Residents from Claryville/Clearville Road and members of the Long Range Finance Committee described large special‑assessment bills tied to recent water and sewer extensions. Council discussed equity, timing, and the mechanics of special assessments, and the Long Range Finance Committee recommended that a deferral option be available to residential and agricultural properties.
Council directed staff to return an amended ordinance reflecting those recommendations, including a maximum deferral consistent with statutory or policy limits (staff discussed a 20‑year special‑assessment debt schedule as a practical maximum). Council members said the deferral option is not a cure‑all but would provide flexibility for homeowners who face unusually large one‑time assessments when the city extends utilities.
Residents described individual assessment totals that ranged from roughly $25,000 to more than $140,000 under prior projects; council discussed the engineering drivers behind those numbers, including lot frontage and deep mains that drive per‑square‑foot assessment calculations under the city’s rate methodology and state utility rules. Council asked staff to refine the ordinance language, clarify whether “residential” should be defined by use or zoning, and return the draft for formal vote at an upcoming meeting.