Archives for category: Budget

Matt Leslie

On May 7 the Fullerton City Council approved two resolutions to charge more money to provide water to the city’s residents. The council unanimously voted for a simple pass through increase to ratepayers to accommodate higher costs charged by the Metropolitan Water District. Such an increase is all but unavoidable. The other measure, however, adopted in a split vote with Mayor Bruce Whitaker and Councilmember Greg Sebourn dissenting, enshrined a dubious formula for determining the cost of service the city will now charge its own water utility for the foreseeable future.

Money-Drain-copy

Last summer a council majority of Bruce Whitaker, Greg Sebourn, and Travis Kiger stripped away a 10% en lieu water fee perpetuated even after 1996‘s Prop. 218 made such levies illegal without approval by voters. It was supposed to be a cost of service fee for water delivery, though it was never applied for such a purpose. Recognizing that it was wrong to continue an illegal tax, Councilmembers Whitaker, Sebourn and Kiger voted to refund the maximum amount allowable back to the ratepayers. The November election altered these plans, however, by seating new council members who were not as responsive to the taxpayers.

In February the new council majority of Jan Flory, Doug Chaffee and Jennifer Fitzgerald accepted as valid a set of theoretical expenses based, in part, on the costs of leasing properties owned by the city to its own water utility, for everything from water storage to office space. Despite the evident lack of any such existing leases, this new majority of the council agreed with a staff assessment that the city should base its estimate on what they ought to have been directly charging the water utility in prior years, not on what was actually charged in the past. (See Ryan Cantor’s March 4 review of this farcical decision at Orange Juice Blog).

Because our water delivery system has been neglected, rates will inevitably increase to pay for repairs, and for increased energy costs to pump and transport water, but it shouldn’t be acceptable to raid an illegally collected fund for this purpose. Rarely have I ever witnessed a government so blatantly rationalize taking money from its citizens, who will not be pleased to find out that they won’t be receiving the full refund they had every right to expect.

UPDATED:

There is no Budget Study Session April 30. The meeting has been postponed to May.

Matt Leslie

There is a City Council Study Session about the 2013/2014 budget on Tuesday, April 30 at the Fullerton Public Library.  It isn’t on the City of Fullerton’s calendar anywhere where I can find it, but it is listed at the end of the agenda packet for the last city council meeting, so I am pretty sure it’s happening.

What time? Who knows?

Budget-Session

Matt Leslie

Yes, the Hunt Branch of the Fullerton Public Library is closed until further notice, and that notice is probably not going to come any time soon. Although the Library’s Board of Trustees closed the Hunt on March 28 with an emergency vote, no official information about the closure has been available on the city’s website or the library’s site.

Hunt 3:4 View

Instead, the city and library seem to be relying on the local website Fullerton Stories to report first, on April 1, that the Hunt would be open during its usual truncated schedule of Tuesdays and Thursdays, and then, strangely, later that same day, that the Hunt would in fact be closed and all of its programs relocated to other facilities, including neighboring Grace Ministries.

Why the contradictory information, and just what were the exact circumstances leading to the emergency closure? Evidently, the city does not consider a closure of a library  important enough for a press release.

An “Adjourned Meeting” of the Board of Trustees held in the Main Library’s Community Room on April 3 revealed more details about the closure, but nothing specific about why it became so necessary so suddenly last week. Instead, the trustees discussed what a sorry state the site was in and what they could and couldn’t do about it. There is no money for it expected in the next fiscal year’s budget unless the trustees and the interested public can wrangle it from the city council in the coming months. And it turns out that the additional operating funds allocated by the city council in the immediate past were taken from the library’s own reserves, and not the city’s General Fund, leaving the library no better off financially than they were before.

Trustee Chair and Retired City Manager Chris Meyer indicated that current City Manager Joe Felz intends to ask the City Council to defund the Hunt Branch for a two year period as a “temporary” action. Mr. Meyer responded to a story in Fullerton Rag on March 29 with the clarification that the Norton Simon Foundation had “released its reverter clause in the gift deed, and the facility is now unfettered by its requirement to solely be a library…”

One plan reportedly being considered is for neighboring Grace Ministries to take over the Hunt facility as its own administrative offices while the William Pereira designed office building on its property undergoes a renovation, but no details of such a plan were discussed Wednesday. Indeed, despite predictions by Mr. Meyer of “an opportunity for a renaissance of the facility, and the adjacent park” nothing has been proposed thus far to allow the public to know just what is happening with the site.

One has to wonder where the Fullerton Public Library Foundation, so effective at raising funds for the Main Library expansion in 2011, is at this critical moment. Although the The FPL Foundation is supposed to raise funds to augment city monies, and not replace them, one could hope they would take notice of the closure of one of the city’s two library branches and offer some form of assistance.