HomeMy WebLinkAbout08-05-1997 Regular Meeting
THE AUGUSTA-RICHMOND COUNTY COMMISSION
MINUTES REGULAR MEETING August 5,
1997 Commission Chambers
Meeting commenced at 2:05 p.m. Members of the Commission present
included Mr. Beard, Mr. Bridges, Mr. H. Brigham, Mr. J. Brigham, Mr.
Handy, Mr. Kuhlke, Mr. Mays, Mr. Powell, Mr. Todd, and Mr. Zetterberg;
with Mayor Sconyers presiding. Also present were Ms. Bonner, Clerk of
Commission; Mr. Oliver, Administrator; and Mr. Wall, County Attorney.
THE INVOCATION WAS GIVEN BY THE REVEREND J.R. HATNEY.
THE PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE WAS RECITED.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Ladies and gentlemen, it's our honor today to have
with us a representative from Senator Max Cleland's office. Augusta in
the past for many, many years has not had a federal senator's office
here. We have with us today Scott McGregor, who is going to open an
office for Senator Cleland here in Augusta. Scott, would you come
forward and introduce yourself and greet the people, please?
MR. McGREGOR: On behalf of the Senator and myself, I want to say
how much we're looking forward to getting our office in Augusta here up
and running in the real immediate future. If there's anything that ever
comes up that y'all need the Senator's attention, public or official,
please let me know and I'll take care of it. Thank you.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Thank you, sir. Ms. Bonner, do we have any
additions or deletions?
CLERK: No, sir.
MAYOR SCONYERS: What's our first item of business, please?
CLERK: The first item is a delegation. Mr. Marce McGhee, 3934
Barrett Street, reference to flooding on property. Mr. McGhee?
MR. McGHEE: Yes. I'm having a water problem in my house, in my
building, and I've asked the inspectors to come out and take a look at
it. Now, they came by, took a look at it, and still I have a water
problem. My garage has been flooded seven times. And the water is
being channeled from another property onto mine. Now, I want the
problems -- I want the water stopped, my problem corrected, and I want
all the extra sand and dirt and stuff removed from my property. And the
house is still under [inaudible] and still nothing is being done to
prevent it from flooding again, and I want to know, you know, what is
the law as far as a builder coming in and channeling water onto another
person's property. I've talked to inspectors and I've spoken also to
soil and erosion.
MR. TODD: Is this water being channeled on you by the government
or this is by another private concern?
MR. McGHEE: This is coming from a builder whose name is McCord &
McCord Design. They came in, they built the water up, the water is
coming straight down the hill into my garage.
MR. TODD: Okay. Is this a residential or --
MR. McGHEE: Yes, it is.
MR. TODD: And the other facility is residential also?
MR. McGHEE: Yes.
MR. TODD: Okay. Mr. Mayor, I'd like to hear from License &
Inspection as far as the building plan and how the water is supposed to
be channeled and whether it's per that plan.
MR. SHERMAN: Commissioners, Mr. McGhee lives on Barrett Street in
Belair Hills Estates. McCord & McCord Design/Build is constructing a
house next door to him. The house is elevated above -- or the adjoining
lot is elevated above Mr. McGhee's lot. When they went in and cleared
the lot, just roughed cleared it, they went ahead and prepared a site
for the house. The house is under construction. It's probably 95
percent complete, so we're not ready to issue a CO on the house yet.
The lot has not been landscaped. The water is running around the front
left side of this house and it's concentrating there, running down a
hill onto Mr. McGhee's property, and it has flooded his house out
several times --his garage. I've been in touch with the builder and
I've told him that they need to resolve it before we issue the CO. And
what it's going to involve is putting up a retaining wall at the left
side of the property next to Mr. McGhee's as well as putting in gutters,
running the water around to the back of the property. And, again, the
house -- the construction of the house is coming along fine and it's
meeting all the codes, it's just that the landscaping has not been done
yet, or addressed.
MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, my question is, is there any way that we can,
through enforcement, assure that there's corrective action taken
immediately? If we're waiting on the completion of the house
[inaudible] final sign off, Mr. McGhee can receive significant damage.
MR. SHERMAN: The grading ordinance does not specifically address
this, nor does the soil erosion ordinance. The soil erosion ordinance
does not require a plan because this site will be exempt, but it does
require that they implement the best management practices. He has put
in a silt screen and he has tried to sod the low corner, but there is
just so much wash that it's going over the silt screen. The only thing
that I know to do is to just tell them that it has to be done before the
CO will be issued, and hopefully they will go ahead and take care of it.
It's going to be a big problem for them the longer they wait, because
if they continue to damage Mr. McGhee's property I suppose then it'll
end up in a civil suit.
MR. TODD: Yes. Mr. Mayor, I understand that, you know, once we
sign off, then it's certainly a issue then between the two parties in a
civil matter. If our site plans as far as drainage and sedimentation go
is not protecting other property owners, existing property owners, when
they're doing new construction, then we need to make sure that we take
that corrective action and procedure so we can protect existing property
owners. And I'm going to make a motion that we receive this as
information and that we request through the building and inspection
department that they work with Mr. McGhee and Mr. McCord or McCord
contractors to resolve this issue to eliminate any additional damages.
That's in the form of a motion.
MR. HANDY: Second.
MR. MAYS: I guess my question is directed to Mr. Wall, no hot seat
intended. Jim, I understand what Rob is dealing with within the law
that's there, but obviously -- and I don't know what the date time of
completion that they are looking at that's in there, but obviously if
there is some ongoing damage that's in there, is there no remedial
situation, say, at least on a 30-day situation or ordering the stopping
thereof if you know there is ongoing damage, and if this is going to
have to be a potential situation that we're going to have to sign off on
and if this is putting us in a legal one, it may be one that we may want
to discuss in legal session. But I think if there is an ongoing
situation and our department recognizes it, and maybe because of the
strength of the law it's not there, then if by weather or if by other
jobs or whatever, that if it continues, say, maybe past a reasonable
length of time, he could end up getting washed away. And I'd hate to
see it to where, you know, we basically kind of, you know, sit while,
you know, and fiddle while Rome burns. And I know we can't make an
after-ordinance to it. It's obvious that we're going to have to maybe do
something to correct future problems with it. And there are some
things, Rob, you're probably going to find out in your new position that
you're going to be coming back to us to ask for other changes on it, but
I think this is one, if we recognize it from an enforcing department,
then it looks like somewhere within there -- there should be something
there that we can at least encourage, cite through warning or whatever.
And I can support the motion on the floor, but I think we need to
maybe do something in there if damages are occurring, we know they're
occurring, because I think if we don't change it, then to a certain
extent it's -- you know, this is almost as damaging as the 1990 flood,
you know, when people build and hoping that they're going to be safe
down the road. And if future development is going to harm that in the
process, then something is going to have to be put in. While we may
want growth, we're going to have to have planned growth and we're going
to have to have growth which does no damage that which is already there.
I just think somewhere in there within the law that we ought to be able
to deal with something in order to deal with this before this is under
final sign off.
MR. WALL: We have in the past on occasion issued stop-work orders
where there was erosion on property, and I think that this needs to be
left in the discretion of the inspectors that are out there, both within
Rob's department and within Public Works, as far as whether they're
getting cooperation out of the home builder on the adjacent lot. But we
have on occasion issued stop-work orders where they were not addressing
the problem.
MR. MAYS: Let me ask this maybe then. Would the maker of the
motion -- and I think if we can get it with [inaudible] if we can get
the cooperation out of this motion and allow Rob and those to work it
out, I have no problem with that, but would you maybe accept an
amendment to that motion to allow License & Inspection at least the
latitude if they are not getting that cooperation, then they have the
right not necessarily to wait back until we're at a regular meeting but
to go ahead on and issue a stop-work order if that's the attention it's
going to take. It may not, but --
MR. TODD: Yes, I'll accept that amendment, Mr. Mayor. And I think
that License & Inspection probably already have the authority to stop
work at any time that there's a safety issue, et cetera.
MR. ZETTERBERG: I have a question. I'm quite familiar with the
problems of water and drainage out in Belair Hills Estates, and I'm
concerned that the water that is coming off and maybe going through that
property comes off the top of the hill [inaudible], and if that's the
case, that's all tied together with another large project that Public
Works has. So, Rob, I'd like you to work with Public Works to -- Jack
Murphy and Mike Green know all about that, because we have done some
remedial work on Barrett [inaudible].
MR. SHERMAN: I was just going to say, I think all the water that's
going onto Mr. McGhee's property is originating on the adjoining lot.
It's not being deflected from the street.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Further discussion, gentlemen? All in favor of
Mr. Todd's motion, with the amendment, let it be known by raising your
hand, please.
MOTION CARRIES 9-0. [MR. POWELL OUT]
CLERK: Item 2: The Turpin Hill Neighborhood Association, Reverend
J.C. Phinizy, regarding recreation in the Turpin Hill neighborhood area.
REV. PHINIZY: Mr. Mayor, to our County Commissioners, and to the
people assembled, thank you for allowing us a few minutes of your
precious time to speak about recreation, or should I say the lack of
recreation in our Turpin Hill neighborhood community. I am the Reverend
J.C. Phinizy, a retired Baptist pastor and a retiree of the First Union
National Bank. I reside at 1303 Steed Street, and I am the President of
the Turpin Hill Neighborhood Association. I'm going to ask Dr.
Washington and also Mr. Robertson, would you please stand with me. We
represent some of the best law abiding, tax paying, God fearing, caring
and concerned voting citizens in the Augusta area. We believe in the
brotherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. We are proud of our
neighborhood and all those who live there, but there is one thing
lacking and that is recreation. Since 1994 we have met in meetings
with Mr. Paul DeCamp, Mr. George Patty, Mr. Lee Beard, Mr. Freddie
Handy, Mr. Willie Mays, Mr. Moses Todd, Mr. Henry Brigham, Mr. Robert
Howard, and others about our recreation in our community, and they all
agree that we should have a recreational center built in our community.
On June 23, 1997, at Mount Calvary Missionary Baptist Church, at a
meeting conducted by Brother Keven Mack concerning community block grant
we again brought up the recreational center in our community. Mr.
Robert Howard informed us that a center was on the drawing board for our
neighborhood. You can imagine how happy we were to hear that good news.
Later on in the Augusta Chronicle there was a write up about that
neighborhood center to be built on the land of the old Howard Lumber
Company on Martin Luther King Boulevard. So today we stand before
you all pleading again that you will please build that community center
that was recommended at the same time Jones pool was built in the early
'60s. For 28 long years we have been pleading, and today we stand
before you asking that it be done, and we hope today that it will be.
Paul said, "Whatsoever things that are pure, whatsoever things that are
good, whatsoever things that are honest, whatsoever things that are
just, whatsoever things that are right, whatsoever things that are
decent, do it." The Master said, "Inasmuch as you have done it unto the
least of these, my brethren, you have done it unto me." The old,
the young, and our children need our recreational center. We no longer
have the Bethlehem Community Center together. It is not there for our
activities anymore. And like the other neighborhood centers that are
built, that center will serve all the people regardless. You have the
power in this new consolidated government to assure the people of
Augusta-Richmond County that we have a government not only with the
people, by the people, but we also have a government for the people. So
please, please, please build that new center in the Turpin Hill area
that was recommended 28 years ago and it still hasn't come to fruition.
Build it for the old people, for the young people, for the middle class,
for the rich, for the poor, for the professionals, and for the non-
professionals. Build it for the people. And if you build it, the Lord
will bless you and so will the people. Thank you for your time, thank
you for listening, the Reverend J.C. Phinizy, respectfully yours,
President of the Turpin Hill Neighborhood Community Association. Thank
you. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I'd like to make a motion that we
receive the delegation's comments as information, and I would have some
comments when we got the motion on the floor. MR. ZETTERBERG:
Second. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I guess there's been some interest
for some time in the Martin Luther King Boulevard area there at Turpin
Hill, and it's somewhere between Turpin Hill and the Bethlehem Community
area. And there is approximately, I believe, somewhere between 300 and
500 thousand dollars that was designated to go to the Bethlehem
Community Center that is not possible because they couldn't come up
with, I guess, clear title to property or a long-range lease. And where
that project would have minimum impact on the General Fund, if we're
building one and running it by Recreation it would have significant
impact, but that is one funding source that we could look towards for a
center for Turpin Hill area. We applied for a grant I guess for the
senior center which is up the street from there, and there wouldn't be
any need, in my opinion, to try to tie it together because we have a
landfill situation on the property adjacent to the -- or I should say a
methane gas problem that's probably going to be there for some time
adjacent to the senior center. So the Howard lumber yard or somewhere
in the general area I wouldn't have a problem with, and I think that we
at least have a funding source that we can start with there. So those
are my comments, and I can support a center as long as we're not busting
the budget and we're doing it from existing funds. MR. HANDY: Mr.
Mayor and Commissioners, the Bethlehem Center that Mr. Todd mentioned is
in an area that I represent, and also the area where Reverend Phinizy
was speaking of is another area that I represent in District Two. I
have spoken with Commissioner Mays and others, along with Reverend
Phinizy, about the possibility of putting a community center in that
area. And, also, since the Jones swimming pool -- the money that it
takes to repair that Jones swimming pool is to actually put a swimming
pool over there along with this particular center. I have spoken with
Mr. DeCamp, also spoken with Mr. Patty, and I've spoken with Mr. Beck
about the recreation, and Mr. Howard, so we all are in accord of trying
to come up with a possibility of putting a center in that particular
area, and the only thing that is keeping us from doing it is finance as
well as being able to acquire the land. We haven't had a study or not to
see whether or not it's feasible to put a center in that particular
area, but we will contact the Recreation Department and try to go
forward to give Reverend Phinizy and the concerned citizens a answer.
We will pursue the possibility of trying to put a center in that area
and we will do all we can to honor your request. MR. MAYS: The
only thing I'd like to add to that -- and I said before, representing
four districts from the river all the way to the north side of Tobacco
Road back. I think we have to be careful -- and I've spoke with
Reverend Phinizy about this and he knows I'm in full support of doing
that. I guess I was elated, too, at the point when we started having a
funding source to finally deal with recreation and to being able to get
some funding into our non-profits. One of the things that did happen is
what Commissioner Handy has said, but I think it's also important that
monies that are targeted to various areas, that if a particular project
cannot go through on Street A -- and I think this has got us in the
political ruckus that we get in from time to time -- is of making sure
that whether it be through forgetfulness, through amnesia, through
reprogramming, whatever, that they just don't automatically take flight
and just disappear. And I want to make sure that while we're
committed to --and it's going to have to come back through Recreation in
terms of finalization, particularly because of environmental reasons if
we're going to deal with that site. But I want to make sure that even
if there is a problem, that the committed monies for that area stay in
that area. And I think very often when projects get delayed for one
reason or another, the shift comes in and then the shaft comes in, and
then people and faces change, and then governments many times forget
what they've actually promised and even forget what's even taken in
minutes many times, or don't own up to it. And that's the main thing
that we appreciate you coming for today and to be a constant reminder to
us of where and what area that that money was allocated for. And I
promise you that even if we got to shift 500 feet either way or a half a
mile either way, that we remain committed to where those funds were
targeted to and they don't just all of a sudden disappear because of
what happened in Bethlehem Center. That may have been a legal
situation, but the community didn't disappear and the folk didn't
disappear, and I think that's the thing that the Commission has to
remain committed to, and I just wanted to put that in for the record.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Further discussion, gentlemen? All in favor of Mr.
Todd's motion, let it be known by raising your hand, please. MOTION
CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item C: Representatives from the Imperial Theater,
regarding Imperial Theater. MR. BEARD: Mr. Mayor, could I just
make a statement prior to hearing from the delegation in reference to
the Imperial Theater. You know, I just want this group to understand
that we have an item coming up in the next few minutes that
Commissioners are having a hard time with because both groups -- we
support them very highly and we think that both of those groups offer a
service to the community that the community needs, and I would just like
to at this time give you a little background on the funds that we
possibly will discuss if there is a need to. The background goes
back to City Council, and I would just like to forget about both groups
for a minute and just talk about the intent of the funds that were
allocated at the end of the old Augusta as we knew it, City of Augusta
and the City Council. The City Council Finance Committee made the
decision to allocate sales tax funds, and in that they allocated
$750,000 to inner-city. Now, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to
understand what inner-city means in this country, and I think, you know,
my fellow Commissioners understand that. They have been told by the
former mayor what that meant, and many of you out there in the audience
know where that money was supposed to go. But, you know, if we are
going to grow as a community, there has to be some sort of fairness
issued to everybody. And hoping in that respect that we won't get into a
whole lot of dialogue in trying to determine where that money is going,
the subcommittee made a recommendation that even though we knew where
that money was supposed to go -- and my colleague, Mr. Mays, just
elaborated on some of the things that a lot of us think. We knew where
that money was supposed to go, but we said in fairness that we would
divide it between the two groups because we think that there was a need
to give them something of support for the Imperial Theater. And after
talking to many of my colleagues up here, I feel that we are ready to
make a motion at this time that $300 be allocated to the Imperial
Theater -- $300,000 be allocated to the Imperial Theater and 450 be
allocated to the Mini Theater. That is in the form of a motion.
MR. HANDY: Second. MAYOR SCONYERS: Do y'all want to have the
discussion now or hear from the representatives first? MR. BEARD:
Mr. Kuhlke has his hand up and I would like to hear what he has to say.
MR. KUHLKE: I respect my colleague Mr. Beard's position on this,
but -- and he and I had a chance the end of last week to sit down with
Mr. Butler and Mr. Esterbrook and discuss this particular issue. I told
him fortunately I was not a member of City Council and so I'm totally
unaware of what these funds were actually designated for. In fact, I
think that there was a lot of misunderstanding from the standpoint of
what really these funds were supposed to be used for. We had a
presentation a while back from the Imperial Theater where they asked
this Commission for $541,000. I along with some of the other
Commissioners had the opportunity to visit the Imperial Theater to take
a look at some of their needs, and actually the theater is in deplorable
condition. They have a plan to go forward. They have specific needs
that they can do immediately. The Mini Theater, in meeting with Mr.
Butler last Friday, it appears that their plans would probably begin
sometime a year and a half from now. Specifically, they don't have any
plans. I would like to offer a substitute motion, and I was hoping
that it wouldn't get to this because I think basically what's going to
happen is this may end up being perceived as a racial issue, and it's
further from the truth. But I'd like to offer a substitute motion that
we disburse this money, $300,000 to the Mini Theater, $300,000 to the
Imperial Theater; that we enter into an agreement with both
organizations that we would disburse $75,000 each to each organization
based on them raising a two-for-one match for the $150,000. And
basically what that means is this: In the case of the Imperial Theater,
if they get 300, if they raise 150, bringing them to 450, and then we
disburse 75, they're within $20,000 of what they have requested of this
Commission. And I think both organizations -- I think it's a win-win
situation for both organizations. The Mini Theater is already
designated for $400,000 out of the sales tax, this would be another 375.
If they dispose of their existing facility, and I don't know what the
value of that is, that would give them a large pot of money to go out
and build another facility. So I offer that in the form of a motion --
substitute motion. MR. J. BRIGHAM: I'll second his substitute.
MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I guess Ms. Linda Beazley is not here, but Mr.
Jerry Brigham, Henry Brigham and Willie Mays and Freddie Handy is still
with us, and you are here and Mr. Jim Wall. When we were trying to pass
the -- or at least we were proposing a referendum on one-cent sales tax
in 1995, one of my concerns were, and some of my constituents, that we
didn't make the mistakes that we made in the previous sales tax
referendums and that we specify what money was being used for. And I
probably pushed as hard as anyone to make sure that that happened, and
when it come down to the city's monies I also pushed there, too. And I
was told that I was meddling where I shouldn't be, that it was another
government, but I felt that we had a responsibility as a county because
only county governments can pass referendums and county governments is
responsible for the distribution and to make sure that the expenditures
is proper on one-penny sales tax -- special project sales tax. So I
felt a responsibility to assure that the City of Augusta, the City of
Hephzibah, specified where those monies was going to be spent, and we
made that push. Now, there was some funds that wasn't designated.
As far as the City of Hephzibah go, we made sure that they listed things
even as far as small equipment that could be capital outlay. The City
of Augusta -- the former mayor didn't cooperate that well, but he
finally come around to an extent, and it was a understanding that the
$750,000 that I later questioned was to be for inner-city or for low to
moderate income families, and that was my understanding. Now, there was
nothing ever put in writing on this, but I wanted a feel of where money
was going to go to assure that individuals wasn't going to be able to
use those funds as political slush funds down the line, where you got a
pot of money and you kind of deal it out to whoever is, you know, brown-
nosing with you at the time or whatever. And we come pretty close to
assuring that that didn't happen, and I would hope in the next one-penny
sales tax referendum that we make sure that it's designated where monies
is going before taxpayers and citizens vote on it. That's important,
because if you don't do that you're going to have situations like this.
I support both groups. The daily paper editorial page stated that
one of the entities has been around for a lot longer than the other one.
Well, I think he got his facts wrong or he had something in his coffee
the morning that he wrote the editorial. When I come to Augusta in
1978, I believe the Mini Theater was around or just been started. I
believe at the same time that they were showing movies at the other
theater, just to, you know, set the facts straight as I recollect, and I
have a fairly decent recollection. But there is no merits really in
who's been around the longest, the merits is in what service delivery
the two theaters are doing to the community, for the community, and I
think both of them are doing a good service delivery. One is leaning
more to low to moderate income, the other one is leaning probably a
little more to, you know, a dinner and a play crowd, and I don't have a
problem with that. I can't afford it, but I don't have a problem with
it. I'm in support of the arts. At a time when counties like Cobb
County is, you know, stopping all funding for the arts or other counties
throughout the state, or cities, I'm in support of the arts. I don't
think that we should have a falling out here over a few thousand dollars
one way or the other. I think we should go on and do the distribution
of these funds and assure in the future that this don't happen again.
And I'm speaking opposed to the substitute and speaking in support of
the original motion. Thank you, Mr. Mayor. MR. BRIDGES: Mr. Mayor
and fellow Commissioners, I think one thing we need to keep in mind on
both of these resolutions is that regardless of how this comes out, is
that there be a proper accounting of these funds and that maybe we want
to restrict them for capital expenditures. At least when we draw up the
contract, Randy, we need to make sure that we're not expending funds out
there that aren't accounted for and are not used properly in the manner
that we intend. MR. OLIVER: It's my understanding of the sales tax
referendum that these funds can only be spent on capital. And that was
one of the clarifications, Mr. Beard, that I had was do you want
contracts to come back on this, and in that contract do you want any
form of a match in your motion at all? MR. BEARD: There was no
match in my motion, but I will go along with what Commissioner Bridges
is saying about accountability and in making sure -- MR. OLIVER:
And bring back a contract then? MR. BEARD: Yeah, and a contract,
but not a match. Could we have a roll call vote on this? MAYOR
SCONYERS: Substitute motion first, Ms. Bonner.
VOTING YES: MESSRS. BRIDGES, J. BRIGHAM, KUHLKE & ZETTERBERG.
VOTING NO: MESSRS. BEARD, H. BRIGHAM, HANDY & TODD. MR. MAYS &
MR. POWELL ABSTAIN.
MOTION FAILS 4-4-2.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Go back to the original motion. CLERK:
Original motion made by Mr. Beard.
VOTING YES: MESSRS. BEARD, BRIDGES, H. BRIGHAM, HANDY, MAYS &
TODD.
VOTING NO: MESSRS. J. BRIGHAM, KUHLKE, POWELL & ZETTERBERG.
MOTION CARRIES 6-4.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Ladies and gentlemen, we're going to change the
agenda just a little bit. We're going to do Public Services next.
That'll be 80 through 92. CLERK: Items 80 through 92 were approved
by the Public Services Committee on July 28th, with the correction of an
address on Item 88. That should read 3328 Washington Road. [Item
80: Motion to approve an agreement between Augusta State University and
Augusta-Richmond County for purchase of existing inventory at Newman
Tennis Center of equipment and supplies by Augusta-Richmond in the
amount of $22,502.00, and payment for court time by Augusta State
University in the amount of $22,344.00. Item 81: Motion to approve
a work-study agreement at Newman Tennis Center between Augusta State
University and Augusta-Richmond County. Item 82: Motion to approve
new ownership request by Peng Xin for a consumption on premises beer and
wine license to be used in connection with the China Express Restaurant
located at 2044 Peach Orchard Road. District 8, Super District 10.
Item 83: Motion to approve new ownership request by Kum Yon Parker for
a consumption on premises beer and wine license to be used in connection
with Ahrirang Korean Restaurant located at 3008 Deans Bridge Road.
There will be Sunday sales. District 2, Super District 9. Item 84:
Deleted from consent agenda. Item 85: Motion to approve new
ownership request by Lora Ann Cain for a consumption on premises liquor,
beer and wine license to be used in connection with the New Continental
Restaurant & Lounge located at 1520 Aviation Way. There will be a dance
hall and Sunday sales. District 1, Super District 9. Item 86:
Motion to approve new ownership request by Joyce Holloway for a
consumption on premises beer license to be used in connection with
Chocolate City Lounge located at 2320 Gordon Highway. There will be a
dance hall. District 4, Super District 9. Item 87: Deleted from
consent agenda. Item 88: Motion to approve request by Henry D.
McLendon for Sunday sales license to be used in connection with Good
Fella's Food & Spirits, Inc. located at 3328 Washington Road. District
7, Super District 10. Item 89: Motion to approve allocations from
1997 Recreation and Parks budget, $2,500.00 to Masters City Little
League and $2,500.00 to West Augusta Little League to offset operational
costs for youth baseball and softball leagues that each operate (subject
to contract for services between leagues and ARC.) Item 90: Motion
to approve a request to submit a pre-application for federal assistance
for projects at the Daniel Field Airport. Local share, $43,658, to be
taken from Daniel Field Reserves. Item 91: Deleted from consent
agenda. Item 92: Motion to approve a Professional Services
contract to Roger Davis and Associates in the amount of $43,680.00
(subject to contract review by attorney).] MAYOR SCONYERS: Do we
have any objectors to any of these, please? [None noted.] MR.
MAYS: Mr. Mayor, I make a motion that we accept the items, with the
exception of the ones that we have pulled for the right of objectors,
that they be accepted as a consent agenda, and that we handle the others
individually. MR. H. BRIGHAM: Second. MAYOR SCONYERS:
Discussion, gentlemen? All in favor of Mr. Mays' motion, let it be
known by raising your hand, please. MR. TODD VOTES NO ON ITEMS 80 & 81.
MR. BRIDGES & MR. POWELL VOTE NO ON ITEMS 83, 85 & 88. MOTION CARRIES 9-
1, ITEMS 80 & 81. MOTION CARRIES 8-2, ITEMS 83, 85 & 88. MOTION CARRIES
10-0, ITEMS 82, 86, 89, 90 & 92.
CLERK: Item 84 is a motion to approve new ownership request by
Sang Pak for consumption on premises beer license to be used in
connection with Olympic Pool Hall located at 2763 Tobacco Road, Ste. L.
District 4, Super District 9. MR. TODD: I guess my concern, is
that in a shopping center? Is someone here from License? MR.
WALKER: Yes, sir, that is a shopping center, but it was an old location
that already had alcohol and there is a new owner applying. MR.
TODD: And they had on-premises beer? MR. WALKER: Yes. MR.
TODD: And what we're doing now is -- MR. WALKER: Is just
transferring the owner. Still keeping on-premises beer and it's a new
owner. MR. TODD: Yes, okay. I just wanted to make sure that we
didn't have a different situation. I'm going to make a motion that we
approve it, but we have a school crossing there close and I'm trying to
look out for interest as far as school go. MR. KUHLKE Second.
MR. POWELL: Mr. Chairman, I'd like to ask the representative from the
Sheriff's Department if they've had any problems at this location that
we need to be aware of. The reason I'm bringing that forward is I've had
some citizens call me and say that this situation is a public nuisance.
MR. BERRY: My name is Roderick Berry and I'm with the Sheriff's
Department. Myself and Sergeant Turnage work vice and we've received no
complaints from this area. MAYOR SCONYERS: Further discussion,
gentlemen? All in favor of Mr. Todd's motion, let it be known by
raising your hand, please. MR. POWELL VOTES NO. MOTION CARRIES 8-1.
[MR. BEARD OUT]
CLERK: Item 87: Motion to approve new ownership request by Myong
Tul Chu for retail package beer and wine license to be used in
connection with Bi-Rite Convenience Store located at 1680 Brown Road.
District 8, Super District 10. MR. SMITH: Thank you,
Commissioners, we appreciate the opportunity to speak against this
motion. My name is Jimmy Smith, I live at 1332 Brown Road, a Hephzibah
address, and my concern is our community. This is a residential area
and one of the fastest growing in Richmond County. We have close by
Goshen Elementary School, the new high school will begin construction
this fall, we have Pine Hill Baptist Church within a rock-throwing
distance, we also have Liberty Methodist Church likewise, and we feel
that we would like to keep our area a residential area. We are between
two major thoroughfares, Highway 25 and Highway 56, that's lined with
convenience stores that all have beer and wine licenses. And we realize
that when Mr. Chu moves next door to his new building, that there will
be another one going in the building that he's moving out of, and we
feel that it will be a natural hangout for our young people and we're
opposed to that. People are leaving Richmond County now because of this.
We don't have any personal vendetta against Mr. Chu. We know that he's
legal, I already checked into this. But my question to you, gentlemen,
is would you want this in your neighborhood where you live? Thank you.
MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, my question is to Mr. Smith and basically to
Mr. Walker, and I guess I'll start with Mr. Walker. We're at the
distance required for the churches, for the schools, including the new
school that's proposed? MR. WALKER: The new school I do not know
about, you know, but from the school and the churches and all, it does
meet the distance requirement. The fact is, the church, the closest,
Pine Hill Baptist Church, is 541 feet, measured by Mr. Harris, from the
front door of the convenience store to the property line, then from the
property line to the church. MR. TODD: Then I guess my question
is, is there a new school proposed on Brown Road or is that just in the
general area that the new school is proposed? MR. SMITH: The new
school is proposed on Old Waynesboro Road, and the question in point is
where they put the new building is at the intersection of Old Waynesboro
and Brown Road, so it's just right down the road from the store where
the new high school is to begin construction this fall. MR. TODD:
I guess to Mr. Chu, do you own any other locations in the county?
MR. CHU: No, sir. MR. WALKER: He owns Young's Country Store at
4170 Old Waynesboro Road. He is closing that one and moving to this
location. MR. TODD: Is the old store also going to be a
convenience store quick stop, I guess my next question, where you're
going to have beer and wine to go? MR. WALKER: As far as we know,
there's been no application or anything on the old store. It's a lease
-- I believe he said it's a lease property. MR. CHU: Yeah, lease
property. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I have a question for the County
Attorney, and the question, Mr. Mayor, is even when a license -- a
petitioner or a licensee meet all the legal requirements, isn't it still
up to the discretion of the Commission if the folks that's opposed show
that it's going to have a negative impact on the environment, community,
et cetera? MR. WALL: One of the things that's provided in our
ordinance is that even if it meets those distance require-ments, that
additional consideration is the location as to traffic congestion, the
general character of the neighborhood, and the effect such an
establishment would have on the adjacent and surrounding property
values. And so the fact there's a school to be located and the
neighborhood character can be considered, as well as the number of
licenses in the trading area. MR. TODD: Yes. Thank you, Mr.
Mayor. I just wanted to make sure that my colleagues understood that.
MR. J. BRIGHAM: Mr. Walker, is this a new application or is this a
change of ownership? MR. WALKER: It was listed as a new
application. It's a new location. Same application, new location, and
he's closing one and opening a new one. MR. J. BRIGHAM: Our book
says it's a change of ownership, that's the reason I'm asking. It's a
new location? MR. WALKER: It's a new location. MR. J.
BRIGHAM: Okay. Mr. Wall, isn't there a new state law as to distance
requirements between existing locations and proposed new locations, and
does this meet that? I think it went into effect July the 1st. MR.
WALL: You've caught me if it has, because I don't know -- I'm not aware
of it. I think it's still 100 yards. MR. J. BRIGHAM: I don't
think so. If I remember reading in some of my materials, I think there
was a new state law on the distance requirement and I think there's a
distance law from existing locations. I might be wrong, but I remember
reading it. It was either one that passed or one that was proposed, but
I thought it passed. MR. WALL: I'm not aware of any that passed.
I could be in error. I mean, I tried to review the summary of the bills
that came out, and I do not recall one that was passed. MR. TODD:
Mr. Mayor, would I be in order to make a motion that we table this one
until the end of the meeting until Legal Counsel can get a update on the
change in legislation? MAYOR SCONYERS: Absolutely. MR. TODD:
I so move, Mr. Mayor. MAYOR SCONYERS: Thank you, Mr. Todd. Mr.
Wall, will that give you time? MR. WALL: Yes, sir. I'll go check
on it. MR. BRIDGES: Mr. Mayor, some of the residents wanted to
speak to the motion to table. Is that permissible? MAYOR SCONYERS:
No, that's a non-debatable motion. As soon as he gets back we'll bring
it back up. We won't have to wait till the end of the meeting. MR.
TODD: Mr. Mayor, a point of information. Do we need to take a vote on
the motion to table? MAYOR SCONYERS: Thank you, Mr. Todd. All in
favor of Mr. Todd's motion to table, let it be known by raising your
hand, please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 91: Motion to approve new ownership request by
Richard S. Pak for a consumption on premises beer license to be used in
connection with Baldinos Giant Jersey Subs located at 2760-E Tobacco
Road. MR. POWELL: Mr. Chairman, I'd also like to make a motion
that we table this item until we get that ruling back, because that's
the same concern I have with this location. MR. TODD: Second.
MAYOR SCONYERS: All in favor, let it be known by raising your hand,
please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Mr. Mayor and the Commission, the Planning Commission
recommends as a consent agenda all items with the exception of Items 5,
10, and 11. [Item 1: Z-97-59 - Request for concurrence with the
decision of the Planning Commission to approve a petition from Fielding
Spring Baptist Church, on behalf of Richmond County Board of Education,
requesting a Special Exception for the purpose of establishing a church
as provided for in Section 26-1, Subparagraph (a) of the Comprehensive
Zoning Ordinance for Augusta-Richmond County, on property located on the
west right-of-way line of Mike Padgett Highway (Ga. Hwy. #56), 155 feet,
more or less, north of the northwest corner of the intersection of
Rollins Road and Mike Padgett Highway. Item 2: Z-97-61 - Request
for concurrence with the decision of the Planning Commission to approve
a petition from Powertel, Inc. & Gearson Communications, on behalf of
Paul M. Davis, requesting a Special Exception for the purpose of
establishing a telecommunication tower as provided for in Section 26-1,
Subparagraph (c) of the Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance for Augusta-
Richmond County, on property located on the southwest right-of-way line
of Cookie road, 1,205 feet, more or less, southeast of a point where the
centerline of Marvin Griffin Road intersects the southwest right-of-way
line of Cookie Road extended (3427 Cookie Road). Item 3: Z-97-62 -
Request for concurrence with the decision of the Planning Commission to
approve a petition from Powertel, Inc. & Gearson Communications, on
behalf of Byron B. Magum, Jr., requesting a Special Exception for the
purpose of establishing a telecommunications tower as provided for in
Section 26-1, Subparagraph (c) of the Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance for
Augusta-Richmond County, on property located on the north right-of-way
line of Gordon Highway, 1,456 feet, more or less, east of a point where
the northeast right-of-way line of Robinson Avenue (Ga. Route 223)
intersects the north right-of-way line of Gordon Highway. Item 4:
Z-97-63 - Request for concurrence with the decision of the Planning
Commission to approve with the condition 'That detailed surveys shall be
conducted and submitted to our office and the FAA showing the exact
location and height (MSL) of the top of the tower, and if these surveys
or any other studies related to the airport reveal a problem, then this
approval shall be null and void', a Petition from Powertel, Inc. &
Gearson Communications, on behalf of Bowles & Bowles Construction, Inc.,
requesting a Special Exception for the purpose of establishing a
telecommunications tower as provided for in Section 26-1, Subparagraph
(c) of the Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance for Augusta-Richmond County,
on property located on the east right-of-way line of Hire Street
(private), 249.53 feet south of the southeast corner of the intersection
of Tindon Street and Hire Street. Item 6: Z-97-65 - Request for
concurrence with the decision of the Planning Commission to approve a
petition from Patricia Boozer, on behalf of Patricia & Morgan Boozer,
requesting a change of zoning from Zone R-1C (One-family Residence) to
Zone R-MH (Mobile Home Residential) on property located on the northeast
right-of-way line of Wise Drive, 380 feet, more or less, southeast of a
point where the southeast right-of-way line of Alabama Road intersects
with the northeast right-of-way line of Wise Drive. Item 7:
Deleted from consent agenda. Item 8: Z-97-67 - Request for
concurrence with the decision of the Planning Commission to approve a
petition from Mark A. Ahlbrandt, on behalf of Mark A. Ahlbrandt and
Elaine Foss, requesting a change of zoning from Zone B-1 (Neighborhood
Business) to Zone B-2 (General Business) on property located on the
southeast corner of the intersection of Denmark Drive and Peach Orchard
Road (3324 Peach Orchard Road. Item 9: Z-97-68 - Request for
concurrence with the decision of the Planning Commission to approve a
petition from Frank D. Davis, on behalf of Frank D. and Mary D. Davis,
requesting a change of zoning from Zone R-1C (One-family Residence) to
Zone R-MH (Mobile Home Residential) on property located on the southwest
right-of-way line of Victoria Street, 455 feet, more or less, southeast
of a point where the southeast right-of-way line of Old Savannah Road
intersects the southwest right-of-way line of Victoria Street (225
Victoria Street).] MR. HANDY: Move for approval for the others,
please. MR. TODD: Second. MAYOR SCONYERS: All in favor of
Mr. Handy's motion to approve, let it be known by raising your hand,
please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 5: Z-97-64 - Request for concurrence with the
decision of the Planning Commission to approve a petition from Carrick
Inabnett, on behalf of Raymond Barton III, requesting a Special
Exception for the purpose of establishing a telecommunications tower as
provided for in Section 26-1, Subparagraph (c) of the Comprehensive
Zoning Ordinance for Augusta-Richmond County, on property located on
Bearing S 20 00' 50" E, being 34 feet, more or less, south of the south
right-of-way line of Scott Nixon Memorial Drive and also being 294 feet,
more or less, west of the southwest corner of the intersection of
McKnight Industrial Road and Scott Nixon Memorial Drive. MR.
ZETTERBERG: I had met with the representatives of the neighborhood and
also with Alltel Communications and discovered that the neighborhood
never saw the sign that was posted at that location. When I went out
there, if you were looking to hide a sign you couldn't have done it any
better. What I'd like to do is remand that item back to the Planning and
Zoning Commission so that the community who is concerned about this item
has an opportunity of due process in hearing that complaint. MR.
KUHLKE: Second. MR. ZETTERBERG: I believe we also have a
contingent from the neighborhood. MAYOR SCONYERS: Discussion,
gentlemen? All in favor of Mr. Zetterberg's motion, let it be known by
raising your hand, please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
MR. ZETTERBERG: Mr. Mayor, I think Mrs. Frails wants to be
recognized, if you would allow. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, just a point
of information. With such a long agenda, if we're giving them an
opportunity and referring it back to Planning and Zoning -- is that my
understanding? MAYOR SCONYERS: That's correct. MR. TODD:
Then I think that the appropriate point would be for the neighborhood to
go to Planning and Zoning. MRS. FRAILS: May I address that,
please? Excuse me, Commissioner, if I can say something, please.
MR. TODD: Yes, just a point of information. I don't like to get ahead
of the folks that we appoint, you know, to do the job, and the
recommendation may come back all together different if we're not going
to act on it today. MAYOR SCONYERS: Ma'am, you can come on up.
MRS. FRAILS: Thank you. I just want to make one point, please. My
name is Betty Frails, and I'll be very brief concerning the Scott Nixon
Memorial Drive. As you say, that it will be tabled and that we'll
discuss it. My request is that we do communicate, because that has been
the problem in our neighborhood. This is not the first time that we
were not notified concerning that Planning Committee on July 14th, 1997.
They did have a meeting and we did not know about it, as Mr. Zetterberg
has told you. My concern now that you are going to table it is to whom
will I be in communication with. We don't want surprises again. This is
a sign we weren't aware of. So as this issue goes forth we want to know
to whom will we be in communication with. MAYOR SCONYERS: Mr.
Patty, when is y'alls next meeting? MR. PATTY: The second Monday
in September. If we don't have to readvertise it, we can hear it in
August. MAYOR SCONYERS: So when is your next meeting in August?
MR. OLIVER: If the sign was obscured, my suggestion would be I think
the sign needs to be reposted, and it needs to be readvertised and
reheard if the sign was not visible to someone -- the casual passerby.
MR. PATTY: If we have to do that it will be the second Monday in
September, if we have to readvertise it and repost it to conform to
state law in that regard. The reason the sign was not put on the road
is that state law requires us to put the sign on the property that's
being considered for rezoning and that property did not extend to the
road, it extended about 100 feet from the road where the sign was
posted. MR. TODD: It seems to me that maybe the Planning and
Zoning board need to come up with a procedure, Mr. Mayor, when the
property don't come to the road of at least notifying some folks that's
in the general area. That's usually the folks that's concerned is the
folks in the general area. Maybe that need to go to the Planning board,
and Mr. Handy represent us on that board, to work that out. MRS.
FRAILS: For future notifications we would like for them to be visible
so that we'll know what it's about. Past history, we've had this
problem, see, and now this has come again, so we want to alleviate that
problem. I appreciate your time. Thank you very much. MR. PATTY:
Mr. Mayor, am I to understand that we're going to rehear this then,
readvertise it and repost it? MAYOR SCONYERS: That was the motion,
wasn't it? MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, point of information. We done
voted on the motion, and that wasn't the way that I understood the
motion, so if we could have it reread. CLERK: The motion was to
refer back to the Planning Commission. MR. TODD: Right, that was
my understanding. And I would think it would be up to the Planning
Commission on how they handle it and proceed and stay in contact with
the residents that's concerned. I don't want to get in the business of
telling the Planning Commission what to do. We appoint them, they make
recommendations to us. And I think that when we get in the business of
telling them what to do, then we don't have a Planning Commission, the
board is doing it. MAYOR SCONYERS: Mr. Patty, what would y'all
like to do in this so that we can let the lady know. MR. PATTY:
Well, my recommendation would be, since they already know about it--I
mean, they're here and they've been talking about it--to just bring it
up at the next meeting and tell them now it will come up at the meeting
next Monday. MRS. FRAILS: The second Monday in September, is that
what you're saying? MR. PATTY: The second Monday in August. It'll
come up next Monday in this room right here at three o'clock. MR.
ZETTERBERG: Mr. Mayor, I have a question for Mr. Patty. George, is
there a difference on how we notify residents between a change of zoning
and that of a zoning variance? I understand that with variance we tell
people within about 300 feet or so of that location, and I'm not too
sure that we do that. MR. PATTY: The Board of Zoning Appeals,
their ordinances require that they send a notice to everyone within 300
feet of the property line and post a notice in the newspaper general
circulation. State law requires on rezoning issues the posting of a
notice plus a notice in the newspaper. Now, that's not to say we
couldn't in addition to that send out letters, but [inaudible]. MR.
ZETTERBERG: Well, I think that's the problem we have. I don't know how
many people read the newspaper and finding out what kind of zoning
changes in their neighborhood. And it has been a problem for these
folks. They have had some commercial development go in when they didn't
know about it, they weren't represented at that time. This is the
second --I have great empathy with Mrs. Frails that she has not be
advised and I'd like you to take a look at that to see if our procedures
are in support of the people that we're serving. MAYOR SCONYERS:
Thank you, Mr. Patty. Mrs. Frails, did you understand that? MRS.
FRAILS: Thank you very much.
CLERK: Item 7: Z-97-66 - Request for concurrence with the
decision of the Planning Commission to approve a petition from Monica C.
Greene requesting a change of zoning from Zone P-1 (Professional) to
Zone B-1 (Neighborhood Business) on property located on the southwest
right-of-way line of Dover Street, 309 feet, more or less, southeast of
a point where the southeast right-of-way line of Deans Bridge Road (U.S.
Hwy. #1) intersects with the southwest right-of-way line of Dover Street
(2572 Dover Street). MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I guess I have a
question for Planning and Zoning in reference to where is that at as far
as Deans Bridge Road go. I know where Dover is, but I want to know how
far off Deans Bridge Road. What is the intended use of the property
would be my question. MR. PATTY: A daycare center. MR. TODD:
I would have a serious problem supporting and would speak against a
motion to site a daycare center at that location, and I'll go on and
state why. You know, some may make the argument that, well, if you have
a crime problem, then law enforcement should address that crime problem.
But my situation is that we have a crime problem, a infested area there
as far as drugs, and maybe it's being addressed or not being addressed.
But I think when we're doing zoning changes for daycare centers and
sensitive entities like that we shouldn't -- the petitioner shouldn't
want to locate a daycare center at such locations and we shouldn't do
zoning changes for locations for a daycare center in a area where you
have high drug activity, et cetera. Now, most of us has passed by
Dover Street going Deans Bridge Road, and you look over to the left, we
know what the environment is. We had a issue of a personal care home
not too long ago in the same general area, and until we get this area
cleaned up I can't support putting a daycare center there, and I'm going
to make a motion that we deny it. MAYOR SCONYERS: Do I hear a
second to Mr. Todd's motion? Hearing none, we'll move on. MR.
HANDY: Mr. Mayor, I'd like to make a motion for approval. MR. H.
BRIGHAM: Second. MR. HANDY: Unless Mr. Patty have some
information about it I don't know anything about. MR. PATTY: My
only comment was going to be that this is within 400 feet of a major
arterial highway and the comprehensive plan sets forth that that type
zoning should be considered if similarly situated properties are zoned.
In this case they are. The majority of these properties within 400
feet of Highway 1 are zoned commercial, so the zoning is in conformance
with the plan. MAYOR SCONYERS: Did you have any objectors at the
meeting? MR. PATTY: No, sir, there were no objectors. MAYOR
SCONYERS: Do we have any objectors here today? [None noted.] MR.
TODD: Mr. Mayor, my question is, is the petitioner here for Item Number
7? MR. PATTY: No, sir, I don't believe she's here. MR. TODD:
My question is, Mr. Mayor, to the County Attorney. As far as high
crime areas and impact that crime and drug sales is going to have on an
establishment like this, can we use that for a reason, per the zoning
statute, to deny? MR. WALL: In general, yes. I mean, obviously
the character of the neighborhood and all of those things can be taken
into consideration. Now, the question is whether or not the change from
the Professional zone to a Neighborhood Business would increase that.
The fact that the high-crime area, et cetera, is there, I mean, is that
indicative of the zoning as Professional and would a change of zoning
impact that is the question. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, my point is, and
my point is to my colleagues and I hope they understand it, is that
Professional, you don't have children going in. And I would assume that
this is not a senior daycare, that it's a childcare. You have folks
going in getting their hair done or their nails done or whatever and
it's adults and they know the surrounding and the environment. Where
you have a place where you're putting children, that fall in a different
category. So, you know, I hope that I don't have to say I told you so
later. And I can, you know, tell you now that I'm going to raise holy
hell with Chief Ronald Strength and the Sheriff's Department as far as
Dover Street and the drug trafficking that's going on in that area as I
have done or more vigorously if we're going to establish a daycare
center there. MR. MAYS: I tend to agree with my good friend and
colleague, but maybe if that's the catalyst it's going to take to help
get it cleaned up, then we'd better hurry up and vote on it then.
Because I don't necessarily think that good zoning and good intentions
ought to necessarily be held up because we got some areas where you
ought to put some suppression in and sit on them and sit on them hard
and run them out. The ordinance that was drawn up by Mr. Wall's
predecessor on prostitution that specifically dealt with and was brought
about because of the traffic that you had on Deans Bridge Road in the
vicinity of Hillcrest School is right across the street from what you're
dealing with, and that was when I first came on board on this
Commission. So if we're still dilly-dallying around with how we're
going to deal with that one in some other areas, then I say so be it, go
ahead and put the daycare center, and if that brings about the
enforcement that you need over there, then maybe that's what it's going
to take in order to do it then. MAYOR SCONYERS: All in favor of
Mr. Handy's motion to approve, let it be known by raising your hand,
please. MR. TODD VOTES NO. MOTION CARRIES 9-1.
CLERK: Item 10: Z-97-70 - Request for concurrence with the
decision of the Planning Commission to deny a petition from Michael A.
Schaller, on behalf of Michele M. & Michael A. Schaller, requesting a
change of zoning from Zone A (Agricul-ture) to Zone B-2 (General
Business) on property located on the northeast right-of-way line of
Belair Road, 685 feet, more or less, south of the southeast corner of
the intersection of Powell Road and Belair Road (4005 Belair Road).
MAYOR SCONYERS: Do we have any objectors here on Item 10? [None
noted.] MR. DENT: Mr. Chairman and Commissioners, Bud Dent for Mr.
Michael Schaller. I'd like to introduce Mr. Schaller. Mike is here, his
wife Michele is right back here; and Mr. Perry Smith, who is a neighbor,
will speak in favor of Mr. Schaller's request; and also Mr. Billy Franke
with Sherman & Hemstreet is here, and they represent a property nearby
and they also support Mr. Schaller's request for a zoning change. I
have asked Mr. Wall to pass out a few copies of maps and the photo which
has been digitally improved to show the proposed building on Mr.
Schaller's 2.4 acre lot so that you can get some idea of what he
proposes to put there. Currently Mr. Schaller is a cabinet maker
working downtown. He'd like to move his cabinet shop out onto his own
home lot. He's got almost two and a half acres. It's on Belair Road,
out in far West Augusta. He is requesting that you change the zoning.
If I may give you a few facts for your consideration, I'll go ahead and
do that now. First of all, there are no neighbors that he has been
able to contact who are opposing his motion. I have also asked him to
go to his immediate neighbors and ask them if they would sign a
statement, and each of them have done that, which says I do not oppose
the Schallers building and operating a cabinet shop at 4005 Belair Road.
And these are signed by a Mrs. Elizabeth Easler, a next-door neighbor;
a Mr. Frank Parker, who lives down at the corner of where the new Powell
Road and Wrightsboro Road intersection is going to be constructed--this
ties in with the Gate 1 intersection; and Ms. Darlene Wigner, who
operates a daycare center in the same vicinity; and Mr. Perry Smith who
is here also. I have only the originals of those and we would offer
those. They are in support of Mr. Schaller's request for a zoning
change. If I may highlight several points for you very quickly.
There are already three existing businesses in this area which is zoned
Agricultural. They are a plant nursery, which is right near the
intersection where the new road is going to be built; a daycare nursery,
which Mr. Schaller estimates has around 30 children per day, high
traffic; there is also a dog kennel located nearby as well. There used
to be a cabinet shop with a variance right next door. That's Mrs.
Easler's late husband operated that. After he passed away, apparently
they discontinued operating that and therefore that zoning variance
lapsed, so actually there used to be a cabinet shop right next door to
where we're talking about. And Mr. Schaller, since the Planning and
Zoning hearing, has gone back and redesigned the concept of his cabinet
shop for several reasons. One, the area where he will actually be
sawing, where there would be noise, he is planning to insulate that to
reduce noise. He's also going to put the office in front, which would
absorb some noise. He's going to design the bay doors which would allow
noise to come out facing into the interior of his lot so that -- it's
already covered with trees and shrubs and so on, so that would help
contain the noise before it reached out into the neighborhood. He has
those trees and shrubs in place and he plans to put in more. If you
will look at that photo that has been enhanced with that red barn-like
building on it, he intends to build a six-foot wooden privacy fence
basically across that opening. As you're looking into that, you're
standing out on Belair Road and looking onto his property, and you see
how the trees are already surrounding where the building will be. He'll
put up that six-foot privacy fence. This is not a high-volume
traffic shop. Very few people come to his shop, and he does not go back
and forth with his cabinets when he goes out and installs them in the
homes, so really traffic is not a consideration here at all. Also, he
only has about one truck that he uses, a pickup-sized truck that he
carries the cabinets and the materials in. Finally, he does not intend
to put a sign out on the public street itself. He does want to put a
small sign up on the building, as you see it in the photos there, so
that it can be identified. I believe those are the factors which
perhaps you would want to consider in determining whether or not you
would grant this motion, and we would ask that you allow Mr. Schaller to
put the property in. And perhaps Mr. Franke desires to say something in
addition to what I've said. MR. FRANKE: I was just going to make a
comment. The area in general, with the Belair Road extension falling
into place, they're projecting it to occur like in February or March
versus the end of '98, and that's going to be a high impact to the area,
and that whole area really should be service oriented type businesses.
And all the current zonings that are in that area within 500 feet of the
intersection of where Belair and Wrightsboro Road [inaudible], so all
that needs to be considered as far as maybe everybody going out and
seeing what's going on in the general area, because it is really growing
and a lot of the growth is heading to Columbia County. MR. KUHLKE:
Why was it turned down? Sounds like it's all right to me. MR.
PATTY: Sounds pretty good to me, too. The only thing I got to say is
that the comprehensive plan says that that type development ought to be
located within 500 feet of the intersection. In this case we're talking
about the intersection that's being constructed, the new relocated
Wrightsboro Road and Dyess Parkway, and this one actually is about 700
feet. There were no objectors and there was, frankly, no discussion
about the conditions that he's proposed. MR. KUHLKE: How many feet
from what intersection? MR. PATTY: The new signalized intersection
of Wrightsboro Road and Belair Road, which is going to be one of the two
signalized intersections at Dyess Parkway and Belair and Wrightsboro.
MR. KUHLKE: And it's supposed to be 500 feet and you say it's 700?
MR. PATTY: It's 700, yes. MR. KUHLKE: Isn't that better?
MR. PATTY: No. This extends the commercial zoning further into what,
you know, at some point becomes a residential area. MR. KUHLKE: I
move we approve it. MR. BRIDGES: Second. MR. ZETTERBERG: I'd
like to make a comment on that, Mr. Mayor. While I agree with approving
this, I think we need to ensure the setback conditions in that, the
buffering is also met, and the ingress and egress routes are met, and
that should be part of the -- would you accept that amendment? MR.
KUHLKE: I'll amend my motion to include that. MAYOR SCONYERS: All
in favor of Mr. Kuhlke's motion to approve, let it be known by raising
your hand, please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 11: Z-97-53 - Request for concurrence with the
decision of the Planning Commission to deny a petition from Sandra
Winfery, on behalf of Sandra & Ronald Winfery, requesting a Special
Exception for the purpose of establishing a family personal care home as
provided for in Section 26-1, Subparagraph (h) of the Comprehensive
Zoning Ordinance for Augusta-Richmond County, on property located on the
southeast right-of-way line of Coleman Avenue, 342 feet, more or less,
north of the northeast corner of the intersection of Chester Avenue and
Coleman Avenue (2516 Coleman Avenue). MR. HANDY: Mr. Mayor, I'd
like to make a motion to approve, to reverse the decision of the
Planning Commission. MR. POWELL: Second. MR. TODD: Mr.
Mayor, I'd like to know what the staff recommendation and why the
Planning Commission voted to deny. MR. PATTY: Let me give you a
little history on this first. It was heard by the Planning Commission
probably in June, or even in May -- it was in June because I was absent
from the meeting. What happened in our meeting was the objectors were
not aware that this case was on the floor and they did not object during
the hearing on the case, so it was approved. And then the objectors
later found out -- Mr. Handy was there. They objected and it came back
for another vote, at which time it was denied. Ben Allen was
representing her at the time, I don't think he is anymore, and when it
came to the Commission he asked me to pull it from the agenda when it
would have regularly have come to you and I did. And then at the next
meeting it was inadvertently left off the agenda, and I believe the last
meeting when the petitioner didn't show up, I wasn't 100 percent sure if
we had notified her, so I asked you to postpone it. So this is probably
-- this goes back to June. Now, that didn't answer your question, I
realize that. These type requests, and we've had numerous conversations
about them with Mr. Wall and with you as Commissioners, they're
frequent. She wants to keep five elderly people in her house. She does
live in the house, it's not a staff operated facility. And there's
simply no way that I've been able to discern to make these decisions.
There's no criteria you can set up. We've talked to other communities,
nobody has got a good way of making these decisions, and frankly we just
bring them up to the floor and hear them out and try to make a decision
on our feet as to whether it's good for the neighborhood or bad.
MR. TODD: How many bedrooms in the house. MS. WINFERY: Four.
MR. TODD: Four bedrooms. You want to keep up to five and you're going
to live in the house? MS. WINFERY: I have a drawing because the
house is added on, okay, from the original plan. Okay, there's two
rooms that will be for private clients, and then there's another room
that would accommodate three, and then we have a staff room for the
person that will be staying on the premises, and then there's a bedroom
for me and my husband. Then you got the dining room and you got the
living room, you got the laundry room, you got -- you know, it's a big
house since it's been added on. And when I went down to the tax --
where I pay the taxes for my house, see, they didn't have the print, so
they had to come out and look at the house because the house had been
built on. But the person who I bought the home from never did add the
rooms on, they never did know about it, so I reported it and now it's
listed and everything. MR. TODD: Is there enough room there, floor
space, to do five and the live-in staff? MR. PATTY: Well, of
course, that's regulated by the Health Department, but to my knowledge
there is. MAYOR SCONYERS: All in favor of Mr. Handy's motion, let
it be known by raising your hand, please. MOTION CARRIES 9-0. [MR.
POWELL OUT]
MAYOR SCONYERS: Let's go back to 87, please. Mr. Wall, did you
get the information? MR. WALL: There has been no change in the
distance insofar as beer and wine. There has been a change in the
requirements as regarding liquor. MAYOR SCONYERS: Mr. Todd, did
you understand that, sir? MR. TODD: Yes, sir. MR. BRIDGES:
I'd like to speak to that first. These people in here in objection to
this -- this kind of snuck up on us, but we hope that you'll agree with
us that this license not be issued in this neighborhood, and I say
neighborhood because that's basically what you've got at the crossroads
of Brown and Old Waynesboro. There are houses and neighborhoods on all
four corners, there's a church shortly down the street from where this
site is being proposed, there's Goshen Elementary less than a mile down
Old Waynesboro Road, there's a new high school proposed about a mile and
a half from there, as well as I'm told possibly a middle school as well.
When the new high school goes in traffic is going to increase in that
area probably about 50 percent, and that's based on a study we've had
the Planning Commission do. So in regards to being within the legal
limits of the ordinance itself, I have a problem with the ordinance that
we have anyway as it's drawn up. Basically what it says is you walk out
the front door of the establishment to the nearest sidewalk in the front
of the establishment, and then you proceed to walk down the sidewalk
toward the church or the school or whatever it is you're trying to
measure the distance from, and then I think the limit is, I believe, 100
yards. The way that ordinance is drawn up, conceivably and in theory a
church could sit directly behind the liquor store and still be within
its legal limits, because you've got to go out in front, measure the
distance from the front of the store to the nearest sidewalk, and if
your parking lot is long enough you can, you know, have 100 yards there.
So my motion, Mr. Mayor, is to deny this license. I think we're in
our discretionary limits to do so. This is a neighborhood and it is
near a church, it is near a -- there are houses and neighborhoods all
around that area, and continually growing, and I don't think this would
be for the good of the community and it's not for the good of the
neighborhood, and I make a motion that this petition be denied. MR.
MAYS: I'll second. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I'd just like to point
out that we do have the discretion, that Mr. Smith representing the
neighborhood association pointed out that this would have a negative
impact on the community to locate the business at this location,
especially with the additional school coming and the community
environment and setting, and -- thank you. MAYOR SCONYERS: Further
discussion, gentlemen? All in favor of Mr. Bridges' motion, let it be
known by raising your hand, please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 91: Motion to approve new ownership request by
Richard S. Pak for a consumption on premises beer license to be used in
connection with Baldinos Giant Jersey Subs located at 2760-E Tobacco
Road. MR. POWELL: Mr. Chairman, that's the item that I had some
concerns from the neighborhood associations on, and what appears to be
happening here is we have a corner there that is just getting saturated
more and more and more with alcohol licenses. I think the only thing up
there that doesn't have an alcohol license is the laundromat. I'm
looking for them to come down here anytime. And, I mean, there's got to
be some regulation or some common sense used about just saturating every
business on a corner with beer or liquor licenses. It's really
degrading to the entire community and it's something that I would like
to see this Commission rule against, and I'll make that in the form of a
motion. MR. BRIDGES: Second. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I guess in
discussion, I would assume that this is an existing business, a new
ownership? MR. WALKER: It's an existing business, new ownership.
It already has a beer license there and we're just -- a new owner is
taking over. We're transferring from the old owner to the new owner.
MR. TODD: I'm going to make a substitute motion that we approve.
MR. KUHLKE: Second. MAYOR SCONYERS: Mr. Wall, what's our
position? MR. WALL: If you've got an existing alcohol license
there and it's just a change of ownership, you're going to lose it. I
mean, it's a transfer, and without showing that there's something
peculiar to this particular operator that would justify the denial --
the fact that the intersection has become saturated, in my opinion,
would not be a justifiable cause for turning it down. MR. TODD:
Mr. Mayor, you know, the other thing that I think we need to consider
here is that we had an individual that run for County Commission that
may be involved in this business and I think that we need to seriously
look at situations when it may be construed political. MR. BEARD:
I call for the question. MAYOR SCONYERS: The substitute motion
first, made by Mr. Todd, to approve this. All in favor of Mr. Todd's
motion, let it be known by raising your hand, please. MR. BRIDGES & MR.
POWELL VOTE NO. MOTION CARRIES 7-2. [MR. ZETTERBERG OUT]
CLERK: Under the Finance portion, Items 12 through 36 were
approved by the Finance Committee on July 28th, 1997. [Item 12:
Motion to approve recommendation to increase Zoning Appeals fee to $125
per case with increase in budget to $5,000 from General Fund
Contingency. Item 13: Motion to approve $37,000 for Personal
Computers for Probate Court. Item 14: Motion to approve request
from Kathleen M. Daniel (Emergency 911) to purchase 15 years 0 months
prior years service in the 1977 Pension Plan. Item 15: Motion to
approve agreement between Richmond County and Richmond County Health
Department regarding funding of the New Public Health Clinic (subject to
the Administrator submitting a schedule of yearly funding allocations).
Item 16: Motion to cancel eighteen (18) security deeds in favor of
Richmond County made during the years 1983 through 1986 to various
property owners under the Richmond County Rehab Program. Item 17:
Deleted from consent agenda. Item 18: Motion to approve
requisition for one each Chevrolet Cavalier 4-door automobile. Item
19: Motion to approve issuance of bid for one each Aircraft Refueling
Truck (estimated cost $100,000). Item 20: Motion to approve
funding of $23,000 for the requisition for one Crew Cab Pickup Truck.
Item 21: Motion to approve the request of Thomas E. Polite to
terminate contributions from the 1977 Pension Plan and receive a refund.
Item 22: Motion to approve refund of prior year taxes -1994, 1995,
1996 in the amount of $115.94 to Robert L. Symms for payment of taxes in
error. Item 23: Motion to approve refund of prior year taxes -
1994, 1995 in the amount of $17.06 to Ronella B. Hobby for payment of
taxes in error. Item 24: Motion to approve requisition for one
each Portable Air Compressor, valued at $12,000.00. Item 25:
Motion to approve request from Larry J. Smalley (Fire Protection) to
purchase 15 years 6 months prior years service in the 1977 Pension Plan.
Item 26: Motion to approve request from Jack H. Milton, Jr. (Fire
Protection) to purchase 5 years 5 months prior years service in the 1977
Pension Plan. Item 27: Motion to approve funding of $22,000 for
the requisition for one 15-passenger van. Item 28: Motion to deny
waiver of tax penalty on 1996 personal property taxes for Norwest
Equipment Finance, Inc. in the amount of $856.07. Item 29: Motion
to approve authorization of Signers on Government's Bank Accounts.
Item 30: Motion to approve Pension Bond Account Agreements with
Prudential Securities for the Richmond County 1945 Pension Plan ("1945
Plan"), Retirement Plan for Employees of Richmond County, Georgia,
effective January 1, 1997 ("1977 Plan"), and City of Augusta General
Retirement fund ("1949 Plan"). Item 31: Motion to approve
requisition for two each Chevrolet Cavalier 4-door automobiles.
Item 32: Motion to approve amendment of the 1977 Retirement Plan for
Employees of Richmond County so as to provide that disability retirement
benefits shall be 50% of the employees' average earnings, as opposed to
25%. Item 33: Motion to reject and re-advertise bid for copier
services for the Consolidated Government (low bidder, the Pollock
Company, at a cost of $21,060.00 per month for 36 months - total amount
of contract, $758,160.00). Item 34: Motion to approve revised
capital item budget for Utilities Department. No change in funding.
Item 35: Motion to approve $173,000 request for funding for two new
State Court Judges, their secretaries and related supporting items as
mandated by the local delegation. Approximately $66,000 of this request
is Capital items and are not a recurring nature. Item 36: Motion
to approve modification to Information Technology Organization Chart,
deleting an Application Developer position and adding a Lan
Administrator position, at a savings of $6,016 annually.] MR. J.
BRIGHAM: Mr. Mayor, I would move that we do that as a consent agenda.
I'm sure some of these items probably are going to be pulled off,
though. MR. BEARD: I second that. MR. MAYS: I don't think we
have to pull Item 15 off, but I would like to comment on it under
discussion if we're in that period now. MAYOR SCONYERS: Yes, sir,
we're in that now. MR. MAYS: Okay. The only thing that I'm going
say --and a lot of dialogue has been brought about in reference to this
whole Health Department situation [inaudible] rumblings now that the
decisions about the Health Department are causing delay on another major
project down on Broad Street that's even coming into the new picture.
But I'm not going to start another revival today, I'm going to be real
brief. I think we've been gathering enough converts out in the Laney-
Walker area to a point that our message has been getting across to a
point the only thing we wanted to see is that people who are going to --
I guess regardless of what you call when folk move from one place to
another whether it's displaced, relocated, moved, transferred or
whatever, and I just [inaudible]. But I think we've had some good
dialogue in reference to this project, particularly over the last couple
of months. I don't think it's anywhere near totally finalized, but I
think at least the spirit of this Commission hopefully has been moved to
a point that fairness can come about in it, and that's the only thing I
think that people have asked from the very beginning is that this
Commission, the Board of Health, or the two together make folk whole,
and whatever process that that's done in I don't think people really
care. Fairness in whatever form it comes in is basically fairness, and
as long as we are moving towards that as we finalize a location on this
project, then I think that that's at least the spirit and the right
direction which we'll go. I would hope that we will continue in
that vein. I do think that, as I said earlier, we are not through with
things there, and I would hope that those of you who do have a vote in
this matter, that you would continue to be vigilant. Because as we've
seen so many times, just as an example today, what happens when things
are not spelled out clearly, when things are not written in their
totality, when times passes memories fade and when things are not
totally written in stone as they are held within governments, then that
which is assumed is just that, it's assumed. And many times, as the old
saying goes, you know what that makes, and I hope with this project that
that does not go that way. And we have had good discussion regarding
that and I hope that the dialogue there continues with all parties
involved, will continue to move in that direction and that the element
of fairness can be achieved before finalization, and those are my only
comments. MR. OLIVER: Mr. Mayor, I'd like to clarify one thing if
I may. On Item 15, I put in front of you a redistribution of SPLOST
Phase III funds that will permit funding of this project because the
funding of this project, according to the contract, did not coincide
with what was approved in the referendum. This is a way that it can be
done. We believe that it does not -- will not impact operations of
these projects. However, we would note this: that when the space
consultant comes back, if they should come back with a solution other
than build or renovate, such as buy another building, we could
potentially be in a situation that the funds aren't available, and that
we wouldn't know, but this is what we feel is the best solution at this
time to do that. Clearly we will not spend a million and a half
dollars on this building this year, and we know -- we're very
comfortable with that estimate. In 1998 we had budgeted 7.2 -- or I
should say several years ago 7.2 was budgeted. Clearly that cannot
happen. But we have tailored this schedule to do that, so I would
request in that motion that you approve the reallocation of SPLOST Phase
III funds in accordance with this schedule as part of that motion.
MR. J. BRIGHAM: I'm going to accept Mr. Oliver's amendments. MR.
KUHLKE: Mr. Mayor, my question is, to Mr. Oliver, is Item Number 17.
Mr. Oliver, my only question on this, it appears to me that we are
limiting ourselves to one particular vehicle. And I understand it says
for 1997, but does that put us in any kind of position where we're
eliminating competition for county vehicles during the remainder of this
year? MR. OLIVER: I mean, obviously we went through an analysis.
I think Harry Sidell -- is Harry here? Mr. Sidell is in a position to
do that. He went through and did a rating matrix. From a maintenance
standpoint, the best thing that can happen to us is -- and I understand
your concern -- would be to have the same vehicle so all parts are
standardized and everything like that. We have made this recommendation
solely for 1997, and Mr. Sidell can talk to the competition aspects. But
clearly our objective is to try to downsize the fleet, and as part of
what you've seen in here we've downsized from a 4x4 to a Chevy Cavalier
in one case. MR. KUHLKE: And I'm not speaking in opposition to
this, I just wanted an explanation. MR. SIDELL: In regards to the
Chevrolet Cavalier, you'd still have competition through the other
Chevrolet dealers that are out there. We originally started the
evaluations by looking at the Chevy Caprice and the Ford Crown Victoria
which were originally in competition with one another for a large four-
door vehicle. When that competition was in effect you could get a law
enforcement type vehicle for approximately $12,000. Too good of a deal
to pass up and most counties took advantage of it. Now that competition
is no longer available and that same car is sold for an average of 20 to
22 thousand dollars a year. By right-sizing the fleet, we get it to the
size that each department should use. The only people that really have
a requirement or a necessity for the larger type vehicle is, in fact,
Public Safety departments, and not all of those departments -- not every
section in each one of those departments has a requirement for a full-
sized automobile. MR. KUHLKE: But I understand your recommendation
excludes Public Safety, am I correct, in most instances? MR.
SIDELL: It would exclude Public Safety from the aspect of areas such as
patrol units, traffic units, and CID investigators and so forth. I have
been speaking with the other departments as far as when they can use a
downsized or right-sized vehicle in that law enforcement or Fire
Department or Corrections Department, that we should do that. And I
have that agreement with all departments, that they will definitely look
at that and accept that administrative vehicle when it fits and fills
the needs that they have. MR. ZETTERBERG: I am concerned about
this. I've been involved in large-scale procurements in a former life
and this is the first time that I've ever seen a government agency
specify a specific vehicle for the procurement rather than letting the
marketplace dictate that. Now, that may -- the advantage of doing that,
we live in a community where there are all sorts of dealers that are
represented. When we decide we're going to only deal with one
particular dealer, then we all have to deal with lots of different
dealers. And I appreciate the fact that we are downsizing the vehicle
fleet and I appreciate the fact that we are reducing the vehicle fleet,
but I don't think it's in the best interest of our citizens to dictate
what kind of car we're going to drive, let the marketplace do that.
Very well, the Chevrolet Cavalier may do that, but I would suggest that
when we write the specifications, that we write it not to identify
that's the dealer or the make that would be procured but we provide that
it be dictated on price and service. That would be the criteria, rather
than specifying a specific vehicle. So I'd like to make -- is there a
motion on the floor now? MAYOR SCONYERS: Yes, sir. MR. J.
BRIGHAM: Mr. Mayor, I'm willing to pull this item out and go on and get
the rest of them on consent agenda. MR. BRIDGES: Mr. Mayor, I'd
like to make a point on the first item, Number 12, that reads a motion
to approve recommendation to increase Zoning Appeals fee to 125 per
case. If I remember correctly from the committee, that we recommended to
the Zoning Appeals board that they do that, not that we -- CLERK:
You approved this as a recommendation from the Commission. MR.
TODD: Mr. Mayor, I wanted to speak on Item 15. I think you went that
way, but I'll make it very brief. And this is my public and private
position, and I think it's morally wrong to condemn property or put a
business out of business and condemn property for a parking lot when
precedence has been set to establish parking area on adjacent property
[inaudible]. And I'm going to support this consent agenda, but I want
to go on record as far as my position on condemning property and putting
a business out of business for a parking lot when there's other areas
that can be accommodated as far as parking lot. Thank you. MAYOR
SCONYERS: Further discussion, gentlemen? All in favor of Mr. Brigham's
motion, excluding Item 17, let it be known by raising your hand, please.
MR. MAYS: Let the record show that I have to abstain on Number 15.
MOTION CARRIES 9-1, ITEM 15. MOTION CARRIES 10-0, ITEMS 12-14, 16-36.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Item 17? MR. J. BRIGHAM: Mr. Mayor, the
recommendation still stands as the recommendation from committee. That
is in the form of a motion. MR. BRIDGES: Second. MR. TODD:
Mr. Mayor, I tend to agree with Mr. Zetterberg on the issue of going out
for specs, just putting out what you want as far as service delivery and
not name a brand. I think when we name a brand it excludes everybody
else from the public process. We name a brand in Public Safety, and I
can understand that because your Public Safety folks is in those cars,
you know, twelve-hour shifts, et cetera, or, you know, pulling
investigations and they're sitting in them. But I think outside of
Public Safety we certainly shouldn't name a brand. When you name a
brand you give that brand advantages as far as market power go, and I
think that is wrong when we're spending tax dollars. So I would agree
with Mr. Zetterberg, and I'm going to yield and maybe Mr. Zetterberg
will offer a substitute. MR. ZETTERBERG: I'd like to make a
substitute motion that we go out on competitive bid and not state a
brand name for a particular vehicle and we let the marketplace dictate
whatever the needs of the government. MR. TODD: Second. MAYOR
SCONYERS: Harry, why don't you come up and tell us why y'all did what
you did. MR. SIDELL: In a review of the different vehicles in that
size category, one of the criteria was price. Regardless of the
specifications that I put out, if I put out specifica-tions for this
right-size vehicle, the chances are probably a 90 percent factor that
throughout '97 the Chevy Cavalier will be the choice based on
competitive standpoint also. These vehicles are all in the same size
category, passenger volume, cargo space, fuel economy and pricing, and
that's the thing I looked at on every vehicle in that standpoint. If we
go out with a generalized specification for that size car, the chances
are that will be the car that will win the bid every time. That's the
reason why I suggested that particular vehicle to be the vehicle of
choice for '97. Each year I would propose that we do another evaluation
for administrative vehicles and light pickups and do the same thing.
MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I think the gentleman has just made a good --
he's made my case, that if the brand that he's wanting to name is going
to win out, then there's no need to name it, let it win out. But when
you name it, you eliminate everybody else. MR. SIDELL: The intent
of right-sizing the equipment is also a concern for the taxpayer from a
maintenance standpoint also, it's not only just the purchase price of
the vehicle. The shops and the garages will become more competent with
working on a singular type vehicle, parts inventory will somewhat be
reduced, and we become [inaudible]. MR. POWELL: Mr. Chairman, my
concern with this -- I have to agree with what Mr. Zetterberg's -- the
intent of his motion. We've had complaints from various dealers that
they have been excluded from the bid process due to us naming a
particular make. I think that we ought to do it as a four-door sedan
and just go with some specs and let whoever gets the bid get the bid,
and I think that's the only fair way to keep anybody from getting
excluded. If it's Toyota, so be it. MR. OLIVER: We could do this,
if you all would like, on what I call an annual bid basis. I mean, we
would go out with one bid a year for this type of vehicle and then
evaluate it based on criteria and achieve the same result. One of the
things I would make as a passing comment, when you look at Avis and
Hertz and the people that are in the vehicle business, they tried to and
they have valid reasons for wanting to try to standardize their fleet.
Sometimes those are reasons, however, we can't live with because of the
environment in which we work. MR. MAYS: Mr. Mayor, the only thing
-- I was going to ask this of Mr. Wall. Probably, Jim, unless we
rescinded --and I understand that in this new government we carried
over, unless we make some other new ruling, those laws or ordinances
which we went by in terms of county. I support the substitute motion
that's on the floor, but I think if we did otherwise --and I probably
bring this up every time a different department gets into what I may
think might be construed as a lockout position with a particular item
whether we're dealing with a car or whether we're dealing with a bar of
soap. But I believe, particularly as the maker of that motion several
years ago on the "or equal" provision of bidding, that unless we
rescinded that which we already have on the books as a county provision
we would be, I believe, probably almost having to vote for the
substitute motion based on what we've already adopted that I believe is
standard procedure in terms of your having the inability to not name a
required item be it Chevrolet, Ivory, Green Giant with peas or whatever.
I think you have to ascribe to the "or equal" provision as it relates
to any area of the procurement process unless we rescind that particular
provision of which the Commission dealt with. MR. WALL: Well, in
certain situations where there's been a justification for specifying a
brand name, as long as the Commission authorized that we've been able to
do that. But you are correct that the general policy has always been to
open it up to as much competition as possible and having the "or equal"
so that you did not -- were not able to specify a brand name. But where
there were situations where a department because of the experience or
because of peculiar-ities within that department or whatever needed to
specify a brand name, then the Commission has authorized that. So, I
mean, I don't know that you would have to rescind that policy in order
to go with a specification of a brand. You're still going to have
competition within the dealers. But, I mean, it's against the spirit of
what you're talking about when you say the "or equal". MR. MAYS:
And I think even when we have named -- when we've gone about in certain
cases of naming a particular one, we have also still stated the "or
equal" provision, I believe, haven't we? Even when a named one has been
in there, so that if XYZ drive train can provide a caterpillar or
tractor, then it still has to be in there. MR. WALL: In general,
we -- there have been very few circumstances in which we've gone with a
sole source, but we have done it on occasion. MR. MAYS: I doubt if
we could get a sole source on a car. What I do think -- and I agree
with the driving point of where that is to get with a standardized
vehicle in there. Maybe one variation might be that we might want to
look at is that once you start in that vein of getting what you want,
whatever that might be, and if it ends up as a Chevrolet Cavalier,
probably of getting into a specific amount of vehicles so that you could
cover down the road the replacement cars on there with that, unless you
had a legal reason to do otherwise, and that might be the only way
you're going to get to that type of standardization. But I think you
could get into some serious trouble with that kind of provision
[inaudible]. MR. J. BRIGHAM: Mr. Mayor, I think this is a very
interesting argument, but I think the reason the recommendation came
forth to start with was an economy move by the staff to try to recommend
to us a way to cut costs and at least standardizing so that we don't
have Item A, which is an apple, and Item B, which is a berry, and trying
to buy the same parts for both of them and not having to repair all
these different items. I think that was the methodology of the
recommendation to start with, and the only reason I was willing to go
with the exclusive right is to say that in 1997 we're going to use this
type and maybe in 1998 we're going to use that type, and I thought that
was the recommendation and that's the reason I voted for it in committee
and still plan on voting for it. MR. H. BRIGHAM: How many
vehicles are we talking about in this particular -- do you have any
general idea? MR. SIDELL: I'd say probably for the remainder of
this year no more than ten vehicles. Next year, of course, it would be
more. As the evaluation of the fleet shows that a lot of the vehicles
out there should be downsized or right-sized and replaced, of course
there would be more vehicles. But in '98 we would do a complete
reevaluation of all the vendors' capabilities and then a new suitable
vehicle selected. It doesn't necessarily mean it will be the Cavalier,
it could be the Dodge Neon or it could be the Ford Temp or another
brand. MR. H. BRIGHAM: I'm certainly not in the car business, but
I drive a Chevrolet--not a Cavalier--but I would hate to see a car
solicited already if I was a dealer and would not even have a possible
chance of getting into the pool since we would be spending public funds
for it. So I say that in support of the motion that we ought to let the
-- now, if this was written in some kind of a way, and I don't think it
was, I hope not, that it would favor Chevrolet -- and I've driven one
for the last forty years, but I just hope it would not be. MR.
SIDELL: No, sir. I evaluated all the dealers -- or the manufacturers'
specifications, I contacted each fleet manager of all the major dealers
and got their average pricing for these vehicles, I used the gas mileage
according to the EPA standard book that comes out once every year, and
used all of those factors in scoring and evaluating the vehicles.
MR. ZETTERBERG: All the things you've done I'm in full support of.
That's not the question. In fact, it's irrelevant really. The very
fact is that we're at a point to make a decision and we are going to go
out and make a procurement of major importance to this county and that
we have a lot of people out there that have a lot of products that they
should have an opportunity to show us, demonstrate, and price for us.
We represent the taxpayers and we need to make sure we get the lowest
possible price for that. But there's really two policy decisions that
maybe need to be made and one only can be made today. Today I'm only
asking for a competitive bid. Tomorrow, after we make that competitive
bid, we may standardize around a vehicle because of cost. But the first
shot out of the gate ought to be -- what we ought to be doing is letting
the marketplace dictate what vehicle based upon the requirements we
have, then later on, maybe next year after -- with experience, then we
make a policy decision that might say that we're going to standardize
around XYZ vehicle. That's the only point I'm trying to make. MR.
HANDY: Just a helpful note. Next time when you present something to
the Commissioners, have that information that day that you said you
called around and received all that. You have that in your hand or you
have it -- MR. SIDELL: I provided that in the Finance Committee.
MR. HANDY: No, but I'm talking about as a -- today, you know, having
it in a form with us that Chevrolet costs this or Ford costs this and
you recommend this. MR. SIDELL: I made an assumption that the
information would be provided as it came up -- as it went from Finance
Committee to you. MR. HANDY: Right, okay. And then it would've
been easier for you. You wouldn't have got shot at like you're getting
shot at today. MR. BRIDGES: Mr. Mayor, I think we can go with the
original motion with Randy's recommendation, that each year we're going
to be bidding these things out anyway, so, you know, everybody is going
to get an opportunity in the free market to have a shot at selling the
government cars. So I would support the original motion. MR. TODD:
Mr. Mayor, I'll make it brief, that I guess we're going to do a set-
aside for Chevrolet. Thank you, Mr. Mayor. MAYOR SCONYERS: Would
you read the substitute motion, please? CLERK: The substitute
motion was to seek competitive bid with no brand name to be specified.
MAYOR SCONYERS: All in favor of Mr. Zetterberg's motion, let it be
known by raising your hand, please. MR. BRIDGES & MR. J. BRIGHAM VOTE
NO. MOTION CARRIES 8-2.
CLERK: Under Administrative Services, Items 38 through 45 were
approved by the Administrative Services Committee on July 28th --
including Item 50. [Item 38: Motion to approve execution of
Covenant of Purpose, Use and Ownership in connection with Incubator
Project to be constructed adjacent to the campus of Augusta Tech.
Item 39: Motion to approve Economic Development Loan Review Committee
recommended approval for a $20,000 loan for Kiysha Designs subject to
conditions of the Loan Committee. Item 40: Motion to approve
transfer of the $15,000 facade grant approved for 984 Broad Street from
the present property owner, Historic Augusta, to the tenant Coco Rubio.
Item 41: Motion to approve amending the 1995 and 1996 CSRA EOA
Agreements which would allow the remaining balance of funds totaling
$3,556.10 to be used for salary costs for April through June of 1997.
Item 42: Motion to allow Able-Disabled, Inc. to subcontract
transportation services out to the Senior Citizens Council at cost not
to exceed $8,000. Item 43: Motion to approve an amendment to the
1997 Girls' Inc. agreement between Augusta-Richmond County which would
allow the use of funds to be changed from acquisition of the property
located at 1917 Watkins Street to the removal of asbestos tiles from the
main building located at 1919 Watkins Street. Item 44: Motion to
approve amendment to the 1997 St. John Towers' agreement between
Augusta-Richmond County which would allow the use of funds to be changed
from modifications of the elevators to the replacement of the roof of
the apartment complex located at 724 Greene Street. Item 45:
Motion to approve funding for Augusta Youth Center in the amount of
$2,348 for Summer Camp Programs for joint venture with Little World of
Learning Daycare. Expenses must be incurred after approval date.
Item 50: Motion to approve transfer of the $30,000 facade grant
approved for 415 Seventh Street (Lamar House) to 419 Seventh Street
(Woodrow Wilson House).] MR. WALL: Mr. Mayor, as a point of
clarification so that we don't get into a conflict, included on the
Finance Committee's agenda that had previously been approved were
recommendations -- and I'm looking at Item Number 18, for instance, to
go out for a Chevrolet Cavalier; Item Number 31, which is two Cavaliers.
I think those are the only ones. Would that be to -- MR. OLIVER:
No, we will go back and bid that the way that you all said, and if we
need to amend it, we'll amend it. But we will do it as an annual
contract for the remainder of this year for a category of car and we can
take that into account, and I think that does need to be corrected.
MR. BEARD: Mr. Mayor, I would move that those items that the Clerk
read and approved by the Administrative Services Committee be submitted
as a consent agenda. MR. KUHLKE: Second. MR. TODD: Mr.
Mayor, I'll be very brief. My interest here is money -- when we're
reprogramming money, that we reprogram money to clean up the blighted
areas, and hopefully that's coming about soon. Thank you. MAYOR
SCONYERS: Further discussion, gentlemen? All in favor of Mr. Beard's
motion, let it be known by raising your hand, please. MOTION CARRIES 10-
0.
CLERK: Can we take Item 46 and 47 and 48 together? They're all
relative to the street lighting project. MAYOR SCONYERS: Yes.
[Item 46: Motion to approve the use of 1996 Street Lighting Project
funds to fund the street lighting portion of the Engineering
Department's Laney-Walker Improvements Projects. Item 47: Motion
to approve the use of 1997 Street Lighting Project funds to fund the
street lighting portion of the Housing Development Project #97143.
Item 48: Motion to approve the reprogramming of $186,708.39 in CDBG
funds from the 1994 Street Lighting, 1994 Street Lighting, and the 1994
Broad Street Improvements Projects with $156,708.39 designated to the
Housing Development Project (#97143) and $30,000 designated to the 1996
Street Lighting Project #96032.] MR. BEARD: Mr. Mayor, I so move
that those three items be adopted. MR. H. BRIGHAM: Second.
MR. MAYS: I'm in favor of the motion, very much so. I just would like
to add briefly for the record as a comical note that when they do put
them in, that they do a little bit better job of keeping them burning
and going than the ones we've already got out there. At times Laney-
Walker can be very, very dark, but it can be a whole lot of lights out
there, light posts, but at times it's as though they're not burning.
MR. BEARD: That is true, and we've talked to Engineering concerning
especially that 800 block up there, 800 block running from Martin Luther
King back to James Brown Boulevard, and they're supposed to be working
on that. It appears that someone has the capacity to either dim those
lights or turn them off, and that shouldn't be. MR. POWELL: Mr.
Chairman, my question, and it's really just for information purposes
only, motion to reprogram 1997 funds from CSRA Agency on Aging --
CLERK: I didn't take that one. MR. POWELL: We're not taking that?
CLERK: No, sir. MAYOR SCONYERS: Just 46, 47, and 48.
MR. POWELL: Okay. I'm sorry. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, when we're
reprogramming money, may I hear from the Director in reference of what
the plan for cleaning blighted areas? MAYOR SCONYERS: Well, we
haven't gotten that far yet. Let's get through 46, 47 and 48, and then
we'll be glad to get on this other stuff. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I'm
not sure that's on the agenda unless it's in some of this reprogrammed
money and we're spending -- well, I'll discuss the street lights then,
Mr. Mayor, if you'll just give me one second. MAYOR SCONYERS:
Well, I wish you would and let's get on the right project. MR.
TODD: Yes. I think that we got to set a priority of what's most
important, Mr. Mayor, the street lights or the complaints that I've
heard about blighted areas and needing to clean them. If we're going to
clean blighted areas, there's provisions in the community block money to
do it. If we're going to put in street lights, you know, and that's the
priority, then we do it. I don't want -- I'm not going to support going
back to the General Fund to do the other. MR. BEARD: Mr. Mayor?
MR. TODD: So I want a clarification, Mr. Mayor -- and I haven't
yielded to the gentleman. I want a clarification on what we're going to
do there because the complaints that I've heard has been from the
colleagues that represent the inner-city. I don't represent any of the
inner-city, but I'm concerned and in support of what they want to do, I
just need them to tell me how they want to do it. Thank you, Mr. Mayor.
MR. BEARD: Mr. Mayor, if you don't mind, I will answer Mr. Todd
because I think he knows that I have been one of those people who have
been talking about that. We had asked the Administrator to bring back a
proposal at the next committee hearing in reference to blighted areas,
and we should have that proposal for you at the next Commission meeting.
MR. J. BRIGHAM: Mr. Mayor, can I ask one question about street
lighting since we're reprogramming money? I'll assume that the money
we're reprogramming, from the way I read this, is already in street
lighting, that these areas are going to come back in a new program or in
a new -- what's going to happen in that situation? MR. MACK: Yes,
sir, we are proposing new programs. We want to reprogram the money so
we can deal with blighted areas and so forth, and we are getting y'alls
approval so that we can advertise in the newspaper to comply with HUD
regulations and give a 30-day notice for public comment. MR. J.
BRIGHAM: Obviously we're moving street light options around. Why are
we -- I know we're moving it to blighted areas. Are we going to come
back to the areas that we're moving from and how are we going to fund
that? MR. MACK: Well, when you talk about areas, are you talking
about in terms of specific census tracks or you're talking about a line-
item area? MR. J. BRIGHAM: I don't know. You've got project
numbers here and I don't know whether we're talking about streets or
census tracks. MR. MACK: Well, the point that I'm making is that
the monies have not been designated to any specific area in terms of
blocks of concern, they've just been designated in terms of street
lighting. What we are trying to do is rehabilitate various communities
within the city. We're going to need those funds to rehabilitate those
areas, including erecting street lights. MR. J. BRIGHAM: Well, if
it's not directly line-itemed to a particular area, why do we even have
to vote on it? MR. MACK: These are line-itemed to a particular
area. MR. J. BRIGHAM: Then we obviously are moving from one area
to another area. MR. MACK: The point that I'm making, it's not a
specific location. MR. J. BRIGHAM: I would've thought that the
location would be part of the area. Maybe I misunderstood. MAYOR
SCONYERS: Further discussion, gentlemen? All in favor of Mr. Beard's
motion to approve, let it be known by raising your hand, please. MOTION
CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 49: Motion to approve reprogram of 1997 funds from
CSRA Agency on Aging in the amount of $40,000 and award this amount to
Walton Options for Independent Living, Inc. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I
so move. MR. BEARD: I'll second. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I had
the opportunity to talk to Ms. Cummings, and I talked to Mr. Mack about
this also. And basically the agency that applied for the grant is not
up and running and ready to use the grant, and they're going to lose it
if they don't use it, and this entity can use it and serve the same
constituency. And I'm in support of it, speak in support of it, and
hope my colleagues can support it. MAYOR SCONYERS: All in favor of
Mr. Todd's motion, let it be known by raising your hand, please. MOTION
CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Under Engineering portion of the agenda, Items 51 through
68 were approved by Engineering Services on July 28th, 1997. [Item
51: Motion to approve authorization policy for infrastructure
maintenance (County Forces) with a cost limit up to $5,000 for
Departmental approval, $5,000 to $10,000 for Administrator approval, and
over $10,000 to be approved by the Commission. This will be in
concurrence with the recently adopted purchasing policy. Item 52:
Motion to approve bid award to the low bidder, APAC-GA, Inc. in the
amount of $147,173.75 subject to receipt of signed contracts and proper
bonds on the Pepperidge Drive Intersection Improvements Project.
Item 53: Pulled from consent agenda. Item 54: Motion to approve
ratification of award of emergency construction contract in the amount
of $13,235 to J.D. Haire Construction, Inc. regarding the relocation of
approximately 960- LF of 6" water main along State Highway 88. Item
55: Motion to approve condemnation of a ten (10) foot triangle owned by
Ms. Yolanda M. Walker at the northeast corner of 5th Street and Reynolds
Street to facilitate intersection improvements. Item 56: Motion to
approve condemnation of a fifteen (15) foot triangle owned by Ms. Betty
Bethune at the northwest corner of 5th Street and Reynolds Street to
facilitate intersection improvements. Item 57: Motion to approve
project conception, establish project budget, authorize property
acquisition and hold public hearing with regard to the project.
Item 58: Motion to approve Change Order #1 for Sand Ridge Storm
Drainage Improvements in the amount of $36,906.40 with APAC-Georgia,
Inc. that will provide for extending an 18" and a 36" storm drain
pipeline in the original contract and remedy a severe drainage and
erosion problem in the same vicinity for which Augusta-Richmond County
is responsible. Item 59: Motion to approve condemnation of
approximately one-third of Parcel 10 on Tax Map 22 (Project Parcel 27).
Item 60: Motion to approve to enter into a contract with Southern
Roofing and Insulation Company to replace the roofing on the Main,
Wallace, and Friedman Libraries at a cost of $134,800.00. Item 61:
Motion to approve Engineering Contract with Cranston, Robertson &
Whitehurst in the amount of $475,000 for Design of a 60" Raw Water
Transmission Main and Preparation of Easement Plants. Item 62:
Motion to approve approval of counteroffer option in the amount of
$500.00 to purchase 9,833 sq. ft. of permanent drainage, utility and
access easement; 5,006 sq. ft. of permanent easement over existing sewer
easement; and 2,597 sq. ft. of temporary construction easement owned by
Barbara L. Botts. (NOTE: Mrs. Botts feels that her property is worth
more than the appraised value of $250.00.) Item 63: Motion to
approve award Construction Contract to the low bidder, Blair
Construction Company, in the amount of $198,500.00 regarding the
sanitary sewer crossing of Gordon Highway near Fort Gordon's entrance
gate No. 1. Item 64: Deleted from consent agenda. Item 65:
Motion to approve enter into an agreement with the Georgia Department of
Transportation to receive funds for Drainage Improvements and Resurface
Improvements on a portion of 13th Street and Reynolds Street in the
amount of $402,429.93. Approval of Change Order to Beam's Pavement
Maintenance Company in the amount of $816,985.50 with contractor waiving
any delay claims. Item 66: Motion to approve the proposal from
Rothberg, Tamburini and Winsor to perform Facility assessment at the
Messerly Wastewater Treatment Plant in the amount of $30,000.00.
Item 67: Motion to approve proposal to enter into an engineering
contract with Pruett, Ford and Associates, Inc. to design a new heating,
ventilation and air conditioning system for the Wallace Branch Library
at a cost of $4,000.00. Item 68: Motion to approve list of Pockets
of "Unsewered Areas".] MR. POWELL: Mr. Chairman, I move that we
accept the Engineering Services Committee report as a consent agenda.
MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I'm going to second the motion. And, also, on
Item 68 I have some comments. MAYOR SCONYERS: Go ahead, Mr. Todd.
MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I picked up the daily paper today and read a
letter to the editor that we were approving pockets of sewer on a
political initiative, and I'm going to speak as vice-chairman of the
Engineering Services Committee and the person that's responsible for
wastewater and landfill. I'm not up for reelection until 1998 and I
would never do anything to be reelected with taxpayers or enterprise
funds. And I'd just like to flatly say that we're doing this now and we
-- it was approved in the revenue bond that we passed last year. So it
was talked about a year ago, and there was no way we could do it because
we didn't have a mechanism to do it with until we done a revenue bond.
We've done the revenue bond and now we have a outline per the revenue
bond to take care of pockets of sewer. We can't wait until Year 2000 to
do it, we got to start it now, because we got a time line per the
revenue bond issued on when we do it. We do some between now and Year
2000, we do some after Year 2000, if my recollection serves me
correctly. And I know that those out there, even when you do things
that serve the best interest of your constituents, Mr. Mayor -- and,
like you, I'm about serving the best interest of the constituents and my
colleagues. When you do things that serve the best interest of your
constituents, you're still going to be criticized on what you do, and
there's going to be those that is going to make it political. You know,
like my colleagues, I do full-time work for part-time pay and, like my
colleagues, I would assume that when someone make a statement like this
it irritates the living heck out of me, and I wish they'd just let us
know what they want. You know, if they don't want sewer -- I understand
that the gentleman that wrote this letter have sewer. You know, if he
don't want his neighbors to have sewer, he should say in the article --
the letter to the editor that he don't want his neighbors and other
citizens and taxpayers of Richmond County to have sewer. I want them all
to have sewer, Mr. Mayor, like you and the rest of my colleagues. Thank
you. MAYOR SCONYERS: Thank you, Mr. Todd. One thing about us,
when we become public servants we're open to criticism, but we just have
to either take it -- you know, it's kind of like in the kitchen, you
have to take the heat or get out. And I don't believe anybody has been
wrote up any more than I have. And that dream I had the other day
didn't come true, did it? MR. J. BRIGHAM: Mr. Mayor, since Mr.
Todd brought up unpocketed sewers -- and I guess that letter was written
by one of my constituents and probably aimed at me. This unpocketed
sewer areas has been on our agenda for 18 months and is not a new
political issue, and probably if it hadn't been brought up and discussed
over the last 18 months we'd probably still be discussing it in the Year
2000. MAYOR SCONYERS: Further discussion, gentlemen? All in favor
of Mr. Powell's motion to approve, let it be known by raising your hand,
please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 53: Motion to approve the Local Government Project
Agreement with the Georgia Department of Transportation, the Capital
Project Budget in the amount of $1,984,000 from the approved list of
projects in Special One Percent Sales Tax, Phase III, and the right to
advertise for engineer's qualifications for the Wrightsboro Road
Project. MR. KUHLKE: I had asked that that be pulled. Just for
information, Jack, what is -- I mean, where does it start, where does it
end? MR. MURPHY: It goes from Barton Chapel Road [inaudible]. What
this is, the Georgia DOT has an infrastructure work program to fund only
the construction, with the amount of 5.3 million dollars to do the work,
which means that Richmond County is going to have to do the engineering,
purchase and obtain the right-of-ways, all the pre-construction process
is our responsibility, and we -- that's what this Local Government
Project Agreement says, that we are agreeing to hold the hearings, do
all the surveys, all the design work, fund and acquire the right-of-
ways, with the Georgia DOT letting the project in the Year 2000. That
pre-construction process money is scheduled to begin in 1998, and we are
simply asking for permission to get a jump [inaudible] qualifications
for the engineer to do this work for us. MR. KUHLKE: I talked with
Mr. Murphy and I wanted to mention something to Mr. Powell, the Chairman
of the Engineering Services Committee. That particular area is going to
grow. I think there is a major reconstruction of the intersection of
Barton Chapel Road and Wrightsboro Road. But there have been some
people that have approached me, primarily the Augusta Mall people, in
that Bobby Jones is going to be widened. We have a serious restriction
at Wrightsboro Road where Bobby Jones goes over. There is some interest
on the part of the merchants out there with the possibility of widening
that bridge -- or lengthening the bridge, they're going to widen it
anyway. And I would like to ask that the Engineering Services
Committee, working with Mr. Murphy, to pursue this diligently because I
feel like that looking long-term with the widening of Wrightsboro Road
out to Belair Road, that we now already have a serious problem there,
that we need to pursue the idea of giving us the flexibility long-term
to be able to widen Wrightsboro under Bobby Jones. So I would just like
to ask Mr. Powell and Public Works to continue to pursue that, working
with the Augusta Mall people and the consultant that I believe they
hired that has given you a great deal of information. So I wanted this
information, but I wanted to inject that if we don't do that I think
we're being very short-sighted. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I so move
that we approve. MR. POWELL: Second. And, Mr. Kuhlke, your
concerns we'll address at the Engineering Services Committee. MR.
TODD: Isn't there also opportunity, Mr. Mayor, for the consultants and
the concerned merchants and citizens when we're doing -- they have a
hearing when we're going to do a road widening, and that hearing will
happen before and those individuals can influence the outcome of
configuration, et cetera. MR. MURPHY: When the Wrightsboro Road
public hearing is held, of course, you know, you can talk about anything
you want to. It'll go on the Georgia DOT's record and they will respond
in the manner which they are accustomed to for such things like that,
yes. MR. KUHLKE: Jack, let me ask you this. The Wrightsboro Road
project is one project, the Bobby Jones project is another project. And
I think the coordination with the Bobby Jones widening is an issue
that's separately from the Wrightsboro Road part and so, you know, we
just need to stay on top of that. MR. MURPHY: What we need to do,
just for the Commission's information, the Georgia DOT is in the process
of hiring a consultant to look at a corridor that will improve the I-
20/I-520 interchange all the way down to Bobby Jones and including the
Wrightsboro Road [inaudible]. That would be the proper place for the
[inaudible]. MAYOR SCONYERS: Further discussion, gentlemen? All
in favor of Mr. Todd's motion, let it be known by raising your hand,
please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 64: Motion to approve Engineering Proposal from
Southern Partners, Inc. to provide engineering services for the redesign
of the Kimberly-Clark Trunk Sewer in the amount of $58,770.00. MR.
POWELL: So move. MR. TODD: Second. MR. KUHLKE: Mr. Mayor, I
asked that that be pulled. My question is this, the wording here says
redesign. What have we paid for design up to this point? Can somebody
answer that? MR. WEIDMEIER: I don't have that information. That
was designed prior to the consolidation of the departments. That design
has been done for some time. MR. KUHLKE: And the rerouting of this
sewer line is going to cost us another $58,000 to redesign that in
addition to what we've already paid? MR. WEIDMEIER: Yes, sir.
MR. KUHLKE: Which is going down the tube, a lot of it? MR.
WEIDMEIER: Some of it will, yes. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, the
redesign is not because they were bad designs, the redesign is because
the conditions changed and the constituents or service area that we
wanted to pick up. When it was first designed it was going, I guess,
across the back forty and not catching any of Highway 56 where there's
potential for commercial growth and payback, and the other problem was
that there was citizens that didn't want the sewer line coming across
their property for various reasons, and I think that -- I can't
necessarily disagree with them when we look at our history of overflow
and being under consent orders. But the bottom line is that this is a
better deal for the wastewater for Richmond County in the sense that the
payback is a lot faster. MAYOR SCONYERS: Further discussion,
gentlemen? All in favor of Mr. Powell's motion to approve, let it be
known by raising your hand, please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 69: Motion to approve Change Order #2 for Skinner
Mill Road Extension/Agerton Lane in the amount of $77,769.68 with Mabus
Brothers Construction Company, Inc. that will address and resolve
conflicts discovered when the construction began on the relocated
portion of Marks Church Road at Wheeler Road. MR. MURPHY: You
remember Change Order #1 was to shift the alignment as the new Skinner
Mill Road/Agerton Lane project tied into Wheeler Road across from Marks
Church Road, and the reason for that was because of our concern of the
lack of left-turn stacking. It's a tremendous move towards better
safety and for operation of the system. And one of the things that we
assumed with that change order, and this also included the incentive
agreement with the contractor to finish and to give us an operable
system by August the 15th, we assumed that we had enough quantities in
the contract, which we did at that time. But once we got to
clearing and grubbing across Wheeler Road for moving Marks Church Road
over 95 feet we discovered a clay sewer very deep and the loads won't --
it won't carry the loads that we're going to place on there, so this
change order here is basically for that, to put a duct-to-line sewer
system in there. Also, we discovered a 30-inch pipe coming down Wheeler
Road that we're going to have to accommodate and also a hidden pond that
was a detention pond -- detention facility that was serving the Y. All
of this is included in this change order here. This has nothing to do
with the incentive agreement. He's got a good shot at meeting August
the 15th. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I so move. MR. HANDY: Second.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Discussion, gentlemen? All in favor of Mr. Todd's
motion, let it be known by raising your hand, please. MOTION CARRIES 10-
0.
CLERK: Item 70: Motion to approve capital purchase of MADVAC 101D
Litter Collection equipment at an approximate cost of $28,500.00.
MR. OLIVER: And I would add that we are proposing to take the funding
from sales tax for this. The purpose of this equipment, we figure it
will alleviate the need for six to twelve people in the long-term, but
frankly we're going to keep up better with litter. What it is, it's a
little vacuum that's on the side of a tractor, permits us to go through
the parking areas, closer to the business areas and streets and to clean
up trash, and that's the purpose of it. MR. KUHLKE: So move.
MR. BRIDGES: Second. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, where I support the
equipment, I'm going to vote the same way I did in committee, and that
is in the negative. MR. ZETTERBERG: Mr. Oliver, does this
equipment allow us to clean up inside the median down on Broad Street,
all those places where people sit? MR. OLIVER: Within certain
limits it does. It depends again on the access, and I think Mr. Greene
can address that better than I can. MR. GREENE: You're talking
about the parking bays in the median in the middle of Broad Street?
MR. ZETTERBERG: Not just the parking bays but the other areas where
people can sit in. MR. GREENE: You can take this vehicle on
sidewalks. You can also use it in the parking decks, the clearance is
low enough. I've seen this vehicle demonstrated in two different cities
as well as here in Augusta. Atlanta bought six of them just for the
Olympics. They work extremely well. MR. ZETTERBERG: It does not
escape me that Mr. Oliver said that we can replace ten or twelve people
down the road [inaudible]. MR. GREENE: No, sir, this will be
people that we will not have to hire, not to replace right now. MR.
BEARD: Mr. Mayor, what I would like to say is that while I can support
the motion here to purchase this, but I would like to add, and possibly
to the Public Service and the Engineering Committee, it is necessary to
clean up these areas, not only the parking bays downtown which are
filthy all the time -- and I just don't understand why we can't clean
those up. You go over here on Greene Street and going out Ninth Street,
or James Brown Boulevard--I can't get used to saying that name, it's
always Ninth Street to me--and other areas, the Laney-Walker area, and I
think if we're going to utilize this, let's utilize it in all areas,
because I think that we are doing a very poor job of keeping this city
clean. I can go up the Calhoun Expressway, and I go up there every
morning, you find beer bottles and everything else on the side there,
and look like they clean it maybe every two months or so forth. And I
think we have those vehicles out there to clean that, and I just want to
know from Mr. Greene there who is in charge of cleaning all of this and
keeping it clean? MR. GREENE: We are, sir. MR. BEARD: Okay.
Well, my point is well taken, and I hope that you heard what I said and
maybe we can do something effectively about it. And the other thing I
would like to ask while I have the floor is that how many of the street
sweepers do we have? Because some people in some parts of the community
never see those street sweepers. MR. GREENE: We have two street
sweepers in the urban district. We have three that are assigned to the
suburban --I mean, the urban district, but only one is running, the
other two are in the shop. The only one that's running in the urban
district right now is the one that the Commissioners authorized to buy
back in January of this year. The other two are in the shop. They're
completely worn out and we're asking for replacements for those in the
budget. Mr. Beard, I agree with you 100 percent. I do not disagree
with anything. But if you remember, due to financial restraints the old
urban district, the city, did not purchase any capital equipment for
quite some time. We have assessed our needs and we're working with Mr.
Sidell and he's trying to help us in trying to get us the type of fleet
and equipment that we do need to maintain these areas. But you are
absolutely correct. What we clean up now on Calhoun Express-way and
areas like this, we clean up these by hand. You can't clean those areas
with street sweepers and et cetera. When you have the people -- the
parking bays, just to give you an example, most of that trash comes from
the clubs, people coming out of the clubs. They dump it in there at
night, by the time the crews get there in the morning you can't get in
there and clean underneath the vehicles because they're completely full.
A lot of it is the community is throwing it out, but a lot of it is
they haven't had the manpower nor have they had the equipment necessary
to maintain these areas. This is one of the areas with consolidation
that we're trying to put the crews where they're needed. Instead of
urban/suburban, this is one Augusta, and we're trying --through the
reorganization, trying to utilize the crews where they are needed.
MR. OLIVER: Let me work with Mr. Greene, and if we need to get
additional equipment, we'll bring it back in a similar manner to this.
Additionally perhaps, Mike, we need to start our crews earlier in the
morning before we have these vehicle problems. MAYOR SCONYERS: All
in favor of the motion to approve, let it be known by raising your hand,
please. MR. TODD VOTES NO. MOTION CARRIES 9-1.
CLERK: Item 71: Motion to approve bid award to the low bidder,
Mabus Construction Company, Inc., in the amount of $1,497,744.60 subject
to receipt of signed contracts and proper bonds on the Hyde Park
Drainage Improvements Project. MR. POWELL: So move. MR. H.
BRIGHAM: I second the motion. MR. TODD: Is this in line with what
we talked about and having the hearings with the community and looking
into the brownfield initiative? You know, we made some bad decisions
here and I think we're going to have to change a couple of them today.
And if it's what the Commission want to do is to go on and approve this,
then -- you know, as far as those that wasn't a part of the Engineering
Services Committee where we discussed it, then perhaps we want to do
that. But I think that if we can have those meetings with the community
-- and my question is, Mr. Murphy, have those happened yet? MR.
MURPHY: You remember, Mr. Todd, that I told you that our consultant had
in his proposal [inaudible] and he set up a hearing in that community
and went there that night, and there was another meeting going on out
there and he never did get to hold the hearing. So effectively what I'm
saying is there was never a public hearing held. MR. TODD: I
believe what come out of committee as far as a recommendation was, along
the discussion or the talks, was that we basically do a hearing and that
our 40-day time line on executing the bid, that we had plenty of time to
do that. Now, gentlemen, there are two things that we have going on, Mr.
Mayor. We have the Health Department doing a toxicity, I guess we call
it or whatever, study on whether there is anything in there that's
detrimental to the folks that live in Hyde Park. We've gone over the
other entity that's doing the cleanup and what they're doing in there,
but there is factors other than the unnamed entity that I'm going to
leave unnamed because they threatened to sue the Health Department.
There is two other entities in there -- corporations in there that's
under consent order that could have a negative impact on whether this
community stay a viable, sustainable community, which I say it's not, or
whether it goes into a brownfield initiative. In the budget that
the President just signed today, I think around noon, there is monies in
that budget for brownfield and there's good opportunity to do a
brownfield in Hyde Park if these studies come back. And I would like to
hear from the citizens, because we can simply not execute the bid or we
can execute the bid with the understanding that the work won't start
until we have time to get some statistics back and some information on
whether we're going to have folks there or whether we're moving folks
out. I also would want to make sure that the money stayed in the
account designated for Hyde Park until we have a disposition. And those
are my comments. This is not in District 4, but I'm trying to represent
the interest of the environmental side of this. And I'm willing to
answer any questions or try to help work this thing out, but I think
that we could be wasting some money if we go on and spend it. Thank
you, Mr. Mayor. MR. POWELL: Mr. Chairman, I think Mr. Handy and I
have discussed the possibility of amending the motion to include a
postponement as far as we'll approve this pending the hearings, the
public hearings. Is that right, Mr. Handy? MR. OLIVER: I would
suggest you defer any action on the contract until you hold the meeting,
because to approve a contract subject to a public hearing could --
MR. WALL: You're going to have a problem insofar as the notice of
award. MR. POWELL: Okay. Well, I'll withdraw my motion and let a
new motion -- MR. HANDY: Right. I'd just like to make a motion
that we postpone this particular item until we have the hearing from the
neighborhood and get their input before we decide what we want to do
with this particular item. MR. BEARD: I'll second Mr. Handy's
motion. MR. OLIVER: Would the Commission like to be involved in
the public hearing? Is that your plan? MR. HANDY: Yes, sir,
right. And you also. MR. UTLEY: The community met on this issue
and our standing is that we not issue the contract due to the fact the
activity that's taking place with the Goldberg site is now vastly moving
toward the Gordon Highway and it will not alleviate the drainage
problem. And we would like to hold those funds and hope that we will
get an environmental decision in the form of a brownfield initiative
where we can use that as leverage and still probably use it as drainage
monies when you can bring it up to industrial use and not as a
residential use. And we would get more for the money and at the same
time we would solve a long dispute with the community where you would
have the community relocated using funds from EPA, ATSDR, as well as
HUD. And that's our reason for our meeting yesterday is to put a
hold on it as far as leave it as it is, because we'll survive now. And
I'm 50 years old and it's been flooding ever since I've been out there,
so we might as well just hold on a few more weeks or a month and see can
we get an initiative passed where we may be able to relocate, and then
turn it into an industrial park where -- Goldberg cannot advance to the
Gordon Highway, but he can advance back into Hyde Park where it's so
desperately needed now. And you all really need to go out there and
look at that mess that Goldberg has out there. And by the way, let me
clarify, too, this does include Virginia Subdivision. I think someone
was saying we -- every time we speak we're talking about everything,
which includes the Southern Wood Piedmont area, which does include
Virginia Subdivision, Hyde Park and Oregon Park, and I want to make sure
everyone is clear on that. MR. WALL: We need to get some direction
from the Commission. The bids are only good for 40 days. The bid
opening was on July the 14th. Depending on how much notice of a hearing
-- I mean, it's possible that we could schedule a hearing toward the end
of next week or Monday before the next Commission meeting, but it's
going to be short notice, and will that satisfy the Commission's desire
to hold a hearing with that short of notice? MR. HANDY: Let this
one expire, we'll do another one. But we need to have a hearing. We
need the input from the neighborhood. MR. WALL: The bids are good,
we would hate to lose it, but that's what we're seeking direction from,
how much advertising, can we hold a hearing and then bring it back on
the 19th. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, we have Mr. Utley here. He told us
that he already had one meeting. I think that he can mobilize his
troops to have a hearing probably at our convenience. The only problem
was that the first hearing, they didn't coordinate the meeting space.
Now, we've run into that situation where we was having a hearing at
Jamestown Elementary School and Morgan Road Middle School was having PTA
and we didn't have, you know, a handful of folks to show up. So that
happens and we're not being critical about that, but I think that he can
mobilize or he probably can give us a answer -- I think he done gave us
the answer on what the community wants. MR. WALL: We'll try to
work something out with the contractor, get him to extend so that we can
bring it back to the Commission the first meeting in September. If
we're unable to do that, we may try a quick hearing, but if the
contractor will agree, then bring it back in September. MR. HANDY:
Okay. Also, Mr. Mayor, I heard what Mr. Todd said about Mr. Utley
having a meeting and everything, and Mr. Utley is the president of the
neighborhood association and everything, but we still need the input
from the entire neighborhood. And also I want it to be understood that
Mr. Utley is trying to get the brownfield initiative. We are not, as a
government, responsible trying to move people out of Hyde Park. So I
don't know anything about the brownfield initiative, who is responsible
for that as far as giving the money and who is responsible to say that
Hyde Park will be turned into what we're trying to get it turned into.
And we're holding up this project and we're not knowing, so I need some
more information from someone to see whether we're on the same accord,
whether we're stopping a project and not knowing whether or not if Hyde
Park will be turned into what you would like for it to be turned into.
MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I'd like to address that. My colleague makes
a good point, and I believe that this Commission passed a resolution
calling on the EPA to make this a brownfield initiative. Now, certainly
we need certain data to do that, but this go back at least three years,
I think when Cynthia McKinney first started representing the 11th
District, that we was -- at that time we went to Planning and Zoning and
got the [inaudible] as far as the information on the residents out there
in Hyde Park and it was presented to her. I think we UPS'd probably a
stack of materials that high. And there was at least three initiatives
to try to get it in to legislation, a reauthorization of EPA and a
reauthorization of Super Fund. It did not make it. Now we have another
opportunity with the budget that the President signed today having
brownfield initiative monies in there. When this government was
going on the Chamber trip, I didn't make it, but I urged that at least
somebody deal with the brownfield initiative. Now Mr. Utley is
traveling on this initiative on trying to push this as a private
citizen, but this board has endorsed the brownfield initiative for Hyde
Park/Virginia Subdivision. The perception is there that there is a
problem. If the perception is there that there is a problem, then
whether there is a problem or not needs to be decided by tests and what
the Health Department is doing, et cetera. Anytime a major corporation
threatens to file a lawsuit to stop a study on whether the activities of
the industry is having a negative impact on citizens, then I think they
have something to hide. And I support the brownfield initiative and
continuing this and get everybody out of the --between the rock and hard
place: industry, the citizens, and this government. MR. MAYS: The
only thing I'd just like to say real quickly, I hope we don't get the
priorities mixed up on where we need to go with this project. Obviously
we want to help, but I think the hearings are important. And then if
out of the hearings come the fact that they want to continue to fight to
get that support, then I think the issue of when we award a contract is
really the least important of our worries. A million and a half to a
million six, don't worry, somebody is going to competitively fight for
that. If you hold it this Christmas or next Christmas, you're going to
have some people who will battle for that money. I don't think we got
to worry about that factor. Somebody's going to compete for it, you
don't have to worry about that. But I think that if we are that
close to trying to get something accomplished with this and then may be
able to turn that situation around, then I don't think that the awarding
of the bid and going through -- while I know that we've got some false
ceilings, we want to make sure that we take advantage of the dollar if
we're going to use it, but I don't think that ought to be the driving
force in what we ought to deal with, and I hope that's not the case. I
hope the driving force is what we can eventually bring in to this total
mess that's over there in Hyde Park, and if we can get with y'all in
terms of doing that, then fine. I think the key issue is making
sure, as I said when we started off this meeting today, is that the
monies don't walk away and go somewhere else. As long as they are
committed to Hyde Park area, you're going to find competent people who
will go over there and bid it and I think that's the bottom line of it.
But I think the people in the initiative should be the driving force,
not when and where we let a particular contract, because somebody will
go over there and do it, you ain't got to worry about that. You put it
out for bid, buddy, you're going to have some folks who will be ready to
come over there and bid on it, so that's not your problem. But I think
if we've got a chance to hopefully clear up a bad situation, then we
need to continue to work with them. MS. ROBERTS: I'm Margaret
Roberts, Virginia Subdivision, and what I came down to talk about, I was
wanting to know if the Virginia Subdivision where it reaches Hyde Park's
drainage, was this sales tax money of Virginia Subdivision, to do work
in Virginia Subdivision, or is it the same project? MR. MURPHY:
I'm going to assume that you asked the question--because I really didn't
hear you, ma'am--that you asked me on the phone today. Number one, does
the Hyde Park project reach over and do anything in your subdivision?
No, ma'am. This is just for east of Dan Bowles Road. And the second
question was, was there any one-percent sales tax money scheduled to be
spent in Virginia? No, ma'am, not at this time. MS. ROBERTS:
Well, I know there hasn't been any and I've been out there about 50
years yet, so we keep waiting on it. We don't have the ditches cleaned,
they haven't been cleaned in 13 years. The grass is this high and the
place is a blight area, too. We don't have anything down there. They
overlook us like we're not even there, you know, we just go right on by
them. But that's one thing I wanted to make sure, that the Virginia
Subdivision is included when you said about this brownfield industrial
park. They came down in December and mentioned about it [inaudible]
something about relocation, which we haven't heard anything about it.
But we want to make sure that when you're talking about Hyde Park, that
you do mention Virginia Subdivision and we are included because the
people don't know. We need to relocate and get out of this place.
MR. UTLEY: Mr. Mayor, they are included. We are not separating at all.
But it does not include any industries, none whatsoever, only the
residential areas. MAYOR SCONYERS: Is Mike Greene still here?
Mike, is there a reason we can't cut the grass over in Virginia
Subdivision? MR. GREENE: Some of the areas we do cut with the
mowers. Some of the areas we do not cut because of the ongoing thing
with the Piedmont plant. We cannot utilize inmates in these areas to
get down and actually cut the ditches. We do cut the right-of-way, we
do go in there with equipment. We've been in Virginia Subdivision in
the last month or so with heavy equipment and dipping the ditches out.
I've got several pipe projects that--I was working on the thing today to
be approved--that we're going to try to alleviate some of the flooding
in that area. A lot of the ditches are anywhere from one foot to eight
foot, the same ditch. It's up and down, up and down, the driveways and
everything else, so it is a real drainage problem. But as far as
cutting the grass, we cut the right-of-way, but we don't do much in the
ditches. MAYOR SCONYERS: Okay. I wanted that basically for
information where Ms. Roberts will know we are doing something over
there. MR. MAYS: Mr. Mayor, before Ms. Roberts leaves -- and I
think you asked a very good question in reference to Mr. Greene with
that cleanup, and he was correct in the answer that he gave. I'm
reminded of you laughing a little while ago about having dreams. You
know, this is kind of like one I've dreamed before and been through this
process. I'm wondering whether it's a dress rehearsal for the same
play. You know, as the mood has become a little bit more favorably,
thankfully, with government and this whole Hyde Park/Virginia
Subdivision situation -- not to where it should be, but it's a long way
from where it was, and I think some of the fear factors of government
thinking that this was going to be, quite frankly, Savannah Place Part
Two but only expanded by numbers, and that drove a lot of people to
fear. But while we are working in unison with each other, I would
hope, and this is nothing that's new, that maybe through Public Works --
this was voted down by us at least once, maybe more than that, I don't
know, we've been down that road so many times. But it would seem to me
that the perception, Mr. Mayor, that maybe some of the residents get,
and particularly maybe more so in Virginia than in Hyde Park, is the
fact that if some of our people -- and this is just one of those
assumations again, that if there is a fear factor or something to be
fearful of, if they don't want to be in there doing it, then obviously
folk who are there every day have an obvious problem, too. The bottom
line is, a lot of the general maintenance is not getting done.
Maybe then in that regard what we need to look at, as we've talked about
before but never approved, is of looking at contracting with people that
will do that type of environmental cleaning work that are insured, that
have the necessary equipment and personnel to be able to protect
themselves and their folk, that go in for a fee and clean those areas
up. And that's been presented to this body before, maybe not the new
consolidated government on this issue, but I know it's been before the
old County Commission, and we've been slam-dunked on occasion with that.
But I think as the mood gets to be more favorable, then obviously it
would seem to me if we got folks that we can't be responsible for --if
we got inmates that we are fearful of that will sue, then the only
alternative is to look at a third-party cleaning source. Now, if that
gets us in the predicament that we admit that there is contamination --
I think we're already in that predicament because we got, by admission,
the fact that we got folk that we don't want cleaning it and we got
prisoners that we don't want to take in that situation. So I think the
only alternative it leaves us in is that we do or at least seek the
numbers that it would take on contractual cleaning so that those people
are protected and that the normal operations of government to make it
liveable and clean can go on. And I would like to invite -- if there's
no motion on the floor -- MAYOR SCONYERS: There is. MR. MAYS:
Then I would like to ask the maker of the original motion, since we're
on that subject with this, could you amend that motion to at least
authorize Public Works or the Administrator jointly to seek in terms of
finding out what the numbers would be for those areas and to deal with
that type of general cleaning that can not be done by machinery.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Mr. Handy, did you understand that? MR. HANDY:
Yeah. I just want to know who said we can't clean it, why our people
can't get in the ditch. MR. J. BRIGHAM: Mr. Mayor, isn't this
discussion getting a little far off of postponing for a public hearing?
MR. HANDY: No, it's all tied in together. MR. J. BRIGHAM: I
know it's all tied together, but I think we should deal with things
separately. MR. OLIVER: With your permission, we've tentatively
scheduled, subject to getting one of two facilities, August the 28th at
7:00--it's a Thursday--if that meets with your needs. And we would
either have it at Clara Jenkins School or at the center on Goldenrod,
depending upon what the availability is. MR. POWELL: Mr. Chairman,
if my memory serves me, it seems to me like we approved the cleanup of
this area about two and a half years ago. We authorized Public Works to
go out and clean the ditches in the Hyde Park and Virginia Subdivision,
and, Mr. Utley, you probably remember that. At that time we had a
letter from then-Director of Public Works, Mr. Gooding, that the
contamination was no -- there was no contamination in the ditches and
that the tests had been already done. The neighborhood came down and
voiced strong opposition to us cleaning out those ditches, and I think
Mr. Utley was part of that then. And that was the direction that we
were taking because the citizens were concerned of us cleaning up or
digging out the ditches because of stirring up some contamination, and
that's something that hasn't been shed light on. But it has been
discussed, it was discussed at the old County Commission. MR. TODD:
Mr. Mayor, Mr. Powell is right on that, including I guess a agitator, a
certain attorney's wife come down and stood in front of a grade-all.
So, you know, he's right on that, and certainly I don't see any reason
why we can't cut grass. All we need to cut grass is a respirator if you
think you're going to kick up dust or something like that. You can get
in there with a Weed Eater and you can cut grass. I don't see a problem
with why we can't subcontract it out. We got more than we can do anyway,
that's the bottom line. So if we -- we can let agitators beat us to
death with environmental issues or we can do what we need to do and do
the service delivery and have nothing to complain about if their ditches
is cleaned. Then the other issue is separate from the minimum moral
obligation as a government service delivery as far as keeping paper
picked up, grass cut, and ditches cleaned out with grade-alls. When you
put that man on the grade-all on a wet day, or you can wet it down, and
you're loading that dump truck, you are not making any dust. There is
no reason for anyone to be out there protesting a cleanup, period. And
what's in the ditches is already wet because you've got running water in
there. And the biggest problem in that ditch is some kaolin that's
running from a -- not a kaolin mine but running from a company that use
a kaolin product that have water a different color. That's one of the
problems. There is a consent order on that because they're not meeting
the clean water standards. But perception is what's killing us here.
And if they got 234 folks dying in a, you know, unreasonable amount of
time, then I'm not going to argue with them on that perception. I'll
wait for the Health Department to bring their study back and we'll make
a decision then. MAYOR SCONYERS: Read Mr. Handy's motion and let
us move on with the order of the day, please. CLERK: Mr. Handy's
motion was to postpone the awarding of the contract until a public
hearing is held. Mr. Mays asked that he accept the motion to authorize
Public Works and the Administrator the numbers to do a general cleaning
that can't be done with machinery. MAYOR SCONYERS: Did you accept
that, Mr. Handy? MR. HANDY: No, I didn't accept it, because we can
clean it and we don't have no reason not to go in there and clean it. I
mean, our people can clean it. MR. MAYS: Well, let me just ask
this, Mr. Handy. I was just responding to what our Mayor had asked the
person in charge of cleanup. I didn't answer the question from the
floor, Mr. Greene answered the question from the floor. Now, you are on
Engineering Services -- and I'm not trying to start a debate about your
motion. I can live without the amendment. The only thing I was trying
to do was to help our new Administrator with a little history to a point
that if you're going in there, it'll be a lot better armed with a
situation of knowing what it would take you to clean up something than
it would going in there with a lot of airs and nothing to offer.
The answer was made by our people in Personnel, and I'm not indicting
Mr. Greene, he just simply answered the Mayor's question. He said that
they were not able to do it. Now, he's the one that's in charge of
dealing with it, he answered the question. Now, whether or not it's
true that they can clean it, I'm not going to get in that debate about
whether it's not. You know, I'm not a health assessor, I don't know. I
deal professionally with the end product of all of it, but -- you know,
I'm just saying when the Mayor asked the question, he wanted to know why
we weren't dealing with it because Ms. Roberts made a statement, and he
basically answered the question that they were not able to do it because
of what had been going on environmentally. Now, if y'all want to do
that through Engineering Services and you want to put your prisoners,
your Public Work folk over there, deal with that. If you don't, the
only thing I was saying was at least getting some numbers so that if you
had to contract it, that you could come in there and be able to tell
folks something. Because obviously when you get there, I think the
proof is going to be in the pudding regardless of where they came up
with it. It was not so much in terms of normal cleanup, it was in terms
of unearthing and disturbing what could be possible evidence in that
area, and it's a big difference in that. And so I think that's a little
bit different than where you got Johnson grass growing in the ditch.
Let's have a common sense with that and be reasonable about it, and
you're familiar with that area very much with that. So, I mean, you
don't have to deal with putting that on the amendment. You don't have
to walk in there with anything. I was just trying to make it friendly so
that if you come there you'd have something to present to folk other
than a wild-eyed stare that we basically been doing for the last several
years, that was all I was trying to do. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, could
I answer my colleague in reference what may be there, evidence that we
may destroy. We offered to pull samples of anything that we pull out of
a ditch and save it for testing by anybody that wants to test it. That
happened, Mr. Mayor, when we had the person standing in front of the
grade-all. If they wanted to stage it in their backyard -- [End of Tape
2] -- and they could take samples, we take samples, and our
environmental engineer will even send those samples off to have them
tested. So it's not a issue of destroying evidence, and we have no
intention of destroying evidence. MAYOR SCONYERS: Thank you, Mr.
Todd. All in favor of Mr. Handy's motion to postpone until we have a
public hearing, let it be known by raising your hand, please. MOTION
CARRIES 9-0 [MR. ZETTERBERG OUT]
CLERK: Under the Public Safety portion of the agenda, Items 72
through 79 were approved by Public Safety on July 28th, 1997. [Item
72: Motion to approve $41,041.00 for matching funds (.111 of the grant
amount) necessary for the procurement of a $369,740.00 grant. (Grant
covers two year period.) Item 73: Motion to approve purchase under
State Contract #466-00-50041 for Mobile-Vision system-5 In-car Video
System (in use by Georgia and South Carolina State Patrol) for 35 patrol
units at a total cost including installation of $127,419 ($3,470/unit
plus $150/unit installation, and eight 75' cables to make cameras
portable for use in working fatalities at a cost of $719.60 for all
eight cables). Project was approved for $128,000 in capital listing for
1997 permanent budget. Item 74: Motion to approve agreement with
Aiken Motorcycle Sales for the use of three Kawasaki Jet Ski Watercraft
by the Augusta-Richmond County Fire Department subject to operations
policy and Attorney's review of contract. Item 75: Deleted from
consent agenda. Item 76: Motion to approve agreement between EMS
Ventures, Inc., d/b/a Rural/Metro Ambulance, and Augusta, Georgia,
allowing Rural/Metro to establish a Public Safety Answering Point PSAP.
Item 77: Deleted from consent agenda. Item 78: Deleted from
consent agenda. Item 79: Motion to approve the appointment of
Captain P.A. Williams, Sheriff's Department, to the LEPC to complete the
current three-year term for Major Richard Weaver, Sheriff's Department.
Term expires April 1998.] MR. H. BRIGHAM: I move that the items
read by the Clerk would be approved by the committee. They were
discussed in the committee meeting and approved. MR. KUHLKE:
Second. MR. POWELL: I'd like to pull Item 78. MR. ZETTERBERG:
I have a question on 75. MAYOR SCONYERS: Do you want to pull it
out? MR. ZETTERBERG: I guess so. MAYOR SCONYERS: Any other
items need to be pulled out? MR. MAYS: 77. MAYOR SCONYERS:
Okay, Items 72 through 79, with the exception of 75, 77, and 78. All in
favor of Mr. Brigham's motion, let it be known by raising your hand,
please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 75: Motion to approve purchase of bullet resistant
vests in the amount of $8,400 for the Deputy Marshals as an additional
safety measure to protect them while performing duties of their
position. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I so move. MR. H. BRIGHAM:
Second. MR. ZETTERBERG: I apologize to my chairman, I should have
asked the question in our committee meeting, but when are the Marshals
going to wear these vests? Is Mr. Smith here? MR. OLIVER: We'll
see if he's there. I'll try to pinch hit in his absence. It's my
understanding that he is going to adopt the policy that's the same as
the Sheriff, that unless the weather is excessively hot and that it
creates an imposition in the performance of their job, that it will be
mandatory that they wear them all the time while they're on duty.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Further discussion, gentlemen? All in favor of Mr.
Todd's motion to approve, let it be known by raising your hand, please.
MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 77: Motion to approve to revise work (change order
with Beers Construction company in the amount of $29,214) in the
attorney visitation areas of the housing pods. Changes include
adjustments to walls and additional hollow metal, glazing and seating
(subject to letter of cost reasonableness from architect/engineer and a
recommendation from the Citzens Advisory Committee). MR. H.
BRIGHAM: Move for approval. MR. HANDY: Second. MR. MAYS: I
asked that it be pulled and I'm glad Chief Toole is here. I believe it
reads subject to a letter of cost reasonableness from architect/engineer
and a recommendation from the Citizens Advisory, and I've tried to keep
an open mind until this particular meeting before a final vote on it. I
stated in committee -- I believe the Sheriff was there that day -- no,
Chief Hatfield was there that day and you weren't there on that day,
Charlie. And you know me, I don't say anything behind anybody's back I
won't say to their face. I said then and I say it now that any changes
basically that related to what we were doing in terms of court order or
the judge approving of a situation, that you were going to account,
particularly as the chief jailer, presenting problems that were there in
that jail, fine, and I could adjust with that as long as what we had in
the budget. What I questioned was -- and this was not personal in
dealing with the Attorney's provision of it, but I know the rigmarole we
have been down through with the frills added on where when we started
off where maybe jail may have been one of the considerations, not the
only one, but everybody got a chance to load up that hotdog in the
beginning and get it all the way from 15 and 20 million dollars into an
estimated 50 million, which it would have been. And I was concerned at
the time that we're going to get a chance to move in four to five months
ahead of time, have some money left over that would put us in the black
with it, that we weren't just looking into a situation where we had some
money. And I know that you've not brought that in there and I won't
say Mr. Wall is bringing that over there, but I wanted to make sure,
because I thought that when we went through that whole provision,
whether it was our side of attorneys or whether it was Georgia Legal
Services, that all of the little things such as these visitation areas
and that kind of thing were basically ironed out. If that's one that's
going to hamper your operation -- as I said in that committee meeting
and I'll say it again, that if that's one where the chief jailer looks
me in the eye where he's got a problem with that, that's going to cause
us a problem, then I'm open to dealing with that. But just one to the
point of where it will be better bigger or if it seats more people in
some area doing it -- and I think we've been reminded more times than
one by Judge Bowen to a point that his order was in terms of dealing
with overcrowding. That was what we were under the order to do, and I
think that's what the order still is even under the reprogramming order,
and that's why I asked that it be pulled out. If we've gotten those
information numbers from the parties involved to move on with it, then I
still stand open-minded and ready to vote on it. But if this is one
that has another opportunity to increase this thing, then I got a
problem with it. CHIEF TOOLE: This didn't just come up, Mr. Mays.
This has been an issue that's been brought before the Citizens
Committee, brought before Mr. Wall and myself, the Sheriff, Mr.
Wilkinson, who is the court-appointed lawyer for Judge Bowen to look
into different things that we're doing out there. And during the time
that we were going back and looking at this we saw a need to put this
in. You've seen the Fourth Street facility, everybody in here. We have
one visitation booth for everybody to use up in those towers. We
started out at $58,000 trying to add these booths, cut it in half to
$29,000, negotiated it down. I have checked the booths out, I've
been out there numerous times, and we feel like that it will expedite
the attorneys seeing the clients that need to see them out there, a very
minimal cost and a very small portion of time involved in getting the
attorneys up and getting them down. This was something that we have
discussed I guess probably a dozen times. Did not know that it was
going to be a big issue as far as it coming up, but we felt like it was
an issue that we needed to go ahead and address, resolve, make sure that
all parties involved were satisfied with the resolution, and that's why
it was done in the change order that was sent out. MR. TODD: I
guess one of my concerns, Mr. Mayor, is that the Citizens Committee
didn't have a recommendation at the committee, and I sat in on Mr.
Brigham's committee; and, two, that it was probably packaged wrong in
the sense I think someone said that it was part of a court order, or
misconstrued -- CHIEF TOOLE: No, it's not part of a court order.
It has been brought before the Citizens Committee. In fact, I even
talked to Mr. Bud Amerson as early as yesterday and they were in
concurrence with going ahead and getting this done. MR. TODD:
Right, and I can support it as long as it's not being packaged as far as
it's a court order. I went over and read the court decree or court
order [inaudible]. MR. KUHLKE: Mr. Oliver, I'll direct this to
you. There was some conversation or some mention from you that you were
expecting a reduction of about $22,000 for some foundation work,
Charles, that was eliminated, and that -- so that we felt like that the
impact of this change order would be about a net $7,000. Any resolution
to that? MR. OLIVER: That was Mr. Wall that made that comment.
MR. WALL: That was me that made the comment. Back when the original
discussion came up there was an expectation that there was going to be a
$20,000 cost savings, and I talked with the Chief about that last week.
I don't know whether Doug has ever responded to that or not. CHIEF
TOOLE: We're trying to pull that information now, Mr. Kuhlke. I'll be
glad to send you a copy of it as soon as we get it. I feel sure that
the deduct is in there, I've just got to pull out all the paperwork.
MR. OLIVER: It isn't in this change order, though. CHIEF TOOLE:
No, it's not in this change order. MR. OLIVER: Okay. I have a
letter of cost reasonableness from the engineer on this. I don't have
anything from the Citizens Committee, but assume Mr. Toole is
representing the fact that he's talked with the Citizens Committee, they
are comfortable -- have they sent anything or do you know? CHIEF
TOOLE: Yes, sir. Like I said, I talked with Mr. Amerson just as early
as yesterday. MR. KUHLKE: Have they put anything in writing?
CHIEF TOOLE: No, sir. I can get it in writing from the Citizens
Committee if you need that. MAYOR SCONYERS: Further discussion,
gentlemen? All in favor of Mr. Brigham's motion to approve, let it be
known by raising your hand, please. MR. MAYS DID NOT VOTE. MOTION
CARRIES 9-0.
CLERK: Item 78: Motion to approve expenditures for renovations to
office space in Augusta Riverfront Center for relocation of Fire
Department Administrative Offices at a cost not to exceed $10,000.00.
MR. POWELL: Mr. Chairman, I asked that this be pulled just really
for information purposes, not really an objection to it. But I noticed
here that we have a cost not to exceed $10,000 for the -- and this
question is -- the two questions is for Chief Few. The $10,000 that
we're going to spend to renovate the area, you've got it coming out of a
fund number here. What are those funds appropriated for? I mean, is
that an administrative fund or is that from a -- is that for equipment
or? CHIEF FEW: It's for maintenance. MR. POWELL: Is that
maintenance on vehicles or just maintenance on the building itself?
CHIEF FEW: Building maintenance. MR. POWELL: And my second
question is, Chief, I noticed here we had the cost of the construction,
but we didn't have the cost of the lease per square foot in here.
MR. OLIVER: Let me explain, Mr. Powell. There isn't any cost per
square foot. The government made a commitment when the building was
originally built to lease X number of square feet. Housing and
Community Development currently occupies a portion of that square
footage, the rest of that square footage was never utilized by anyone.
What the proposal that Chief Few put forward was to use the space and to
share a combined conference room with Housing and Community Development,
so actually there's no increase in money that we're paying out. Now, as
a practical matter, as was mentioned, we will wind up -- we're paying a
portion of that out of the General Fund, charging it back to the Fire
Department, but it's no new money to us. We are not renting additional
space. We are obligated for the space we're renting, we're just not
using it. MR. POWELL: How long are we obligated for this space?
MR. KUHLKE: Ten years. MR. OLIVER: Yeah, that's my
recollection also. MR. H. BRIGHAM: Move for approval, Mr. Mayor.
MR. TODD: Second. MR. HANDY: Mr. Mayor, I just got one
question. The extra room that we was paying for never been used since
we bought it? MR. OLIVER: That's correct. MR. HANDY: What's
the use in getting it then? MR. OLIVER: I will say this in defense
of that, it was a situation that was done to make that particular
complex work. There were a number of people that did that. I mean, Mr.
Morris did that with the museum and different people make -- but
whenever you do a speculative office venture it's not uncommon that you
have anchor tenants, and those anchor tenants commit for a certain
amount of space. And the reason for that is to have a guarantee to the
investor that the building is going to lease up and not go into default.
MR. KUHLKE: Mr. Oliver, it's my understanding that the city
subleased a portion of that space where Chief Few is going in to two
attorneys and one is still there. MR. OLIVER: I didn't know that.
MR. ZETTERBERG: Chief Few, can you tell me how many people you're
going to move over there? CHIEF FEW: Yes. There's about seven.
MR. BEARD: I call for the question. MR. TODD: I had my hand
up, and I'll make it very brief. When I was invited over to Augusta
Tomorrow and looked at the vision for that area I didn't see Channel 6
or the Fire Department down there, so I imagine the Chief is probably
going to need a place to oversee the movement of that fire department.
MAYOR SCONYERS: All in favor of Mr. Brigham's motion, let it be
known by raising your hand, please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 93: Motion to approve minutes of the regular meeting
of the Augusta Commission on July 15, 1997. MR. H. BRIGHAM: So
move. MR. KUHLKE: Second. MAYOR SCONYERS: All in favor of
Mr. Brigham's motion, let it be known by raising your hand, please.
MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 94: Appointments to various ARC Boards, Authorities
and Commissions. Mr. Handy would like to rescind the appointment of Ms.
Belle Clark to the Daniel Field Aviation Commission and to appoint Ms.
Linda Roberts. He would like to appoint Ms. Belle Clark to the Coliseum
Authority. Mr. Todd would like to place in nomination Ms. Marlene
Watkins for an appointment on the Coliseum Authority. MR. TODD:
Mr. Mayor, I so move. MR. HANDY: Second. MAYOR SCONYERS: All
in favor of Mr. Todd's motion, let it be known by raising your hand,
please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 94-A: Appointment of Richard Slaby to the Community
Service Board of East Central Georgia for term July 1, 1997 - June 30,
1999. CLERK: I spoke to Judge Slaby and he had looked at the
canons and felt that he could serve in that capacity, and he is
interested in serving if y'all are agreeable to reappointing him.
MR. MAYS: So move. MR. H. BRIGHAM: Second. MAYOR SCONYERS:
All in favor of Mr. Mays' motion to appoint Judge Slaby, let it be known
by raising your hand, please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 94-B: Reappoint three members to Economic Opportunity
Authority for a four-year term: Mr. Marion Barnes, Mr. James Walker,
Ms. Imogene P. Ford. MR. HANDY: So move. MR. H. BRIGHAM:
Second. MR. BRIDGES: I'll have to apologize for not looking in the
detail, do we have a detail of who these people are? I really don't
know who I'm voting on here. I'd like to know something about them.
MR. OLIVER: We are under no legal obligation to appoint these members
at all. These are recommendations that were made by them, and it's my
understanding these people currently serve. MR. BRIDGES: So this
is the people they are asking that we appoint? MR. OLIVER: That's
correct. MR. J. BRIGHAM: Mr. Mayor, while we're on this, I notice
on their letterhead there's three vacancies. Are we going to fill these
three vacancies? MR. OLIVER: Those have already been filled. That
was miscommunication between myself and them probably a month or six
weeks ago. We filled the three vacancies six weeks ago, but we didn't
do the reappointments because I didn't understand those terms were
expiring. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I guess my question to the County
Attorney whether we have any legal liabilities in having three members
over there as far as any action that they may take as far as
[inaudible]. MR. WALL: No, it's a separate corporate entity. The
fact that we appoint somebody to the board does not, in my opinion,
create any liability on this Commission's part. MR. TODD: Is there
any obligation as far as funding go? MR. WALL: Any obligation, no.
Now, you have funded it to an extent in the past, but there's no legal
obligation. MR. TODD: Yes. Mr. Mayor, to go back to the past,
when I come on board we discontinued the funding, and I led that effort,
I believe, because there was some concerns about some activities by
their former executive director. And I basically want to make sure that
-- and I think those situations were a family member being on the
payroll and a lot of other things. As long as we're not funding, I
don't have a problem with the appointments. MR. WALL: I don't want
Mr. Todd to misunderstand. I don't know about '97, but we funded in
'96. And I'm not certain about '97, but I would not want to represent
that we have not funded them to some extent in '97. MR. TODD: When
you say we, you're talking about Richmond County Board of Commission?
And I'd like to know when that funding was approved. MR. WALL:
Well, it was approved out of the City Council in the budget that they
approved for 1996. It was part of the budget that the City Council
adopted in December of '95, but the monies were a part of the '96 budget
and were paid out in '96. MR. TODD: I understand that, Mr. Mayor,
and don't have a problem with it. That was another entity and we
inherited it. MR. OLIVER: Mr. Greenway is in the process of
checking on the current status regarding any funding. MAYOR
SCONYERS: Further discussion, gentlemen? All in favor of the motion,
let it be known by raising your hand, please. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
CLERK: Item 95: Motion to approve contract for Space Utilization
Study. MR. TODD: If I may have the floor, Mr. Mayor, a minute.
This is one that I guess is the outrage of the year as far as I'm
concerned, that we had a entity that said that they could provide a
service delivery and we awarded a proposal, and they were supposed to
have saved us 50 percent and they're coming back and telling us that
they got to have another $20,000 in order to do this work. Now, it was
my understanding that they couldn't perform the work per the money that
they put in their proposal using the Carter-Gobel scope of work, and
they agreed to, it's my understanding, or at least before we approved
this motion to award them the bid or proposal, that they would do it for
that amount. And now I'm hearing that they can't do it for that amount,
and even adding $20,000 to it they can't do 100 percent of it, that
there's two components, or at least one component they can't do. I
think this is ludicrous. I think there was those of us that sit on the
board that told the individuals that was pushing this that they could
not do it for the money that they was proposing. This was a frivolous
bid or proposal and they done it to get their foot in the door, and they
knew the service delivery we wanted was the Carter-Gobel scope of work.
And based on that, I'm going to make a motion that we award this
contract to Duckett, and that's in the form of a motion. MR. BEARD:
I'll second it. MR. ZETTERBERG: I am at the moment not against
awarding the contract to Duckett, okay? What my concern is, that I've
become very confused on the bidding process, and I'd like to ask Mr.
Oliver a couple of questions. We went out with a proposal -- and let me
preface my remarks, because I'm getting sick and tired of us going out
for proposals and then having -- after we go out, then we get into
battle royals over issues. I've never seen anything like it. I have
never seen this many contracts in dispute, and it's almost to a number,
one, two, three. Every time we turn around and compete for copiers or
anything else, we get into some sort of a long, harassing, detailed
problem. So I'm going to ask a couple of questions. One is, when we
went out for a proposal, everybody got the same request, right -- got an
RFP? MR. OLIVER: That is correct. MR. ZETTERBERG: Okay.
Then they all responded to that RFP; is that correct? MR. OLIVER:
That is also correct. MR. ZETTERBERG: Okay. Then one of the
contractors came in -- let me not ask that question right now. How did
the CGA or whatever the proposal is become the writing document that we
base this on? MR. OLIVER: Let me explain this. In these types of
responses there is going to be more ambiguity, and let me tell you why.
We went out and asked for a consultant and we defined a scope of work,
which I think was done as well as it could be done based upon the fact
that we had never gone through this service. I mean, we had gotten
RFP's from other jurisdictions, but we went out with that scope of work.
We had three firms that came in and made presentations. One of them,
you know, had something that was slightly different, one of them had
another thing that was slightly different, and then the third one we
viewed as having the superior scope of services, and that was Carter-
Gobel. As a result of that, what was done was we had some
preliminary discussions with Heery International, and when the written
language was faxed around, be it misunderstanding on our part, their
part, or they didn't like the written language, Mr. Goins and I spent
some period of time negotiating language back and forth and we could not
get to a point that we felt that it was consistent with what CGA said.
They made some arguments as to why we needed to do one thing or didn't
need to do one thing, but we made a commitment to this Commission to one
thing and we wanted to do that and we did do that. We felt that at
that point what was appropriate -- we said, okay, this is it. They said
we can't do that; we didn't budget it that way, we can't do it. We said
okay. In efforts of being fair, what we did was we faxed the scope to
them and we said this is the scope, use it. We faxed the same scope to
Duckett & Associates, we said this is the scope, you use it. Neither one
of them had an opportunity to know what either one's price was. And we
brought it back to you, and the hope was to bring it back to you so that
now rather than having an orange, an apple and grapefruit, we now have
three oranges and they're all doing exactly the same thing. The scope
of services is verbatim the same. If you all feel that -- MR.
ZETTERBERG: And let me just make this comment. The scope of services
should have been absolutely plain the first time that thing went out,
and I would suggest that if we're going to get ourselves into this thing
we ought to have pre-bid conferences so that everybody clearly
understands what has to be done. And my position right now, we have
probably violated every rule that I can think of in contracting and
we're all mixed up down here. Seems to me the appropriate bid now is
CGA. I mean, what we did is we asked them for their proposal, CGA had
the best proposal, or did we go out and ask for the best price? You
can't have it both ways, you're either going to ask for best price or
you're going to ask for best proposal. MR. OLIVER: We asked for
the best combination of service and price was what we asked for.
MR. ZETTERBERG: I don't know how you get that. That's pretty difficult
to get, that's my considered opinion. That becomes very, very
subjective in that case. And my problem is I don't know how to vote, so
I may not just vote. But I think we made a big, big mistake just from
the very beginning and we best get a lot better. That's one of the
reasons I wanted to make sure that we go out and get vehicle requests.
Don't let me catch y'all coming back in here and writing specifications
that specify Chevrolet Cavaliers. MR. OLIVER: But I think everyone
will agree though when you do a vehicle spec, that it's much more well
defined than it is on a study of this nature. MR. ZETTERBERG: I
appreciate all the good work the staff does, but in contracting we need
to go back to school. MR. BEARD: I'm thoroughly kind of confused
over this, but I got the book here to understand. Because I'm going to
tell you, maybe it's my naiveness, you know, but I thought the study was
well under way, and come back in here and find out that we got to, you
know, go through this whole process. And then I looked in the back of
the book here and see some different prices, and I just don't understand
it other than, you know, if these people cannot do what they said, then,
you know, go to the next person. And to me, as we said before, that
next person was the Duckett company. You know, all of them were given -
- MR. ZETTERBERG: Wasn't it CGA? MR. OLIVER: At the last
Commission meeting that this was discussed, you wanted to get an
agreement on scope of services and bring back a contract to you. The
two firms at that time that were discussed were Heery International and
Duckett and Associates. MR. BEARD: And Duckett was the next person
and they didn't get the bid, that was my understanding. And this is
what I see, and I think everything was equal, then we go to the next
person that can provide those services, and that's what I'm going to
vote on today, that the next person get the bid. MR. POWELL: Mr.
Mayor, I have two questions. The first question is for the County
Attorney. We've taken these proposals, we've used CGA's scope of work.
When we've contacted the other companies, we didn't contact CGA for a
rebid. Now, are we putting ourselves in a position -- a legal position
on this? MR. WALL: Well, CGA bid on the scope of services. I
mean, they've quoted that. And so what we -- in order to compare apples
to apples, what was done was to go back to the two companies that had a
little different scope of services and say, now, what will you do this
work for. And, again, you're dealing with professional services as
opposed to bidding for, you know, a car or a tool or something like that
that, you know, you know what that is going to be. And when you're
dealing with professional services, different organizations are going to
approach it in a different way. And let's face it, we were looking for
their expertise in the request for proposal, and so when they come back
and defined the scope of service and said this is the way the project
ought to be done, Carter-Gobel had given a price for that, and to
compare apples to apples we got pricing from the other two entities.
MR. POWELL: Right, but my question was, you know, we've taken the
scope of work from CGA, we've -- the numbers have already been exposed.
Everybody knows what color underwear CGA had on, okay? Well, these
people come back and are allowed the opportunity to rebid. Now, I'm
asking are we going to run ourselves into a legal position with this.
MR. WALL: I don't think you run into a legal position. I mean, I
understand your problem with the process, because they had a benchmark
that they could use insofar as pricing, and I understand that concern.
But from a legal standpoint of professional services, I don't think you
create any legal problems. MR. J. BRIGHAM: Mr. Wall, let's go back
to CGA. What was their bid on the original proposal and is it more than
either one of these -- MR. OLIVER: No, it's not. MR. J.
BRIGHAM: What was it? MR. OLIVER: It's $96,800, Mr. Goins says.
MR. J. BRIGHAM: Well, I'm kind of like Mr. Powell, if we done
anybody wrong, we've done CGA wrong. We've said we're going to follow
their set of guidelines, we kicked them out of the race and we've gone
back to the other two bidders, the low one and the high one, and we went
to the one in the middle and said we're going to follow their
guidelines. Now, if we're going to do this -- if we're going to start
over, let's start over, or either we're going to stick to low price, one
of the two, we're not going to go back around [inaudible]. MR.
KUHLKE: Mr. Mayor, you know, I'm disappointed in the way it's been
handled basically from a couple of standpoints. The first thing is the
low bidder's price has gone up to give us what we want. The second
thing is Duckett and Associates has been given three chances to become
very low and they haven't done it yet. And CGA has been excluded
basically. Maybe they should have been given a chance to revise their
price at the same time. So, to me, I think we've handled this very
poorly. We were hoping to get this space study in in November or the
first part of December. We're not going to do that, I don't think. But
I cannot support paying $11,000 more, and my suggestion is that we -- at
this point I would support Heery and Associates because they got the
best price and obviously the scope of work. But frankly I think that
whether you change anything or not, I think we need to give all three a
chance and I think we need to defer doing anything on this until we have
a clear understanding -- we didn't develop the scope of this work until
we received bids. That's basically what we did. MR. OLIVER: There
is some validity to that statement. It wasn't totally refined out of our
inability to be able to do it because we didn't have that experience.
Might I suggest this, in a spirit of compromise and fairness what we can
do is we could send each one of them a letter. We've now agreed that
the scope is there, give them each until 12:00 noon, say, on Friday or
12:00 noon on Tuesday or whatever and say give us your best number. And
then at that point it's fair to everyone, the scope of the service is
fair, and what I'm trying to do is come to a meeting of the minds here
which everyone feels would be equitable to all parties. MR. TODD:
Mr. Mayor, I don't think that we went out for proposals or for bids, I
think we went out for statement of qualifications on the first one. And
I tried to read what Drew put together in the specs, the criteria. As
far as cost go, the maximum points you could get was 30. The total
maximum points was 100. So cost shouldn't and can't be in those specs
the whole influencing factor, you consider everything. I think also
they requested, you know, the scope of work, what would they provide in
a space allocation study, you know, and that's a statement of
qualifications. Certainly Carter-Gobel had the best statement of
qualifications. Also in that, for those that wasn't on the
committee, and I think I made a couple of meetings, Mr. Kuhlke, there
was an assessment of the written proposal or statement of qualifica-
tions, or a combination, and there was an assessment of the interview.
And after doing that and grading them, there were recommendations from
the staff, and the staff recommendation was the firm that we initially
awarded it to first, Heery or whatever it is and Duckett. Those was the
two from staff. So at the point that staff has made that
recommendation, I'm not looking at Carter-Gobel, I'm looking at the
other two. I'm not obligated to use anyone's statement of
qualification. We brought folks in the conference room down on the
sixth floor and they told us how they would -- what scheme they would
use on reprogramming the jail. Well, one fell in, the rest of them fell
out, you know, they was out of it, we hired Precision Planning. We've
had contractors we brought in as far as statements of qualifications go
as far as the landfill on capping and doing the cell. When we finished
with them we hired one, the other ones went down the road. And we don't
have to go with the low dollar proposal for professional service.
And we can kick this thing around as long as we want to, but the bottom
line is that we have opportunity here to do some things that we should
have done a long time ago. We have a qualified minority contractor here
that we can do business with, and my advice to them would be not to give
you the service for nothing just to get it. You should put a dollar
proposal in for what you can do it for and make a reasonable profit. I
don't think anyone sitting here would do anything any different than
that. This entity, they're out of Atlanta, they have three
subcontractors, or possibly four if you -- I mean, three. There's three
with the real estate; if you delete the real estate you've got two
subcontractors that's local. That should be another reason for
supporting it. Now, we can go with the international company for
the sake of going with an international company that has jerked us
around, and the bottom line is that it was -- it was on the Internet, it
was everywhere else because it was in the daily paper that we were
awarding it to them with the understanding that they would do the
Carter-Gobel scope of work. And if they wasn't agreeable to that -- I
was told basically that they would do it for that. I had individuals
sitting at this table told me that they would do it for that. If they
wasn't agreeable to that, they should have told us that and told us that
then, not now, not two months later when they ought to be mobilized and
in with the study. There is folks that's waiting on this study so
they can make decisions. We have additional judges, we have court
services we got to take care of, we have heating and air conditioning on
this building that's falling apart, and there was 10 million dollars put
in the one-penny sales tax to take care of this building, and we either
should go on and take care of this building or go on and do the space
allocation study. Thank you, Mr. Mayor. MR. J. BRIGHAM: We talked
earlier about the Chevrolet Corsica and the Crown Vics. There ain't a
whole lot of difference in this. It's a question of how we're going to
get there, it's a question of what we asked for, and we'll pay what we
asked for. We're the ones that changed the contract. If we didn't
expect them to change the price, I'm sorry. Maybe we were held out a
carrot, but I still don't think we need to go buying a Crown Vic when we
need a Chevrolet Corsica. MR. MAYS: If we're going to deal with
professional services and deal with those qualification areas that
companies or individuals can do, then I think we ought to deal with that
and we ought to be ready to stand behind a company or persons in terms
of doing what we want them to do as the best people that can do that, or
we ought to deal with it totally on knowing first what we want and then
putting it into a scope and let people bid on it. Now, why we're
getting jerked around is basically because we're on kamikaze missions
with this darn thing, that sometimes we want it to be a strict bid
process, sometimes we want to bring folk to the table almost and be able
to hand them a process. I didn't even -- because of my inability to
know what I was doing, I didn't even participate in the thinking and the
rationale of that little scale bid y'all had. Number one, that's not my
job to tell somebody's qualifications and to bid 20 points here, 15
points here, 10 points here either. And maybe with the exception of one
or two people, I don't think anybody else is qualified to do that. I
think it gets even narrower when you start talking about spending
somebody's money. I think it gets down to zero people on this board of
doing that. But the last time we went through a crazy bid process of
putting numbers together and then coming out with an ending figure of
who we ought to give something to was when we hired a consultant to put
a sales tax package together, and we're sitting down here every week
wondering why certain qualified projects got left out of the process.
Got left out of the process because we played silly games with it.
What we're doing, we're still playing silly games, and we need to decide
how professional services are going to be dealt with. You can't have it
one way where you're dealing -- and this is no knock on engineering
firms, but we can't have them where we're dealing with them one way in
that respect and they come along and you select them by a different
level of criteria, and then when you decide to do something else, if
somebody done something before and they look good and they know five
people over here or six people and they built this particular project,
that's a good firm to hire. One somebody hasn't seen before, might be a
bad firm to hire. And I really think that's the musical chairs game
we're playing with the professional service process. And until we get
to a point of deciding and making a decision as a board whether we want
to deal with that on strict adherence to it or whether we want to have
enough confidence to go out and deal with -- once we find qualified
firms to do a particular service, just say okay. If one costs us three
times what the other one was going to do, but if we're satisfied with
the scope of that service, be human being enough to say we selected the
best firm and move with it. But this dilly-dallying of trying to get
something changed after you've got somebody is just going to lead to a
bunch of elementary mess to a point that when we criticize boards that
we appoint people to and want to know how they came up with a decision,
then, quite frankly, they may be doing a little bit better job within
some of those authorities and boards than we are because they're going
ahead and making a business decision and standing behind that decision
and going ahead with the project. I don't think right now that
[inaudible] small mess that I got between my ears and knowing which one
of these folk that y'all got on the spectrum to even make a vote on.
I'd like to even know did it start over, gentlemen, with just three
people? Did y'all have some others in the beginning? MR. OLIVER:
There were, I don't know, six, eight, nine proposals. The six, eight,
nine were skinnied down to the three most qualified, and those three
most qualified came in. MR. MAYS: I'll close out, Mr. Mayor, and
be real -- I'll shut up on this. That makes me even more leery to a
point that if you change scope when you got down to three, how confused
were the people when you had five to six? Maybe you might have got a
better deal out of some of them when there was six or seven of those.
So, you know, you ask yourself where do you go legally with it. If
you're getting into that thing of exposing numbers, then maybe you had
somebody out there in the bunch who got dropped off, that didn't make
even the three, that if knowing what you really wanted -- but you can't
bring folk in looking cockeyed at somebody about what you want and then
change it and then hope that the person that you got in mind is going to
end up getting the job. You can't do that. So, you know, I wouldn't --
whether it was minority firm, majority firm, whoever, I just got a funny
feeling that Mr. Wall or Mr. Mayor is going to get served, or Mr.
Oliver, with some papers by somebody, because it seems like we got a
mess here, and I'd be afraid [inaudible], so I'm going to abstain on
whoever's name comes about here today. MR. KUHLKE: Can I make a
substitute motion? That we defer any action on this particular item,
that we invite the three people to come back to us based on the scope
that obviously we have defined at this point, and we take this up at our
next meeting. I just think that there's too much confusion here, and I
want this thing to be done right. I mean, we look at our Internal
Auditor, we look at the copy deal, we look at all this crap that we mess
up on, and I'd like to see this -- we've got the time at this point to
maybe do it right, and so I would like to make the motion that we do
that. MR. BRIDGES: I'll second. MR. H. BRIGHAM: The Spirit
had quoted me on this about two months ago, and I made the statement,
I'll make it again today, that sometimes we have to put our own personal
feelings back and do what is right. I'm going to ask two questions. Was
it not true that when we awarded this bid, that the group said they
could do it for $49,000? MR. OLIVER: That was the representation
that I understood. MR. H. BRIGHAM: And now they're coming back and
saying that they could not do it for $49,000? MR. OLIVER: Yes.
And, frankly, to be fair to all parties, the difference was in the
written language. They did not have the same understanding verbally as
it was, they felt, in the written language. But you are correct, and
they said that they could not perform the scope of work that was faxed
to them for the cost that they previously offered. However, they said
in their opinion it wasn't in the RFP and, to be fair to them, that's
correct also. MR. H. BRIGHAM: Well, isn't it not true that we did
have a company or maybe several companies that did understand the
language and made a bid within reason? MR. OLIVER: You had two
companies -- you had one company, obviously CGA, and that was the reason
we seized on their scope, that we felt best defined the project.
Duckett did not go into as much detail as CGA did, however, Duckett
indicated when that scope was faxed to them that they did not have any
kind of problem with the scope. Heery indicated that they felt part of
that scope was not necessary and that they did not contemplate that work
being done. MR. H. BRIGHAM: In the nomenclature of things, when we
have several bids and one fall out for reason or the other, isn't it
customary -- I'm not saying that's the rule, but isn't it customary that
we go to the next bid? MR. OLIVER: Frankly, I've done it many
different ways. I have done it that way, I've also done it where you do
simultaneous negotiations. So, I mean, there are different practices
involved. I will say this, that professional services are much
different than if you're bidding on sticks and bricks, because obviously
there are times, for example, on an A&E contract that you could take the
cheapest price and wind up paying more money. MR. ZETTERBERG: I
think I stand pat, I think we blew it. I'm not going to vote on it.
MR. BEARD: Mr. Mayor, you know, I don't know a lot about a whole lot
of different things, but I do know all of the firms were reviewed and a
short list was formed, and all things were supposed to been equal. And
I think that in most cases wherein the first person cannot do the job,
then you go to the next person, and that's the way I feel about this.
And I also question, you know, why didn't we just go to the second
person instead of going back and contacting both of these organizations
again when it should have been just simple to go to the second bidder.
But we went back and we contacted, you know, these people and told them
to rebid or whatever they were supposed to be doing, I guess it was
rebidding, and I don't quite understand that. And I just feel like it
should have been very simple, that if Heery couldn't do it, then you go
to the next person. And that's the way I see it and that's the way I
view it. MR. POWELL: Mr. Chairman, I'd like to go back and maybe
ask Mr. Todd to give me a brief answer on one question that he shed a
little light on. Earlier when he started talking he said that we had
two firms here and that one of the firms still couldn't meet two of the
obligations, and I just -- I'd like to throw that out there if you could
give me a clarification. MR. TODD: Yes. Mr. Mayor, it's my
understanding, and I'll refer this to Mr. Oliver, that Heery actually
has not agreed to do the full scope. They have changed the price from
49 to, I guess, 79 or whatever and they still have some concerns about
doing the service delivery on the full scope of the Carter-Gobel. Is
that my understanding? MR. OLIVER: I'm going to defer the
specifics of that to Mr. Goins because I can't answer that level of
detail. MR. GOINS: That's incorrect, Mr. Todd. Heery has agreed
to the scope of services for CGA at the amount that's shown in your
agenda item, and there's a backup that indicates that. MR. TODD:
And they're going to give us the entire scope of work? MR. GOINS:
Verbatim. MR. TODD: Verbatim. Okay, then that was a misinterpre-
tation, Mr. Powell, by me. And, also, I'll take 25 percent of the
responsibility for screwing this up. I was on that committee, I believe
there was four of us on that committee, and I would hope that the
chairman and the rest of them will take their percentage of
responsibility, too. MR. HANDY: I just want to make a sarcastic
statement. If we can pay $90,000 for a pay study and get screwed up like
it is, hell, this ain't screwed up at all, this is good. MR.
KUHLKE: Mr. Mayor, let me ask Drew one question in following up on what
Mr. Todd said. In the writeup that you have here you say that Heery
agreed to the CGA scope of services with the exception of two things.
Did Duckett and Associates exclude those things also from their
proposal? That was the detail engineering analysis and the ADA
evaluation. MR. GOINS: Let me say one thing to answer that
question. Heery International provided us a price based on the RFP that
we put out for bids. CGA and Duckett -- we go back to the Cavalier and
Chevrolet. Heery says okay, you bid on a Cavalier, this is the price
for a Cavalier. Duckett and the other firm says, well, we can get you
there for -- but we think you need more things, so they added costs
associated with the additional things that they recommended that we have
associated with this study. And as Mr. Oliver stated, that CGA's
proposal or scope of work was superior to the original RFP, and we
recognized that fact and that's how we're in the situation that we're in
now. We changed scope of services. When we went back to Heery and
asked can you do this for the scope of services and we gave them the
written document, they told us no, we can't do that based on two
factors: number one is the detail that was in the written documentation
for the engineering studies and the second was the written documentation
for the ADA requirements. And as I stated in my agenda item to you,
those were the two sticking points from the CGA proposal relative to
what Heery's original proposal was. MR. KUHLKE: So they are in
there now? MR. GOINS: They are in there now, and they are in there
for the price that they quoted. But, again, the misunderstanding was in
the written language of CGA's proposal. They recommended detailed
engineering evaluations of all the facilities that we own. Heery
contends that we don't need that. MR. KUHLKE: So if you took that
out of there -- are you and the Administrator saying that we need that
service? MR. GOINS: My personal opinion is we only need that in a
very limited area. MR. TODD: I think he had me confused, and maybe
Mr. Kuhlke cleared it up. He told me it was verbatim, then I was
understanding there was two sticking points, but it was resolved. It's
my opinion that we have a ADA requirement that's a mandate per ADA that
we provide, you know, there, and I don't see how someone could tell us
that we don't need it. Even though we put a lift next door, I see the
person that would use the lift climbing the steps all the time, but at
least we met our minimum requirements if she should fall. So I think
that there is a mandate and a requirement for the ADA in all of the
facilities, and the other issues, you know, as far as engineering.
What I want to assure -- if I may reflect, Mr. Mayor, back to -- you
know, a few years. A few years ago we hired a gentleman, paid him 40 or
50 thousand dollars, a professor from Georgia Tech by the name of
[inaudible]. He probably didn't tell us all we would like to hear, you
know, and certainly he didn't tell me what I'd like to hear because I'm
quite embarrassed sitting on a government body that do less than three
percent with the minority community. And that study was called a
disparity study. And whether we accept the recommendation or not, we
should try to take corrective action. But the body did accept the
recommendation, and most of us are sitting here. We accepted a
recommendation that we had disparities. And I don't think that we
should award contracts to minorities just for the sake of awarding a
contract to a minority, but when you have a qualified minority I don't
think you should look for every reason in the book to not award a
contract. And we've done that. I can name them: Blue Construction,
Athens-Clarke County. The issue was sloppy work they done up around
Eastpoint. The Mayor Pro Tem and myself drove up there and looked at
it. It was supposed to been in a high-profile community. We found all
that to be wrong, and that come from our staff. We can continue
down the road of looking for ways and reasons not to do business with
the minority community and you're going to have one or two end results:
one is that your underground economy is going to continue and you're
going to have your killings, your murders, your drug dealings and things
like that. Because if you don't let the economy grow and work in a fair
market or a level playing field, then it's going to grow in the
underground economy, and the DA can tell you about that, or you can be
fair and you can do what's right, and at least it puts hope with those
folks that's been excluded from the process and you have more folks try
to work the system and do what's right. So there's a lot more here
than probably meets the eye, but the bottom line, we're not requesting a
set-aside like we have with Public Works, with engineering consultants
and that professional services where you have a set-aside for the good-
old-boys in each flood basin. We're not requesting that here, all we're
requesting is that you be fair, that you award bids with a fairness
doctrine, and that you not award it because there's a minority involved.
Before I knew a minority was involved I supported Duckett. A lot of
folks probably don't believe that, but I said it here and it's a fact.
And I still support Duckett based on the interview, reading the specs,
and the recommendation from staff as far as they recommended Duckett
number two and Heery number one. My conclusion was number one. Now
that I've learned that Duckett is a minority firm, have I pushed any
harder for them? I don't think so. But I'm not going to sit here and
not defend my philosophy and position because they're a minority firm
either, because I understand they're doing an outstanding work, they've
done outstanding work over the years, and they've paired up with two
outstanding local majority community firms and possibly three if we keep
the real estate element in there. And that's where I'm at on it,
gentlemen, and it's not a racial issue, it's a fairness issue, and
that's where I'm at. MR. ZETTERBERG: I don't want to be painted in
this issue that my vote revolves around a minority issue at all. My
vote of no on this issue, or absent on this issue, deals with the
professionalism that this board has shown and that the staff has shown
in contracting efforts. This has nothing to do with race whatsoever
from Rob Zetterberg's point of view. Nothing. You can make broad
generalizations, Moses, but this has to do with our professionalism,
this has to do with our staff's professionalism, and I'm not going to be
a party to slipshod work by this government. I represent taxpayers:
black taxpayers, yellow taxpayers, red taxpayers and white taxpayers,
and I don't give a damn what color they are, what race, what gender,
whatever. But I will not be part at all of lack of professionalism, and
I think that's exactly what we are. MR. HANDY: Call for the
question, Mr. Mayor. MAYOR SCONYERS: Read the substitute motion by
Mr. Kuhlke, please. CLERK: Substitute motion by Mr. Kuhlke was to
defer the action and to invite the three firms to come back based on the
scope of service at the next meeting. MAYOR SCONYERS: All in favor
of Mr. Kuhlke's motion, let it be known by raising your hand, please.
MOTION FAILS 3-3-1.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Let's go back to the original motion. Read the
original motion, please. CLERK: Original motion by Mr. Todd was to
award the contract for the Space Utilization Study to Duckett and
Associates. MAYOR SCONYERS: All in favor of Mr. Todd's motion, let
it be known by raising your hand, please. MESSRS. BRIDGES, J. BRIGHAM &
KUHLKE VOTE NO. MR. ZETTERBERG ABSTAINS. MOTION CARRIES 6-3-1.
CLERK: Item 96: Motion to approve a Resolution requiring public
disclosure by members of the Augusta Commission and any employee of
Augusta-Richmond County of performing work for benefit of Augusta,
Georgia. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, may I request that the Clerk read
the resolution, or the County Attorney? MR. WALL: Whereas the
Augusta-Richmond County Commission has adopted a code of ethics set
forth in O.C.G.A. 45-10-1; and whereas members of the Augusta-Richmond
'
County Commission may have interest in companies performing work or
rendering services to Augusta, Georgia; whereas it is deemed to be in
the public interest for there to be public disclosure of any
Commissioner who has any interest in companies performing work for
Augusta, Georgia; now therefore be it resolved by the Augusta-Richmond
County Commission that any member of the Augusta-Richmond County
Commission who for himself or on behalf of any business or for any
business in which he or any member of his family has a substantial
interest involved in any transaction made pursuant to the sealed
competitive bids, to make or give public notice of such involvement to
be recorded in the minutes of the Augusta-Richmond County Commission of
such transaction. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, that's a proposed
resolution and I'd like to move that this board approve it. MR.
MAYS: I'll second it to get it on the floor. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor,
I think this is a no-brainer, and that's all I'm going to say. Thank
you. MR. HANDY: Mr. Mayor, according to the consolidation bill, I
think it says that -- for example, like the Attorney could not work for
the Commission or [inaudible]. Now, I don't mind Mr. Todd putting in
for a resolution to do anything that he deem necessary that we need to
do, but when it's going to any family member, if it's not your husband
or your wife or your children, I don't see where there needs to be any
family members in there because, I mean, that's just getting too far out
the way. And I think we already have something in place. When you bid
on a job you're supposed to disclose it already, and I'd like to ask, is
that correct or not correct, Jim? MR. WALL: In the Public Works
contracts that we have, the contractor has to list the subcontractor who
does more than five percent of the work, and so that information is
disclosed and is on public record insofar as the Purchasing Department
is concerned. So, yes, that is there. MR. HANDY: So what this
will do different from what that is doing now? MR. WALL: Well,
those procedures are in place insofar as Public Works contracts. This
is broader from the standpoint of services, and it is simply a
disclosure that would be made. It would not have to necessarily be read
at any public meeting, but it would be on file so that if anyone was
concerned they would be able to look in a central place in the Clerk's
office where it would be spread upon the minutes and would be a part of
the public record insofar as the involvement of a Commissioner or his
family in work for the government. And the reason that the language was
used is basically I took the state requirements. Any member of the
family, that came from the state statute. If you're doing state work
that requirement is there. MR. HANDY: Right. State work, not
county work. But what's the purpose of this? I don't know whether
Commissioner Todd explained to you when he asked you to write that, but
what really is the intent behind this whole thing right here? MR.
WALL: Well, Commissioner Todd wanted there to be public disclosure if a
Commissioner was involved in doing work for the county. That was the
purpose that I was instructed to try to meet in drawing it up. Now,
beyond that I can't answer. MR. TODD: Mr. Mayor, I'll try to
answer that if the Commissioner would like for me to. The devil is not
in the details of this, this is just to police us as a board. I started
this initiative in 1993 when I come on board with ethics in government.
Mr. Kuhlke enhanced that in 1996 when he come on board. He broadened
it and this is to further strengthen that. As it's been said here,
we're painted by one brush. If there's not guidelines to keep me in
line and I go out there and mess up, certainly you all pay. If one of
you certainly do it, then we're all paying. And basically this is a
policy that I -- like I said to start with, it's a no-brainer. I don't
see how you could argue with doing a public disclosure as far as doing
business with the government or if your family is doing business with
the government. The other thing that this will do is certainly,
based on being elected to the board, whether it's present or future
Commissioners, you won't be able to increase your market or powers here
of whatever business you're in or want to do by doing it with the
government or doing it with contractors through subcontractors with
those contractors, period. MAYOR SCONYERS: Mr. Wall, if you own
stock in a company that sells something to a subcontractor or a
contractor in Richmond County -- I mean, just how deep does this thing
go? You know, some of us may own some stock in a company and don't even
think about it. MR. WALL: Well, I guess it depends on what level
of stock that you would own. I mean, it says a substantial interest in
the company, and the fact that you may own, you know, 100 shares in
Procter & Gamble or Caterpillar or something like that, I mean, that
doesn't come into play. I mean, it would mean a right -- an interest
that could influence the decision of that company, and that would not
necessarily in all cases mean 50 percent, but, I mean, as a general rule
I think that you could look at that as sort of the benchmark. But a
substantial interest, more than just a nominal or small percentage
ownership in a company is what it's designed for. MAYOR SCONYERS:
I just wanted to get that clarified. MR. BRIDGES: You know, I
guess I'm kind of confused about this resolution, too, because we've
already got the ethics codes that we live by. Anytime anybody puts in a
bid for anything you know who it is. The bids are sealed bids. They're
secret, you can't -- if our staff is doing their jobs properly, there's
no way any Commissioner or anybody else that works for the government
can get a leg up on anybody else. And I don't think a Commissioner
should be excluded from any public process that's available to any other
citizen that's out there, and I just think that's putting a burden on
people that might want to seek office that if you keep laying these
additional burdens on them, you're not going to get anybody running for
public office. Some people might like that. You know, I'm just looking
at who this applies to sitting on this board, and if each person that
this applies to or that I think it applies to as a businessman decided
not to seek office, Mr. Todd and I would be the only ones left up here.
And I don't think that's in the best interest of the citizens of this
county to be limiting that process. I think this is something that
we've already got as far as ethics. We've already got the codes and the
law and everything in works, and we've got the bid process that we go
with the low bid, and let's go with that, let's do what we've got, let's
not exclude people. MR. MAYS: I seconded because I wanted to get
some clarification for myself. Jim, how does this differ with the
already-in-existence spending guidelines on that -- what is it, within a
given period, I believe, that the $200 tax situation that's there. Does
that language cover what you proposed in here or is this a different
situation in here? MR. WALL: Well, it could conceivably be a
different situation. I mean, the situation where the $200 limitation
per quarter, that's except through sealed bids. If you were doing
business with the county and go through a competitive bid process, then
obviously that would be disclosed. However, if you were a contractor to
furnish copy machines and you had a subcontract and you bid on that, but
as a part of that you were going to subcontract out to Jim Wall Paper
Company to buy the paper from me to supply the copy machines, depending
on the way the specifications were written, you might not have to
disclose that Jim Wall Paper Company was going to supply the paper.
This would require that. I mean, Jim Wall Paper -- if I were a
Commissioner, Jim Wall would have to disclose the fact and put in the
record somehow that I was participating in a contract with Mays Copy
Service, and then if anybody wanted to check to see what business Jim
Wall had done with the county, then that would be on file. So the
bid process would not necessarily reveal that. In the Public Works area
we do require that, that the subcontrac-tors be listed, and so there is
disclosure there and it's available at the time the bids are opened,
everybody sees who the subcontractors are that do any substantial
portion of the work. I guess it would be in the non-Public Works arena
that this might come into play. MR. MAYS: And my reason for asking
on that procedure, even though this is not in place and probably will
not get in place, I've had the experience of having to deal with that
$200 factor even though it's not been in a bid process. And since the
Coroner's Office doesn't have a rotating system, you know, on unclaimed
bodies, you know, I get less of them than anybody else, so I really
don't have any problem since he doesn't send me any, so -- and I'm glad
he doesn't. But, you know, when I have had an occasion where there may
be a request and you run into those so-called pauper situations, and the
monies that are derived out of that office is beyond the $200 limit --
only slightly beyond that, roughly about 250. And when I've had those
cases I've had to, naturally, submit a bill, you know, to him on an
itemized basis of doing so, but the check that I get and derive from
that is less than what any of my colleagues in the same profession would
be because it puts me over that particular limit. So, you know, I
can live with it or I can live without it because I'm already basically
having to deal with it, so, you know, I was just sharing that as
information of how I had to do it, you know, within my own. It hasn't
been a situation I've had to deal with a lot, but in those cases where
it might occur, that's how it's done. It's not necessarily a
disclosure, per se, but there is a bill on file with that particular
office that it comes out of. And in this case it would be an elected
official who would receive the billing process of it, but the basic
check would come out of, you know, the county's money. MR. HANDY:
Mr. Mayor, I call for the question. MAYOR SCONYERS: All in favor
of Mr. Todd's motion, let it be known by raising your hand, please. MR.
MAYS & MR. TODD VOTE YES. MOTION FAILS 8-2.
MR. WALL: Mr. Mayor and Commissioners, I need a legal meeting. I
know everybody is tired and it's been a long meeting, but -- personnel,
real estate, and litigation. MR. POWELL: I move we go into legal.
MR. H. BRIGHAM: Second. MOTION CARRIES 10-0.
[COMMISSION RETIRES INTO LEGAL MEETING AT 6:40 P.M.]
MR. OLIVER: To pay Baird & Company $17,800 for internal audit
service work performed for the months of November, December, and a
partial month of January; terminate the agreement for internal audit
services with Cherry, Bekaert & Holland immediately, and issue a 30-day
termination letter to them in accordance with our contract with them;
reinstate the contract with Baird & Company, subject to the inclusion of
a 60-day termination provision that will give us the right to terminate
this agreement at any time with 60 days notice; and agree to refrain
from retaining Cherry, Bekaert & Holland during 1998 for internal audit
work. MR. KUHLKE: I so move. MR. ZETTERBERG: Second.
MR. J. BRIGHAM: Mr. Mayor, I would like to offer a substitute motion
all the way down to terminating the two firms, paying off the two firms
and not reinstating anybody. MR. POWELL: I'll second the motion.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Discussion on either motion, gentlemen? Substitute
motion first. All in favor of Mr. Brigham's motion, let it be known by
raising your hand, please. MR. J. BRIGHAM & MR. POWELL VOTE YES. MOTION
FAILS 7-2.
MAYOR SCONYERS: Original motion, Mr. Kuhlke's motion to approve.
All in favor of Mr. Kuhlke's motion, let it be known by raising your
hand, please. MR. J. BRIGHAM & MR. POWELL VOTE NO. MOTION CARRIES 7-2.
MR. J. BRIGHAM: Move we adjourn, Mr. Mayor. MAYOR SCONYERS:
That's a non-debatable motion. Thank you.
[MEETING ADJOURNED]