Laserfiche WebLink
services to adjacent suburbs on a contract fee bas�s; only <br />eighteen percent disagreed. Disagreement was based on two <br />points: inadequacy in praviding services to current residents <br />and an opposition to expansion beyand the city borders. <br />Sixty-eight percent rated code enforcement "about right;" <br />but, twenty-five percent felt that codes enforcement was "not <br />tough enough." Junk cars and messy yards were the source of this <br />dissatisfaction. Residents consistently supported extension of <br />current hausing inspection practices. Ninety-one percent favored <br />regular inspections on the outside of all rental dwelling units, <br />while eighty-one percent favored similar practices on the inside <br />of all rental units. Ninety-two percent endorsed regular <br />inspections of commercial and industrial property. The regular <br />inspection on the outside of all owner�occupied housing garnered <br />sixty-two percent in favor and thirty-four percent opposed. <br />Residents clearly endorse more aggressive enforcement practices. <br />Roseville residents are maderately strong "fiscal <br />conservatives." While forty-seven percent reported their city <br />property taxes as "about average," thirty-four percent rated them <br />as either "relatively high" or "excessively high." The median <br />estimate of the City's share of the praperty tax was about <br />eighteen percent, slightly more than the current rate. <br />Residents, then, appear to be in a cautious mood with respect to <br />their taxes, and would view any proposals to raise them with a <br />with a "show me" attitude. <br />A plurality of forty-three percent support the current <br />system of individuals contracting directly with refuse haulers. <br />51 <br />