Spending fuels debate
Dave Brooks
Millions of dollars earmarked by voters for infrastructure are being
spent to repay loans on several city projects, including the
controversial Sports Complex.
Voters approved a measure in March 2002 requiring the city to
spend 15% of its annual $150 million general fund budget on
infrastructure needs, but a recent memo from the Public Works
Department shows that nearly $5.4 million of the fund is being used
to make loan payments for beach improvements, City Hall, an Orange
County Emergency Communications system, expansion of the library and
the Sports Complex.
The expenditures underscore a debate at City Hall about what
constitutes “infrastructure” and how voters intended the money be
spent.
“Any fixed construction that the city builds” can be considered
infrastructure, said Huntington Beach budget analyst Dan Villella.
“It could be a parking structure, sports complex, new lifeguard
headquarters; any real property improvements.”
Yet several members of the Public Works Commission said voters
were led to believe they were earmarking money to be spent on the
city’s dilapidated streets and sewage system, not repaying loans on
capital improvement projects.
Commissioner Dick Harlow said the current way infrastructure funds
were spent “was inconsistent with what the Infrastructure Advisory
Board recommended to the City Council,” he said, adding “we felt it
wasn’t what the voters supported.”
According to the text of the law, the definition of infrastructure
does include all “public buildings and public ways,” but the language
of the law says nothing about using the money to repay loans.
Instead, the law says money from the infrastructure fund “shall be
utilized only for direct costs relating to infrastructure
improvements or maintenance, including construction, design,
engineering, project management, inspection, contract administration
and property acquisition.”
Public Works Commissioner George Mason said he and others made the
discovery after repeated requests to learn how the money was spent.
“I think the idea was to at least keep maintenance levels the
same,” Mason said.
The infrastructure fund measure was passed by 57% of Huntington
Beach voters just one year after an ad-hoc committee released
findings that the city faced more than $1 billion in deferred
maintenance costs over the next decade.
“The infrastructure was in disrepair and that was what was sold to
the community,” Harlow said.
Instead, about $600,000 of the money is spent to pay off all of
the city’s contribution to the County Emergency Radio Communications
System. An internal memo on the financing of the project shows the
$80-million county system cost Huntington Beach about $5.9 million,
with $4.1 million of that money being financed through a 10-year
loan.
Another $2.5 million from the infrastructure fund is going to pay
off the Sports Complex and beach improvements on the south side of
the Huntington Beach Pier. Both projects were originally envisioned
to pay for themselves through the revenue they were expected to
generate.
Instead, the Sports Complex became a major headache for city
officials. Originally priced at $1.5 million, the cost of the project
skyrocketed to $16.3 million after planners discovered the site
needed to be cleaned up. The contractor hired to construct batting
cages and hockey rinks on the site later abandoned the project,
leaving it partially completed and the city holding the bag for the
$1-million price tag. Officials are still struggling to get the
Sports Complex finished.
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