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Salem drinking fountain took $6,000, 2.5 years

Bureaucracy complicates man's 'fun' project

The Columbian
Published: October 1, 2014, 5:00pm
2 Photos
Anna Reed/Statesman-Journal
Marvin Sannes takes a sip Monday from the public drinking fountain he worked for more than two years to install near the Old West Salem City Hall in West Salem, Ore.
Anna Reed/Statesman-Journal Marvin Sannes takes a sip Monday from the public drinking fountain he worked for more than two years to install near the Old West Salem City Hall in West Salem, Ore. Photo Gallery

SALEM, Ore. — A newly installed drinking fountain adds a classy touch to a West Salem neighborhood, but for Marvin Sannes it’s also a parable about bureaucracy.

Sannes’ nearly 2½-year effort to have a drinking fountain installed on Edgewater Street NW has ended in success. The project took patience, ingenuity and cost Sannes about $6,000 — about three times more than he expected.

In spring 2012, Sannes became interested in a 1940s-era drinking fountain, which hadn’t worked in decades. The fountain was in front of Annette’s Westgate Cafe. Sannes thought it would be “fun” to get the old fountain working again.

“It turned into a big, involved process,” he said.

The owner of Annette’s let Sannes have the cast-concrete drinking fountain. Sannes started making plans to move it across the street and place it front of the old West Salem City Hall, a building at 1320 Edgewater St. NW that he has owned since 1989.

His vision of having a historic drinking fountain paired with a historic building hit its first obstacle when Sannes wanted to put the drinking fountain in the public right of way. Placement of the fountain was solved when the city agreed to buy a sliver of Sannes’ property, with the proviso that he would install and maintain the fountain.

The next hitch was harder to overcome: plumbing problems.

Sannes thought he could simply let the fountain drain into a catch basin, the same place rain goes after a storm.

He was wrong. As Sannes explains, he was informed by the city that “you can’t spit in the river.” The outdoor fountain would need to drain into a sewer pipe, just like a plumbing fixture inside a house.

‘Virtually impossible’

Unfortunately, Sannes found it was “virtually impossible” to hook up the fountain up to the sewer and stay in compliance with the plumbing code because of a number factors. He peppered city inspectors with questions about possible solutions to no avail.

“I just threw up my hands,” Sannes said.

Next, Sannes took his plumbing conundrum to a state building code expert. The state expert suggested that a French drain — a device that slowly releases water into the ground — would solve the problem.

After Sannes paid $2,000 to have a French drain installed, a city inspector came by and wrote a stop order, he said.

Sannes then learned that the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality would need to issue an “underground injection” permit before the French drain could be used. In response to a Statesman Journal inquiry, a DEQ spokesman confirmed that a state permit is required for projects that may inject water into the aquifer.

Sannes applied to DEQ for the permit, and a month later, it was approved.

Mike Watson, a foreman with Judson’s Inc. in Salem, the company that installed the fountain, said the installation itself was relatively simple. He didn’t find the permitting processes unreasonable.

“We just had to cross all our t’s and dot our i’s,” Watson said.

The fountain, which was restored by local artist Bob Thrush, has been operating for a couple of weeks.

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