Costa Mesa plans attack on budget
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Deirdre Newman
With the city spending $4 million more than its taking in this fiscal
year, city leaders are taking a two-pronged approach to preventing
budget problems in the future.
On Monday, the City Council will consider adding new revenue
sources and discontinuing or modifying existing programs.
The new revenue sources the council will consider are: increasing
the business license tax; increasing the transient occupancy tax,
which is paid by hotel guests; imposing a local sales tax; imposing a
sanitation franchise fee; and offering a voluntary fire medical
subscription fee, a program in which revenues would be used for
improving the quality of emergency medical services. The first three
options would require approval by residents at the polls.
The council will consider altering or cutting a total of 35
programs and services including the Drug Abuse Resistance Education
program, the shopping cart retrieval program, summer concerts at
Fairview Park, the Job Center and the highly-anticipated skate park.
“I think given a choice between finally having a skate park and
looking for new revenue sources like [an increase in] the transient
occupancy tax, I think we should go with the transient occupancy
tax,” said resident Geoff West. “It hurts no residents in the city.”
But some feel the current programs need to be addressed first.
“I feel it’s imperative that we address cuts in programs and
services prior to raising taxes or increasing fees,” Councilman Allan
Mansoor said. “I just think that’s the most fiscally responsible
thing to do at this point.”
While the new revenue sources would be more of a long-term
approach, examining the financial worthiness of programs can help in
the short-term, Mayor Gary Monahan said.
“Even though [discontinuing or modifying programs] has long-term
ramifications, it starts saving money up front if we do anything up
front,” Monahan said.
For this fiscal year, managers throughout the city have taken
actions to reduce spending. But more extreme measures, like
discontinuing or modifying programs may also be necessary, Finance
Director Marc Puckett wrote in his staff report.
The skate park shouldn’t even be on list of in-danger programs as
its not a general program, Monahan said.
“To use the skate park as an example, that’s one little capital
project that doesn’t save us money in the long-run,” Monahan said.
“[Looking at programs] is another step in a long-term process of
providing a blueprint for the future of the city government of Costa
Mesa.”
The list programs and projects that are up for consideration are a
compilation of suggestions by council members. So there might not be
a majority of city council members that feel they need to be
discontinued or modified, Monahan said.
Monahan will try to keep the discussion focused on general program
guidelines, he said.
“So in a general sense, are we spending too much time on
recreation programs, on staff development, on committees, research
and whatever,” Monahan said. “That’s what the staff has generated
this for -- to set priorities. To say, ‘what’s more important to us?
What programs do you feel are fluff or are not needed or are not that
important that if we need to cut the budget?’ That’s where we cut it
first.”
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