Milton will appeal countywide flood district

The Milton City Council hopes to send a clear message to the Pierce County Council regarding their recent creation of a countywide Flood Control District Zone.

In a unanimous vote, 7-0, Milton City Council members chose to invoke jurisdiction with the Pierce County Boundary Review Board (BRB), to state the case as to why the city should not be included in the district. Deadline for filing appeals to the BRB was July 22.

“We want to give them enough information to make an informed decision,” Milton Public Works Director Letticia Neal said.

The cities of Lakewood and Eatonville have already filed appeals with the BRB this month.

The Flood Control District Zone was created to funnel funds into high-risk, flood-affected areas in low-lying sections of Pierce County. The funds would help pay for needed levee repair work and other flood prevention capital projects. The county council has the authority to levy countywide taxes up to $0.50 per $1,000 assessed property value to pay for district projects. This means that Pierce County residents living in cities located in higher elevations could end up subsidizing flood control projects outside of their city.  

Last May, Neal testified against the creation of the district at a county council public hearing. She pointed to lack of public knowledge and no specific plan created to address flooding issues in the city.

“I didn’t testify because I think it’s a bad idea,” Neal said. “I felt the citizens were not informed and there’s lack of information about the projects, including the cost and timeline for projects.”

Although no specifics were addressed by county council members, Neal told council that preliminary flood district funds could be used on the lower Puyallup River levee. County council has also discussed the possibility of creating “sub-basins,” which would tax cities at higher rates if they are located in lower-lying, flood prone areas.

Milton council members fully supported appealing the district this month.

“It’s a pretty drastic measure,” Councilmem-ber Bryan Ott said.

Mayor Pro Tem Bart Taylor told council he became “hot under the collar” after reading the ordinance for the first time this week.

“It’s a tough situation for everyone, but our number one goal is to take care of the citizens of Milton,” Taylor said.

The BRB is expected to set a public hearing date with no less than 30 days notice after the July 22 appeals deadline. A decision is expected 40 days following a public hearing.

Published on July 29, 2010

Commenting rules

Milton-Edgewood Signal is happy to provide a forum for commenting and discussion. Please respect and abide by the house rules:

Keep it clean, keep it civil, keep it truthful, stay on topic, be responsible, share your knowledge, and please suggest removal of comments that violate these standards.

Read full commenting rules

User Submitted Content

Related Stories

© 2010 Pierce County Community Newspaper Group

Send technical questions and comments to