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Council budget vote tomorrow in new temporary venue -- Hiawatha City Hall; vote on $540,000 for Yardy protection should be highlight
Mar. 8, 2010 11:18 pm
CEDAR RAPIDS - All the heavy lifting on the City Council's next budget was completed a month ago when a council majority agreed to freeze commercial and industrial property taxes and to raise residential taxes by 2.89 percent.
This evening, the council will formally approve the budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, the council's first budget under new mayor, Ron Corbett. Another first: The vote will come in a new temporary home for the council, the council chambers at Hiawatha City Hall.
One piece of the vote on the new budget will be anything but a formality when the council decides if it will spend $540,000 from its solid-waste operation to buy an anti-tip guard, which a local inventor says residents need so they don't get hurt by city-issued Yardy carts.
Inventor Kim Brokaw says hundreds of residents will be hurt by the carts this year without the guard while the city staff says it has received only a few complaints about the carts in the last several years. [Editor's note: opening bidding would have been required had this project moved forward.]
The Hiawatha council venue, which Corbett has said is more conducive to council meetings, will serve as the Cedar Rapids council's temporary home until the council decides on its permanent home. The council had been meeting in the auditorium on the campus of AEGON USA since the flood of June 2008.
The council's decision in the new budget to hold the line on property taxes for commercial and industrial property owners came after a series of budget meetings. The first meetings saw department heads present their requests for additional spending while the last two meetings saw Corbett lead the council through a tedious review of the city's $96-million, property-tax-supported, general-operating budget.
In the end, the council majority balanced the new budget by making some cuts and with the help of $1.8-million in reserve funds, a move that council member Kris Gulick said was a bad business practice.
Corbett argued that the city will still have reserves equal to 31 percent of the general operating budget, which he said he is above the 25-percent level suggested in city policy.
The new budget will add about eight new employees to the city's 1,400-employee work force, with five of those additions going to the city's Finance Department.
The overall size of the city's annual budget normally would be in the range of $350 million when large user-fee-based departments like water and wastewater are factored in. With the city in the midst of a recovery from the June 2008 flood, the size of the budget will be an estimated $635 million for the new fiscal year.
Much of the growth represents federal and state flood-recovery dollars coming into the city.
In the proposed new budget, the owner of a $150,000 home will see property taxes from the city portion of the bill go up $30 a year from a current $1,041 to $1,071. The city's portion of the local property-tax bill is less than half of the total with the school district, Linn County and a few other smaller entities also levying property taxes.