Council decides on balanced, benign budget for Newport
Lolita Harper
City leaders will search for ways to save and ways to serve on
Tuesday, all while keeping a proper balance of the city’s funds when
they analyze the proposed budget.
Department heads, council members and residents will review the
proposed expenditures and revenue sources for fiscal year 2004-05 at
a study session on Tuesday, when Administrative Service Director
Dennis Danner said officials will “really get to the meat of the
budget.”
The proposed $158.5-million budget was “very status quo,” Danner
said. It is balanced and straight-forward, taking into account
various economic factors such as the state’s unpredictable financial
woes.
“If we had this same budget next year, people would be pleased,”
he said.
City Manager Homer Bludau said the city “grappled” with issues
such as the rising cost of the city’s pension plan, the timing of
employee contracts and the cost of delayed capital improvement
projects that have rolled their costs into the upcoming fiscal year.
The Capital Improvement Program included in the budget serves as a
funding plan for Newport’s public improvements, special projects and
ongoing maintenance programs, Bludau said. The program, which
consists of about 100 projects, totals $24.2 million of the $171.2
million of calculated expenditures, according to the proposed budget.
The city plans to see a relatively flat increase in revenues,
estimating about $156 million, up only 1.38% from last year. The
strong housing market, which brought about high property values and
taxes in previous years, is expected to continue to bolster the
city’s financial standing. Officials expect property taxes to make up
26% of revenues.
“This financial plan for 2004-05 is a conservative, cautious,
balanced plan that still attempts to competently address all known
(and some uncertain) challenges we think we will face in the upcoming
year,” Bludau wrote in his summary.
City officials distributed the proposed budget on April 30 and
held public meetings May 11 and 25. Danner said council members will
make a “checklist” during the study session of various items they
would like to further scrutinize. City officials will take input from
the residents and rework the numbers for final adoption of the budget
on June 22.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.