Wednesday, October 7

City Manager's 2010 budget proposal is a call to action

It will be impossible for the City of Geneva to sustain year after year of zero per cent property tax increases AND retain its current administrative structure AND current service-delivery model. City Manager Matt Horn sent that message loud and clear to Council and the citizens of the City of Geneva in his 2010 budget proposal.

In our view, Horn’s challenge is not a threat to raise taxes, but a call to action. Council must respond with bold, decisive choices following directly from the mission, vision, and priorities for the City it has already declared. In other words, it’s up to Council to now walk the walk, after talking the talk.

Horn’s proposed budget holds property taxes to a zero per cent increase for 2010, through a series of interdepartmental line items, and by refusing to bond for capital projects and foregoing an installment to the equipment amortization fund. In effect, he is allowing Council until the next budget cycle (which should begin the day after the 2010 budget passes) to deal with the long-term, structural challenges to the budget.

And the challenges are many. New York State faces massive debt, thanks to unrestrained spending and severe cuts in revenue attributable to the recession. State aid to the City, never guaranteed, is, therefore, in even more doubt. In addition, cities across New York State will likely receive, in 2011, a bill to cover shortfalls in the State pension fund to cover the costs of benefits for retired City workers.

And though the City will realize some cost savings for health insurance coverage for current employees in 2010, thanks to a change in plans offered, this does not eliminate all benefit increases. Even with some measure of health care reform at the federal level, policy premiums are projected to rise. The City can also expect further declines in sales tax revenue, the second highest source of revenue after property taxes.

Those are the challenges. But Horn, undaunted, says Council has already developed a framework to address them; the “strategic imperatives,” passed by Council in 2008: (1) “value for taxpayers,” i.e. giving tax payers their money’s worth in services; (2) “enhancing neighborhoods,” i.e., following through on the neighborhood initiative; (3) “engaged governance, i.e., better communication and deliberation; (4) “economic development,” i.e., investment and job creation.

His budget document, page after page, hammers home the priorities. The question is, “Exactly how will those priorities address the challenges?” That is for the City Council to wrestle with.

1 comment:

Tom Marsh said...

I think that you are very accurate in saying that the City Council is going to have to take a long hard and innovative look at the how the City is run and how it spends its money.

One step would be to look at the structure of the City work force. Geneva has something like 13,400 people and I would like to know how the size of our City payroll compares with other cities our size and our economic condition. Not only the number of employees and their pay but how those workers are used. Is Geneva making best use of its people?

A second area is income. The traditional source of income has been property tax. But in Geneva, that is only about 40% of the real estate. The rest for one reason or another is off the tax rolls. That ratio cannot be allowed to stand. A different source of income was revenue sharing from State and Federal government and/or grants. The funds are also being reduced. And in Geneva we are not helped by the fact that our representatives in Albany are now in the minority party and our member of the House of Representatives has limited ties to this area.

This means that the Council will have to look for more innovative ways of raising the money needed.

The one basic requirement is going to be that the Council and City Hall are going to have to work together and in complete trust.