Wednesday, March 10, 2010

City Manager Offers "Two Paths" to Close $3.5 Million Budget Gap

San Carlos City Manager Mark Weiss unveiled his Proposed 2010-11 City Budget today in preparation for City Council Budget Workshops scheduled in March. Copies of the proposed budget staff report are available for review at City Hall and on the City's Web Site.

The budget workshop, to be held on Saturday, March 13th at noon in the Community Rooms of the San Carlos Library, 2nd Floor, 610 Elm Street, will enable the City Council and community to hear a detailed budget presentation, offer public comments and hear City Council thoughts on the proposed budget.

The City Staff has also reserved the Community Rooms at the San Carlos Library for March 22nd starting at 6:00 pm in the likely event that the Council Budget Workshop is continued. Input from the workshop will be used to prepare the 2010-11 Budget to be presented to the City Council for review and approval in early May.

The City’s Proposed Budget for 2010-11 features "two paths" to a balanced budget. The recommended path involves City Council authorization for the City Manager and City Department Heads to prepare service agreements for receiving Police and Fire services from neighboring agencies and to explore contracting for parks maintenance services.

This option is projected to save the City approximately $5 Million or more per year and would cover the City’s budget deficit without necessitating additional cuts to City services. A second path features a series of major service changes in many City service areas. This option will save the City $3.5 Million per year and would close the City’s budget gap for 2010-11. Some of the key service reductions that would occur with the second option include:
  • Cutting 9 Full-Time positions including 2 Additional Police positions plus numerous Part-Time support personnel
  • Closing the Youth Center and Eliminating Administrative Support for Special Events in San Carlos (including Hometown Days, Art & Wine Festival and Summer Concerts at Burton Park)
  • Reducing City Counter Service Hours to 3 Hours Per Day and Closing the City Clerk’s Counter with Service Provided by Appointment Only
  • Freezing the City of San Carlos Contribution to the Funding of the Belmont-San Carlos Fire Department at the 2009-10 Budget level
  • Discontinuing Funds to Record and Broadcast City Council Meetings on Cable TV and the Internet
City Manager Mark Weiss said “Two years ago I indicated that the City of San Carlos was at a “Tipping Point” and asked the City Council to declare a fiscal emergency. Last year a local one-half cent sales tax designed to preserve City services (Measure U), was placed on the November ballot and was rejected by San Carlos voters. Thus, the major steps proposed in this budget to bring it into balance will not be surprising to those who have been following the local, state and national economy and the City’s fiscal status.”

Weiss added that “This is the 11th year in a row that the City of San Carlos will be making program and service cuts in the annual budget. Even though there were two rounds of budget cuts last year, the City’s General Fund Budget deficit has grown by almost $1 Million (from $2.6 Million last year to $3.5 Million this year) even after all of these cuts were implemented. This confirms the projections made last year that the current approach of making modest budget cuts each year and tapping into reserves is no longer sustainable.”

“What I am proposing in this year’s budget is a paradigm shift in how we view City services in San Carlos. Rather than continue to attempt to provide the full range of City services mostly in-house, I believe it is time to accelerate the use of contract services in several areas in an effort to improve efficiency and take advantage of economies of scale, while embracing a regional service delivery model.”

“With the help of the City Department Heads, we have developed a menu of options for the City Council to consider in the upcoming budget to fully close the $3.5 Million per year budget gap. The recommended path involves contracting out or outsourcing Police and Fire Department services in a more sustainable manner. Additionally, choosing this option would allow the City to preserve all services, including public safety, facilities and community events at their current, albeit already reduced levels. This approach addresses the budget deficit in an aggressive manner and avoids closure of facilities and continued deterioration of all City services.”

“This budget includes tough choices and offers a different view of the City’s future as we move forward. I envision a vigorous discussion as the Council explores and decides the road San Carlos will follow into the future. I invite San Carlos residents to attend and participate in this vital process.”

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