City Council approves final budget
June Casagrande
A momentous feat went practically unnoticed this week as the City
Council finalized and approved the city’s 2003-04 budget.
Long after the network TV crews left Tuesday night’s council
meeting, cameras full of footage on the controversy surrounding
Councilman Dick Nichols, the council was scrutinizing last-minute
spending requests, listening to some alarming statistics on
increasing costs for employee retirement benefits and ultimately
casting a unanimous vote to approve the city’s the $162-million
spending plan right on time.
“There have been six hours of public discussions on this so far,”
Mayor Steve Bromberg said as the council entered its final discussion
of the matter on Tuesday night.
In response to a request by resident Ron Winship at the June 10
council meeting, city staff reported this week that the cost of
employee retirement packages is expected to skyrocket.
For the coming fiscal year, the city will pay about $9.5 million
into the Public Employee Retirement System, a state-run fund that
pays retirement benefits for many public employees. Next year, the
amount that the city must pay into the retirement system will rise to
$14 million. In 2005-06, it will likely increase at an even greater
rate.
“It’s going to hurt, no question about it,” City Manager Homer
Bludau said Thursday.
Because police, fire and other safety employees get benefits about
six times that of other city employees, retirement costs for this
group represent the bulk of the city’s costs. Of the $9.5 million to
be spent in the coming year, about $7 million is for these safety
employees.
Because of the continuing economic downturn, the budget is a
status quo spending package with little room for play and, thus,
little room for debate. A few final supplemental spending requests
created only minor controversy among council members Tuesday.
Bromberg and Councilman Tod Ridgeway hammered out a compromise on
how to help out the Corona del Mar Business Improvement District.
Ridgeway said it was inappropriate for the city to pay $6,750 to
cover half the cost of printing the business directory.
“I think underwriting a chamber of commerce is inappropriate,”
Bromberg said.
After some back and forth, he agreed to chip in $5,000 for the
annual Corona del Mar Scenic 5K Race and another $10,000 for the
annual Christmas Walk. Bromberg also agreed to drop the request to
help fund the directory, but promised to try to commit a little of
his annual discretionary budget funds for the district.
“They’ve done so much for the city, they deserve this,” Bromberg
said. “It won’t be much, but it will be something.”
Gary Proctor got his wish for funding for two projects in his
district: $60,000 for some dredging in the West Newport waters for
environmental and navigational improvements and another $15,000 for
the West Newport Rejuvenation Project.
Proctor said he hopes the money will set in motion future
beautification projects for the area.
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