This article shall be known and may be cited as the Public Safety/Emergency
Response Cost Recovery Ordinance.
In order to protect the City from extraordinary expenses resulting
from the utilization of City resources in response to certain public
safety or emergency incidents, this ordinance authorizes the imposition
of charges to recover reasonable and actual costs incurred by the
City in responding to such incidents.
For the purpose of this article, the following terms or phrases
shall be defined to mean:
ASSESSABLE COSTS
Those costs for services incurred by the City in connection
with response to a public safety, accident, emergency incident, including,
but not limited to, the actual labor and material costs of the City
(including, without limitation, employee wages, fringe benefits, administrative
overhead, costs of equipment, costs of equipment operation, cost of
materials, costs of transportation, costs of material disposal and
costs of contracted labor), whether or not the services are provided
by the City or by a third party on behalf of the City; service charges
and interest; and attorney's fees, litigation costs, charges,
fines or penalties to the City imposed by any court or state or federal
governmental entities, except that the City shall not be fully reimbursed
more than once for any expense incurred by the City.
CITY PERSONNEL
City personnel include members of the fire department and/or
other entities providing mutual aid to the City.
COST RECOVERY SCHEDULE
The City Board shall from time to time adopt resolutions
that set forth a schedule of the costs incurred in responding to a
public safety, accident, or emergency incident. It shall be presumed
that the costs listed in this schedule are the true costs incurred
by the City in responding to a public safety or emergency incident.
This schedule shall be available to the public from either the City
Clerk or the fire department.
EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE
Emergency services of any type, except for fire protection
services, provided in response to a public safety concern, accident,
or other emergency. Examples include, but are not limited to: traffic
direction or control, extraction (jaws of life), assistance to law
enforcement or emergency medical providers, search and rescue, structural
collapse, flooding, responses to interstate highway incidents, utility
line failure or issues, tree removal, clearing of public highways,
and hazardous material incidents. Emergency services include mobilization,
standby, and response to false alarms or other incidents where there
is a call for emergency services but services are not provided.
RESPONSIBLE PARTY
A responsible party is any person, entity, corporation, limited
liability company, association, partnership, commercial entity, consortium,
joint venture, government entity, or any legal entity who received
emergency assistance from the City for a public safety or emergency
incident or accident, and includes any owner, tenant, occupant, or
party in control of real and personal property from which, onto which,
or related to which there is a public safety or emergency incident,
or accident, and their heirs, estates, successors and assigns.
The payment of expenses determined to be due and owing under
this article does not constitute an admission of liability or negligence
in any legal action or any other action for damages.