Vote to lower assessment is unanimous among county supervisors

The assessment for Zone A of the San Diego County Street Lighting District will decrease from $13.50 to $10.00 per benefit unit.

A 5-0 San Diego County Board of Supervisors vote August 5 approved the new assessment along with the Engineer’s Report. The most recent increase in 2016 addressed rising electricity costs but also allowed for the completion of a phased retrofit of high-pressure sodium street lights to light-emitting diode bulbs which will be more energy-efficient, and the lower operating costs enabled the assessment to be reduced by 25.93 percent for Fiscal Year 2020-21.

The San Diego County Street Lighting District was formed in September 1987. The district itself includes the entirety of unincorporated San Diego County; Zone A covers parcels which benefit from street lights in the district while Zone B consists of the remainder of the district. The district maintains and operates 10,416 street lights, including approximately 3,780 which are owned by San Diego Gas & Electric, in residential areas and along major roadways.

Zone A covers nearly 100,000 parcels and more than 120,000 benefit units. In 1987 voters approved an assessment rate of up to $25.00 per year per benefit unit, with a single-family home equating to one benefit unit. The other maximum approved as­sessments are $850.00 per acre for commercial property, $150.00 per acre for institutional buildings, $50.00 per acre for industrial land, $25.00 per acre for recreational parcels, and $2.50 per acre for farm land.

The assessment was reduced from $23.00 to $2.50 per benefit unit in 1990 and stayed at $2.50 until 2004, when rising energy costs and a state budget shift from special districts did not allow efficiency to offset the additional expenses. The assessment per benefit unit was increased to $5.33 for Fiscal Year 2004-05, $5.60 for 2005-06, $5.88 for 2006-07, $6.17 for 2007-08, and $6.48 for 2008-09. Stabilized energy, labor, and material costs had allowed the assessment to remain unchanged at $6.48 per equivalent dwelling unit between 2008 and 2015.

The increased energy prices caused the 2016 assessment in­crease and that also allowed for the retrofit to the light-emitting diode bulbs. In 2015 the street lighting district obtained a Cali­fornia Energy Commission loan to convert approximately 2,000 high-pressure sodium lights to LED bulbs to create an estimated savings of 1.8 megawatt-hours of energy use each year, but that loan only allowed for the conversion of approximately one-third of the county’s high-pressure sodium bulbs. The increased rate allowed for a phased retrofit over several years of the remain­ing high-pressure sodium bulbs. The conversion to LED bulbs was implemented in 2017 and is expected to be complete this calendar year.

The San Diego County Street Lighting District receives rev­enue from the base property tax and from interest on reserves as well as from the benefit assessment.

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