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Resolution No. t 3-11 <br />Bill No. <br />A RESOLUTION OF THE COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SOUTH BEND, INDIANA, <br />CALLING FOR MORE DETAILED INFORMATION AND MULTIPLE OPTIONS FROM THE <br />CITY ADMINISTRATION SO THAT THE COMMON COUNCIL HAS THE OPPORTUNITY TO <br />MAKE THE MOST INFORMED DECISION POSSIBLE IN DETERMINING THE <br />MOST "JUST AND EQUITABLE FEES FOR SERVICES RENDERED BY THE SEWAGE WORKS" <br />the South Bend Common Council notes that on December 29, 2011, the United States <br />Attorney's Office and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency issued a news release from Hammond, <br />Indiana, entitled "City of South Bend - Indiana Settlement" where they announced that the "City of <br />South Bend, Indiana has agreed to make an estimated $509.5 million worth of improvements to its <br />combined sewer system to significantly reduce overflows of raw sewage to the St. Joseph River..." <br />which is now projected to cost approximately $667 million; and <br />�cu that News Release noted that the combined sewer overflows (CSOs) resulted in the <br />discharge of pollutants without a permit and therefore was in violation of Section 301 of the Clean <br />Water Act, Title 33 United States Code § 1311; and <br />,e-ra4, that New Release further noted that a Consent Decree was entered into which requires <br />the City of South Bend to implement a Long Term Control Plan (LTCP) by 2031, which included <br />upgrades to the wastewater treatment plant and improvements to the collection system, in light of the <br />fact that "over 2 billion gallons of untreated sewage" was being discharged into the St. Joseph River [not <br />noting that it was being diluted]; and would require the City to reduce by 95% the 80 event discharges to <br />a total of four (4) event discharges ; and <br />G rPreao no member of the South Bend Common Council was involved in the actual <br />negotiations leading up to the Consent Decree; and <br />Gy// ui the South Bend Common Council acknowledges that the Indiana General Assembly <br />has given the municipal legislative bodies the authority to "establish just and equitable fees for the <br />services rendered by the sewage works and provide the dates on which the fees are due" pursuant to the <br />passage of an ordinance consistent with Indiana Code § 36- 9- 23- 25(a); and <br />(�(X a,on June 28, 2010, the South Bend Common Council passed Ordinance No. 10019 -10 <br />which became effective July 10, 2010, raised the sewer rates by an average of 9% per year, with the <br />rates being codified into the South Bend Municipal Code in § 17 -21; and <br />�/4 tray the Common Council notes that South Bend Municipal Code § 17 -25 requires the City <br />Administration to begin discussions with the Common Council by June of 2013 with regard to any <br />revisions and adjustments of the sewage rates "to assure adequacy in the cost of maintaining the City <br />