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There was
so much opposition to putting out another six-million-dollar bond to help pay
for soaring costs of the new police station that the Kodiak City Council last
night would not even vote to talk about it some more. A first reading of the
ordinance that would have authorized letting the citizens of Kodiak vote on the
bond failed on a 1-to-4 vote. Councilman Gabriel Saravia was the lone yes vote to bring the ordinance back in two weeks
for a public hearing.
Councilman
Tom Walters said he was not voting for the measure because it would mean too
much debt for the city and “raise the blood pressure” of the citizens. He said
he knew the Mill Bay site for the jail was going to cost more, but how much
more took him by surprise:
-- (Police Bond 1 21 sec “… dollar started
a down, a spiraling down.”)
While
Walters was sure after the vote that the city would somehow find the money from
elsewhere – perhaps in the form of a larger contribution by the state for the
jail portion of the building – Saravia (s’raw-VEE-ah) wasn’t as optimistic:
-- (Police Bond 2 25 sec “…problem to our
kids, and this is the bottom line.”)
City
Manager Linda Freed said the plans for the building were almost done, and given
the investment the city has already made, she’s going to continue trying to get
the station built:
-- (Police
Bond 3 35 sec “… work on that site, and purchase
of that property.”)
With the
issue of putting the bond to a vote of the people shot down in flames, Freed
recommended that the agenda items proposing to pay for the bond with an
increased tax on alcohol likewise be failed, and they both did on identical
zero-to-5 votes.
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