City needs its ‘chump change’
Just days after the City Council voted to spend an unnecessary
quarter-million dollars on fancy street lights in South Laguna, City
Manager Ken Frank announced a hiring freeze.
Many residents are not happy with the prospect of higher taxes to
pay for disaster relief, so Frank used his executive powers to make
the point that the city cannot operate in the red.
Apparently the council majority hadn’t been paying attention when
city officials announced they were $1.2 million short on funding
needed to assure safety and access to Bluebird Canyon before the
winter rainy season begins. Those “emergency repairs” are estimated
to cost $7 million.
Down the road, restoration of the damaged public infrastructure is
expected to require an additional $5 million to $8 million.
When Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman, a South Lagunan herself, asked
that a previous decision to “go for broke” in sprucing up her
neighborhood be reconsidered in light of the financial strain on the
city, some on the council sputtered and fumed that it would open up a
Pandora’s box of redo’s on pet projects.
Kinsman wisely felt that, since the check for the extra-special
lights had not yet been cut, it made sense for her area to live with
the same no-frills street lights the rest of the town has.
The special lights will be owned and maintained by the city
instead of by the utility company.
That means the city -- instead of the utility company -- will be
liable for damages if anybody smacks into them.
“Chump change!” uttered Councilwoman Jane Egly about the $260,000
that Kinsman wanted to keep in city coffers instead of spending it
over the 30-year lifespan of the lights.
In normal times, Egly is probably correct in her assertion. But
these are not normal times.
There is no such thing as “chump change” when city officials are
looking around every corner to cobble together enough money to do
what needs to be done for public safety.
The hiring freeze is just the latest, most drastic step to save
money. Hiring freezes don’t cut the fat, they cut into the muscle and
bone of city services. The freeze might even mean there won’t be
staff to maintain those fancy lights in South Laguna.
There is no question that $260,000 -- “chump change” though it may
be -- could have gone a long way toward avoiding such a hiring
freeze.
It’s not going to be easy to rein in spending in a city that wants
the very best.
But in the wake of the June 1 landslide -- and the dearth of
assistance from government agencies -- that’s exactly what the
council must do.
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