01.09.2014CouncilMinutes
CITY OF AMMON
CITY COUNCIL MINUTES – WORK SESSION
THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 2014
AGENDA:
CITY OF AMMON
2135 SOUTH AMMON ROAD
CITY COUNCIL AGENDA – WORK SESSION
THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 2014 – 4:30 P.M.
DISCUSSION ITEMS:
1.Sheriff’s Office Update
2.Broadband
3.Sidewalk Maintenance Program
4.Medical Coverage for Partners
5.Misc.
MINUTES
City Officials Present:
Mayor Dana Kirkham
Councilmember Brian Powell
Councilmember Rex Thompson
Councilmember Sean Coletti
Councilmember Russell Slack (arrived at 5:00 p.m.)
Councilmember Brad Christensen
Councilmember Byron Wiscombe (arrived at 5:15 p.m.)
City Administrator/Clerk/Planning Director
Deputy Clerk Rachael Brown
City Engineer Lance Bates
I.T. Director Bruce Patterson
Public Works Director Ray Ellis
Building Official Charlie Allen
City Officials Absent:
City Treasurer Jennifer Belfield
DISCUSSION ITEMS:
Mayor Kirkham opened the meeting at 4:30 p.m. at the City Hall building located at 2135 South
Ammon Road.
1. Sheriff’s Office Update:
Sam Hulse, Captain with the Bonneville County Sheriff’s Office said he thinks things are
going very well with the contract. He said we are in a good place and things are moving forward. The Sheriff’s wants to make sure we
are in front of the growth or change. As far as cost, we are coming out of a downturn; there is more building going on in the county.
Policing is like any other service, it is driven by what is going on in the community. If you add a new housing addition it will require
more services which will also require more policing; that will drive additional numbers and additional calls for police services. Right
now we have good control of what is going on, and have a proper size contingent for what is occurring. Mayor Kirkham asked Sam
his thoughts about a larger fiscal increase for the upcoming year. Sam said we did have a just fewer than three percent cost of living
increase for their employees. That will drive into the contract along with the safety variable. He needs to go over the numbers to be
accurate, but thinks the city is looking at a five percent increase. Councilmember Powell asked if the sheriff’s department was still
covering one third of the D.A.R.E. program. Sam said yes, as long as all parties are willing to contribute. Mayor Kirkham said she
does not expect any changes. Councilmember Thompson and Councilmember Powell have been assigned to the Sheriff’s office. Sam
said he will get the numbers for fiscal 2015 to the Council as soon as possible. Mayor Kirkham said the sooner they have the numbers
the better. Sam wanted the Council to be aware the department is looking at changing and updating the CAD (Computer Aided
Dispatch) system. Discussion ensued regarding the CAD System.
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Sergeant Jason Sorenson reported the number of service calls and arrests for the City of Ammon in the last calendar year. He
reported that there were 9,400 calls for service, and of those calls there were 370 arrests. The Ammon officers are Nick Contreras,
Mike Vasquez, Brad Croyer, Ryan Crumless, Dave Schwartz, and Michael Broderick and Sergeant Sorenson.Councilmember
Christensen said he would be interested in knowing how many DUI’s there have been, and how many of those are convicted. Jason
said he did not have that information, but he will have the numbers for them the next time they meet. He knows there are a lot of
DUI’s, because one of the deputies on his shift gets quite a few. He has the highest in the sheriff’s office for DUI arrests. Mayor
Kirkham said the Council is a little concerned with the City’s prosecution rate. Mayor Kirkham asked if the speed trailer was in use
right now. Jason said it is in the hangars being charged. Mayor Kirkham said she would like it placed on Stafford Drive to give some
awareness to the citizens, and to show that we are responding. Councilmember Christensen said he really enjoys a focus on the public
safety issues, speeding is a public safety issue, officers sit in a place and wait to catch someone speeding; in his mind he would rather
they were patrolling. Mayor Kirkham said she thinks there is a need for a balance, it is aggravating to see deputies parked and waiting
but, it serves a purpose to the public. The only thing that is going to slow people down is being ticketed; when word gets around
someone has been ticketed, people begin to take speed limits seriously. Jason said the deputies have MDT’s (Mobile Data Terminals)
in their patrol vehicles, and they use the time to complete their reports. The parked cars are visible; people see them and check their
speed.
Kevin Casper said Ammon’s DUI numbers are between thirty and fifty per year. Kevin will have the spread sheet with the
exact numbers at the next meeting. He asked Councilmember Powell to bring specific questions regarding prosecution issues and they
will collect that data and compare it to other counties prosecution rates. Councilmember Powell asked Kevin to pull the data and e-
mail it to Ron or Councilmember Thompson. Councilmember Powell asked if the data can be disseminated between City of Ammon
and Bonneville County. Kevin said yes. Kevin reported that on the traffic issues the sheriff’s department does not like the image of
being seen as ticket writers. We try to be responsive with the appropriate level of enforcement. Jason has to balance the few roads that
have consistent speed issues.
Kevin praised Lance, Ron, Ray, and the City of Ammon staff; in the last several years safety has gotten better. The sheriff’s
department used to receive consistent complaints about traffic accidents. An example is the intersection at 17th Street and Ammon
Road; since sanding and plowing has gotten better, the traffic ratio of accidents in the four months of winter is down. Good public
service reflects on public safety. Because of recent growth, the numbers should be up for traffic issues, but they are down. That
reflects good public service. Kevin said no one says thank you for spending more money on the roads, but the department no longer
sees the number of accidents on the intersection that were worse in years past. The City Engineer’s oversight of design and
compliance and analysis of traffic studies is very beneficial. When we deviate from recommended traffic procedures we typically have
trouble down the road which causes enforcement problems for the department. Lance has been a resource on the traffic studies. It is
nice to work together towards solutions. The data shows good decisions have made things safer for the community. Kevin said when
growing, and building developments of a large scale, the department has suggestions for public safety such as lighting apartment
parking lots. The department has been working with the private sector to light two existing lots, and car burglaries have dropped from
200 per year to 100. Good design plays a major role in public safety, and the Council plays a key role in making those decisions.
2. Broadband:
Bruce Patterson introduced to the Council to two gentlemen from Fiber Com. Fiber Com’s intention is to
be a wireless ISP (Internet Service Provider). They have approached Bruce, and have had discussions regarding using the City’s fiber
network for back haul. They would also like to discuss with the City about co-location of sector antennas at the well houses.
Councilmember Thompson asked what a back haul is. Bruce said they need to supply internet to a radio somewhere in the
neighborhood. A wireless antenna will only go so far. They need fiber to feed it optimally; they do not have to feed it with fiber. They
could do hops across radios which would affect the performance of the network. Councilmember Thompson asked if it would be
slower. Bruce said yes. Fiber Com would like to use the City’s fiber. We currently furnish co-locations and space for Digis, formerly
Microserv with a month to month contract. Fiber Com is looking for a similar agreement. They are requesting lit service from our
C.O. We already have an agreement with Syringa to bring the internet to there, and use our fiber to transport it to the various well
houses. Bruce has talked to Ray and Councilmember Powell, and they have some legitimate concerns regarding security for the well
houses. It will be a 24/7 escorted service to the location. The representatives from Fiber Com are here to address those concerns and
answer any questions, and have agreed to call Bruce if they need let onto the property. Mayor Kirkham asked if staff would remain
there while they are on site. Bruce said not necessarily. Councilmember Christensen asked how many locations there would be, and
how much revenue it would generate. Bruce said eventually six locations, and they would all be at the well houses. Bruce would like
to see a separation from the well house antennas. Bruce said his issue is he has some construction to perform for antennas. Fiber Com
is looking to negotiate to pay for some of the construction cost. Discussion ensued regarding the fees.
Vince Call, of Fiber Com said they have been doing research on fiber and the speed of internet. The City of Ammon is lower
on the receiving end of internet. Our goal is to increase the speed, but there hasn’t been the technology for it. The reason we are
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looking at the well houses is that it gives us a closer network to Ammon. The higher population density areas can receive higher
functioning speeds. Councilmember Thompson asked how big of an area would be covered. Vince said five miles each antenna, the
goal is to have a network that will broadcast out to everybody. The more robust network can self-heal if a pump house location does
go down we can reroute to one of the other six locations.
Councilmember Christensen asked Bruce if Fiber Com will become a contender for the Ammon fiber program if Ammon
decides to provide fiber to homes. Bruce said he doesn’t personally feel that way; he feels we are wetting the appetite for other
interested parties. Councilmember Slack said we want people that can provide service to our city. We want to make sure we are
designing systems for our networks that allow multiple people to do what they need to do. Councilmember Coletti asked how often
they would anticipate needing staff to let them on site.
Tim McClanahan, Fiber Com’s engineer said the initial install will take a few days, and then there will be a week of testing;
after that there would be maintenance every three to six months.
The Council is ok with Bruce negotiating the contract.
3. Sidewalk Maintenance Program:
Mayor Kirkham said we have discussed this already, but Ray is looking for
approval. The Council reviewed the policy. Ron explained the policy, and said it’s only for residential property.Councilmember
Thompson asked if the applicant has to have the work done before the City would pay. Ron said yes. Ray will assess the sidewalks of
the citizens that have applied, and the grants would be awarded for the sidewalks that are in the worst shape. Councilmember
Christensen asked what the City’s liability is for not advising people their sidewalks need to be fixed, or not having it fixed. Ron said
ICRMP (Idaho Counties Risk Management Program) said if the City knows there is a problem, and we do not make them fix it, then
the City becomes liable. It is necessary to have a program in place to enforce it. We can enforce it and make them repair the sidewalks,
or we can set $40,000 in the budget so we can assist. As part of the grant the City would remove the existing sidewalk, because we
have a backhoe and a dump truck, and the contractor will frame and complete the sidewalk. It will save the property owner money
since we provided that service. Ray said it saves fifty percent of the new sidewalk cost. Mayor Kirkham said Ray brought up a
concern about the Original Town Site, and asked if it was a possibility that we would move away from sidewalks in the Hillview area,
pull sidewalks out, and do away with curb and gutter to help repair these sidewalks. Her personal feeling is that we are not moving
away from sidewalks. She feels comfortable offering this to the Original Town Site too. Discussion ensued regarding sidewalk issues
in the Original Town Site.
4. Medical Coverage for Partners:
Mayor Kirkham said she moved this issue to the work session to give the Council
time to think and decide how they want to proceed. Ron said the same question came up when the City had insurance with Blue Cross.
Ron explained that the State of Idaho must allow you to offer insurance; most of the contractors at the site offer it for partners, but
right now we have very few employees it would apply to. It is a general question as to whether in the future we want it or not.
Councilmember Powell said he thought we couldn’t do anything already forbidden by the state. Ron said Scott Hall said that, but he
knows the INL offers insurance for partners. Ron said we would offer it to partners that had a legal recognizable partnership. At the
time the legislation was passed coverage may have been allowed through common law, but Idaho is no longer a common law state.
Another thing to take into account would be if you are offering coverage to partners who are not legally recognized, they are buying
insurance that is very inexpensive. The bottom line is that you pay X amount for the employee, and we are charged roughly $570 or
$590 to add a dependent. The employee pays $200, and the City would pay the remaining amount for the partner that is in a
relationship not recognized by the state. Councilmember Powell said he thinks it is a good way to go, because there are people
cohabiting but the relationship is not legally recognized by the State. Ron said the issue would be of people trying to take advantage of
the coverage. Ron thinks there is some logic to thinking about what it costs the city and determining whether it is legal.
Councilmember Slack said the problem is without a legally binding definition of what a relationship is; it is difficult to determine what
cohabitation is. Is it a relative, a short term or long term relationship, or a friend? It becomes difficult to determine where the partner
piece begins and ends without a definition. The legally binding piece solidifies it. Ron said that is the advantage of States that allow
civil unions. Councilmember Thompson said there is a need to consider the City’s insurance premiums are paid for with tax dollars
which is different from the INL or a private company with its own policy that pays for it from their own private funds.
Councilmember Thompson said for the City itself, the more conservative route is how he would go. Councilmember Christensen
doesn’t think we need to extend benefits. Councilmember Slack said he doesn’t know how we could have it any other way; it becomes
so broad it will become a problem without something that binds. Councilmember Coletti said he agrees. Councilmember Wiscombe
said he was going to defer to the rest of Council since this was his first night sitting on the Council.
5. Misc.:
Mayor Kirkham will be attending the City of Idaho Falls Mayor Elect Rebecca Casper’s swearing in.She would
like to encourage the Council to attend as well.
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Mayor Kirkham asked Ray if he is using something different on the roads, because she is happier with them this year. Ray
explained that he purchased treated rock salt. The cost is $80.00 a lane mile. Councilmember Powell asked how long the treatment
lasts. Ray said 24 hours. The rock salt is purchased from a distributor in Utah, but the company hadn’t planned on selling it to the City
so we are limited to how much we can obtain and how much we can afford. Mayor Kirkham said this weekend will certainly be the
test of how well it works since the forecast is calling for snow. Councilmember Powell asked how much of the treated rock salt the
City has on hand. Ray said he had a truck load, but can’t get any more until next week. Mayor Kirkham said she and Ray have been
talking about the pretreatment spray that the city of Idaho Falls uses, and if we have money left in the budget she would like the City
of Ammon to get to a position to where we would be able to use the pretreatment spray also. Mayor Kirkham asked Ray what it costs
to plow the entire City. Ray said a good guess is $20,000. Mayor Kirkham complimented Ray for doing a good job.
Mayor Kirkham said the Council microphones need to be repaired. She received some phone calls after the last meeting from
people in the audience that were unable to hear what was going on. Other Councilmembers’ expressed that they had received similar
phone calls. Ron explained that staff has been unable to keep the microphones from screeching. Mayor Kirkham said the audience felt
excluded from the conversation, and they need to hear what is being said. Ron asked Bruce how much it would cost to upgrade the
sound system. Bruce said to replace just the microphones, the cost is $100 each, but to upgrade the system it would be a few
thousand. He would like the microphones to hang from the ceiling to reduce the amount of feedback sound that we are experiencing
from the ones mounted on the desk. Mayor Kirkham asked Bruce to research the cost of repairing or upgrading the microphones.
Mayor Kirkham askedLance about the $60,000 bill from EIRWWA (Eastern Idaho Regional Waste Water Authority) for the
Ozone treatment for odor control at the lift station. She was not sure why it was billed to the City of Ammon. She spoke with Dave
Noel, and they will discuss the billing at the meeting next week. The total bill was $90,000. The City of Shelley paid $30,000, and
Ammon was billed $60,000. Lance asked what Dave’s explaination was. Mayor Kirkham said his understanding was that the City of
Ammon was going to pay for it using the funds we saved on the screens. Discussion ensued.
Mayor Kirkham would like one of the Council to sit on the INL Citizen’s Advisory Board. Councilmember Christensensaid
he would be happy to.
Mayor Kirkham said it is time for donations to the Spirit of Ammon Scholarship Fund, and she would encourage everyone to
contribute. She would like to see the scholarship grow to a point that it is not only limited to EITC (Eastern Idaho Technical College).
She would like to offer a scholarship to any young person in Ammon going to an Idaho school. Councilmember Coletti wondered if
the Idaho Community Foundation could help put it together. He will look into it. Mayor Kirkham said she would like to encourage the
Council to attend the scholarship award ceremony. Discussion ensued regarding the scholarship process.
Lance gave Councilmember Thompson a draft copy of the proposed parking stall diagram. Ron said this parking design
would work within the 9x18 requirements. Lance said this will also clarify the City’s policy. Councilmember Thompson commented
this encourages diagonal parking.
Councilmember Christensen said he was invited to do the TedxAmmon. It does not have anything to do with the City of
Ammon it is just part of the name. It will be held at EITC. If you are familiar with TedxAmmon, this is a localized version. It is being
held February 21st at EITC. There will be two ninety minute blocks of presentation separated by a dinner. Only 100 people are invited
to attend. Councilmember Christensen asked the Council to let him know if they would like to attend.
Mayor Kirkham said her goal is that by March to use the Work sessions for strategic planning. The department heads have
been given specific assignments. She would like the Councilmembers to meet with their department heads and review the entire fee
schedule for their assigned department. She wants the Council to understand what the fees are, and how they cover cost. She
understands this may be a complicated assignment for some departments such as public works. Councilmember Thompson said he
feels we need a metro police department. There is overlapping coverage with Idaho Falls. Mayor Kirkham said the Sheriff’s office is
the regional police force. Councilmember Slack said Ammon and the County will eclipse Idaho Falls in roughly ten years.
Councilmember Thompson said this is off topic but he would like to share data obtained from the police department
regarding commercial property, particularly Wal-Mart. The data covers where the police went for the year, 15percent of the service
calls were to commercial property, 15 percent to the schools, 35 percent to high density housing areas, and 45 percent residential
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houses. Wal-Mart’s property value at that time was $12.3 million. They paid $159,000 in taxes. The City of Ammon received $25,000
of those taxes. It costs between $100 - $115 per police response call. The sheriff receives 25 to 40 calls per month from Wal-Mart.
The commercial property Wal-Mart does not pay for itself for police protection. This is also true of other commercial properties. The
properties coming to the City of Ammon are not helping with taxes. Councilmember Slack said there are differentials to the data such
as, how long an officer is at the scene. Picking up a shop lifter takes fifteen minutes, while dealing with a domestic violence issue in a
high density area could take hours. Councilmember Thompson agreed; he said he likes having the data available. The commercial
properties add convenience and employment for the residents. Discussion ensued regarding commercial property development.
Councilmember Slack moved to adjourn.
The meeting adjourned at 5:57 p.m.
______________________________________________
Dana Kirkham, Mayor
______________________________________________
Ron Folsom, City Clerk
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