Western Bay cabin owner relents in legal spat over unpaid garbage fees - Action News
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Western Bay cabin owner relents in legal spat over unpaid garbage fees

Derek Winsor is forking over five year's worth of fees, but he has sharp words for the process and board who oversees them.

About four cases a month involving Eastern Regional Services Board end up in court

Derek Winsor says he shouldn't be on the hook for garbage collection fees when he didn't know he was being charged. (Paula Gale/CBC)

A Western Bay cabin owner has begrudgingly agreed to ante up five years in unpaid garbage collection fees, but he is far from the only person to have a dispute with the Eastern Regional Services Board end up in small claims court.

Derek Winsor, a St. John's businessman, appeared in a courtroom on Friday, and ultimately agreed to pay $855 which works out to $171 a year for garbage collection from 2013 to 2017.

He will be permitted to work out a payment schedule and could have been on the hook for up to $2,000 including interest costs but that doesn't mean he's happy about the result.

"I totally don't really agree with it," said Winsor outside the courtroom on Friday.

"I really don't think [small claims court] was necessary. I think it could have been done around a boardroom table."

'Communication is a problem'

Winsor has maintained he wasn't notified whenWestern Bay signed on for garbage collection through the board in 2013.

After finding out last summer, hepaid up for 2018, and says he'll continue paying.

Winsor, who owns this cabin in Western Bay, says he was surprised to find out he owed more than $2,000 to the Eastern Regional Services Board for garbage collection. (Submitted)

It came out in Friday's legal proceedings that the Eastern Regional Services Boardoffered Winsorthe same deal he agreed to pay on Friday, $855, back in April.

Why didn't he just pay it then and move on?

"Just because the legislation says [the board] is allowed to do it, I think they have an obligation, and a moral obligation, to us as taxpayers to say, 'Here's your invoice and this is the fee,'" said Winsor.

"Their communication is aproblem."

Board chair says exceptions made for 'reasonable' cases

But Ed Grant, chairperson of the board of directors, said there's little chance Winsor didn't know about the garbage collection fee.

When Western Bay availed of the board's services in 2013, there were notices placed in stores and newspapers. The ERSB even canvassed the town, Grant said.

"If people come to us and make a reasonable case they didn't know even though this issue has been topical for the last four or five years for sure then we can make an accommodation," said Grant.

"I think it's rather disingenuous to suggest he didn't know there was garbage collection in the area."

This is the bill that was contested in small claims court by Winsor. The interest was more than the principal by the time Winsor said he found out he owed anything. (CBC)

Outside the courtroom on Friday, Grant said Winsor could have resolved this in April.

"This exact same offer was made a year ago. He chose not to accept it. Mr.Winsor wanted his day in court and he had his day in court."

The provincial government is reviewing the process in place.Grant said there is no central data base for properties in unincorporated areaslike Western Bay, anda minimum assessment system, which is in place in other provinces, would help simplify the process.

Grant said the ERSB sees three or four cases end up in small claims court each month.

Ed Grant, chairperson of the board of directors for the Eastern Regional Services Board, says they offered Winsor the same deal, last April, that ultimately came out of legal proceedings on Friday. (Eddy Kennedy/CBC)

For Winsor, that's an unnecessary burden on the small claims legal process and taxpayers, too.

"I just think it's important that the ERSB move forward and learn they have to treat people with respect," he said.

The ERSBposts the outcomes of some small claims cases on its website. A similar case from the Southern Shore in 2014 shows a judgment in favour of the board, saying, "Regardless of whether you were notified or not, there is still a legal obligation to pay."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Stephanie Kinsella, Ryan Cooke and the St. John's Morning Show