Tight assets, taut plan
Barbara Diamond
The 2005-06 draft city budget cuts pretty close to the bone.
Laguna will have to operate with an estimated income of
$55,552,850 and estimated expenditures of $56,316,350 in fiscal year
2005-06. The difference in revenue and spending is covered by a
starting balance of $9.6 million, according to a draft budget
prepared by City Manager Ken Frank.
He isn’t happy, but he isn’t ready to throw in the towel.
“If we are expected to maintain the current level of service, yes,
we are cutting close to the bone,” Frank said. “It’s not desperate,
but it is very tight and it’s worse [in] other places.”
San Francisco, he said, closes fire stations on a rotating basis
to save overtime. Richmond, despite its oil storage tanks, has laid
off firefighters.
Compared to some of the worst cases, Laguna is doing OK, Frank
said, but it certainly could be better. “Certainly we would like to
have more money for equipment, materials and supplies, but it is just
not there.”
Several factors have depreciated the city’s financial position,
said Frank. State cuts in property tax revenue have challenged
Frank’s legendary financial legerdemain. The cuts were approved by
the voters who overwhelmingly supported Proposition 1A.
“That measure allows the state to purloin another $1.3 billion
from cities, counties and special districts in the next fiscal year
to support its profligate spending habit,” Frank said.
Property taxes are the principal revenue source for Laguna, which
is more dependent on property taxes than virtually any other city in
the state, according to Frank.
“Laguna Beach will be tapped for $675,000 in property taxes next
year,” he said. “That loss exacerbates the difficulty in presenting a
balanced budget.”
City law requires the city manager to present a balanced budget to
the City Council by May 1.
In order to meet the requirement, Frank prepared a draft that
draws the line at increases in staffing, programs, and all but
minimal capital equipment outlays. Adjustments for inflation in
operating costs are described as “austere.”
Revenue and dedicated city funds must cover payroll, employee
pension and medical plans, emergency services, community services,
buying and servicing new city vehicles, cultural and community
programs, lighting city streets and cleaning them, protecting water
quality and repairing, replacing or constructing vital and
not-so-vital infrastructure, among other costs.
“On the positive side, Prop 1A effectively prevents future state
raids on cities, counties and special districts,” Frank said. “The
property tax transfer to the state will terminate on June 30, 2006.
Thereafter, the city will enjoy unfettered discretion in balancing
the municipal budget, and the state will have to confront its own
fiscal dilemma.”
Property tax rates also continue to increase at a comforting 8% a
year. The increase has exceeded that in the past two years, and in
fact has averaged 8.7% over the past decade, but the fiscally
conservative Frank never banks on the estimates.
The city almost always has a better-than-expected bankroll at the
mid-year budget evaluation, as a result of Frank’s propensity to
underestimate revenue and overestimate expenditures.
“Our [estimated] 8% increase in property taxes is a modestly
conservative projection, but it is still dependent upon substantial
increases in property values and an active real estate market,” Frank
said.
Meantime, city officials still have to contend with what Frank
describes as “pernicious increases” in employee retirement costs, due
to losses in the state public employee retirement system investment
portfolio. The 2005-06 costs to the city will be $536,000 higher than
the current year.
Other financial challenges to a balanced budget listed by Frank:
* Employee health costs have escalated faster than inflation for
several years, with a 15% increase assumed to start in January when
the municipal employee contract expires. Police and firefighters have
a contract in place.
* Workers compensation is costing the city about $2 million a
year, which Frank said he hopes has peaked.
* The abrupt cessation of Chevrolet’s donation of lifeguard
vehicles, which will now have to be purchased by the city.
* Maintenance of the Trapeze data retrieval system, which provides
public access to the city clerk’s records and the Community
Development Department files.
* $55,000 a year in additional expenditures for the countywide 800
MHz safety communications system, which was financially supported by
the county until the system was completed.
Expenditures from the city’s general fund -- the discretionary
funds available to the council -- are expected to total $36,880,050,
about 6.4% higher than last year “Unfortunately, in order to submit a
balanced budget, numerous worthwhile endeavors, which have been
initiated or endorsed by the council, are not recommended,” Frank
said.
No funding was included for a study of diagonal parking
($15,000-$20,000); a study of the Nyes Place truck ramp ($20,000);
consultation to keep South Coast Hospital in Laguna ($30,000); El
Toro Reuse Planning Authority ($25,000 outstanding in the current
year); design guidelines ($30,000); additional sidewalk cleaning
($13,000); or an undetermined amount for a contract being negotiated
with an association that represents the city’s hourly lifeguards. And
certainly not the $18-to-$20 million needed to plan and build the
village entrance.
In addition to these council-initiated items, Frank said, most
city departments would appreciate additional staff, reclassifications
of existing employees, more and/or newer vehicles, greater allowances
for equipment maintenance, computer services and other operating
expenses.
Additional funds must be directed to capital equipment
replacement, according to Frank’s memorandum to the council.
Frank excised most department requests from the budget for the
second consecutive year.
“Before any new, ongoing expenses are approved, the city needs to
provide adequate funding for the existing level of service,” Frank
said.
The draft budget is available for review in the city clerk’s
office at City Hall and at the Laguna Beach library. Copies may be
purchased in the finance department.
A budget workshop is scheduled for 9 a.m. May 7 in conference room
A at City Hall, 505 Forest Ave. For more information, call (949)
497-0705.
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