County Fees for Commissary, Waste Permits Likely Headed Higher

Date:

(County Fees for Commissary)

RIVERSIDE (CNS) – The Board of Supervisors is slated tomorrow to consider increasing fees charged by the Riverside County Department of Environmental Health for permits to sell food in markets, operate community water systems, store waste and conduct other activities that require the county’s stamp of approval, but many fees are expected to remain frozen for the
benefit of businesses hard-hit by the coronavirus emergency.


The board will take up Environmental Health Director Keith Jones’ request for hikes to raise permit fees by 3%, approximating an increase in the region’s consumer price index last year.
“The new … fees will produce sufficient revenue to support the proposed costs of providing services in the upcoming fiscal year for which (the) required fees are being charged,” Jones said in a statement posted to the board’s policy agenda.


“Businesses will be moderately impacted by increased fees for food market permits, plan checks, solid waste and hazardous material-related activities, septic tank and water well permits,” he said. “Every effort has been made to minimize impacts on industries which are suffering the economic effects due to COVID-19.”


A county ordinance passed in 2014 authorizes the department to modify fees to keep up with inflation.


Environmental health officials anticipate the agency will be saddled with heftier expenses in 2020-21, due mainly to greater internal service charges, as well as higher labor costs stemming from union contracts, pension obligations, insurance payments and lease outlays connected to five facilities.


The fee hikes will net about $250,000 in additional revenue.


Under the revised fee schedule, obtaining a permit to operate a 300- square-foot open air or closed market selling packaged goods would cost $246 annually, compared to $239 now; a mobile food commissary permit would increase from $606 to $624; a septic tank truck permit would g ofrom $347 to $357; a community water system operating permit would increase from $573 to $590, with up to two dozen connections, and from $1,142 to $1,176 with up to 200; and a permit to repair or modify an underground storage tank would go from $882 to
$908.


The department is proposing to freeze more fees than it seeks to increase, waiving hikes on body art facilities, micro-enterprise home kitchen operations, veterinary clinics medical waste generating facilities, brick-and- mortar restaurants and vending machine operators.

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