mountain School District on a hill overlooking the neighborhood. The photo looks north.

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Another look at Crockett Lane, below, shows the dirt street facing to the east. The Vanguard School is out of view to the right. 

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The neighborhood was created by Lee Jeffers, a disgraced ex-investment broker — his career ended in 2000 when he pleaded guilty to one count of securities fraud, paid a $28,000 fine. State and federal regulators accused him of using an investment strategy deemed too sophisticated and risky for some elderly clients to understand.

Jeffers bought the property in 1987 and subdivided it into 12 lots in two filings with the city planning department. A couple houses existed. He built one. Moved a couple in. Remodeled barn space and garages into living space. Soon he had 24 rental properties and a large horse barn along Crockett Lane.

Below is a look at the neighborhood from www.FlashEarth.com

crockettlaneflash

Only problem, he didn’t get building permits for many of the houses and he piggy-backed utilities from existing houses. That made the houses illegal.

 crockettlane21

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Here is a link to my August 2007 column  about Crockett Lane.

 

 

In the 2007 column, I exposed the illegal houses and the folks at the Pikes Peak Regional Building Department and Colorado Springs Utilities vowed to investigate and take action.

Not so much, as it turned out. In fact, several of the houses sold before Regional Building got around to slapping “Certificates of Non-Compliance” on them. That means the buyers didn’t know they could not be occupied.

certificate2

 

Now the buyers are trying to get the houses up to code so they can be rented or sold. But they are being told to pay for Jeffers’ sins. 

 

Each house must have development permits purchased and building permits and inspections and water, sewer and power lines installed. There are zoning and setback variances to get.

Even worse, the owners are being told the houses sit in a floodplain for Fountain Creek, which is on the other side of Interstate 25. Doesn’t matter that the houses are surrounded by houses not considered in the floodplain.

Here’s a closer look at Crockett Lane.

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