Mayor’s 2012 budget taps fund balance to keep levy level

Mayor James Sottile’s proposed 2012 budget contains no layoffs and achieves a tax levy increase of less than 1 percent, but only by tapping $1.2 million from the city’s fund balance.

The proposed budget, which must be approved by the Common Council totals $36.5 million, up 2.2 percent from 2011. But the amount to be raised by taxes remains unchanged at $14.8 million. The amount of taxes to be raised from the city’s residential properties will rise by 0.67 percent while the commercial sector’s share of the tax levy will fall by 0.72 percent. Tax rates, meanwhile, will rise by 11.3 percent with homestead properties paying $7.09 per $1,000 of assessed value while non-homestead properties will be taxed at a rate of $14.37.

Sottile, submitting his last budget as mayor, said the tax rate increase reflected an 11.7 percent decline is the assessed value of all city properties. (The city assessor’s office instituted an across-the-board cut in assessments as part of the 2011 revaluation).

Advertisement

Sottile said the tax levy freeze comes despite an increase of $844,000 in mandated expenses, including hikes health insurance costs, payments to the state retirement system and debt service.

To offset those and other projected spending increases, Sottile has proposed using $1.2 million of the city’s unreserved fund balance. That will leave $1.3 million remaining in the city’s cash reserves. Services and personnel will remain mostly unchanged with the exception of the transfer of five laborers currently assigned to the Department of Parks and Recreation. DPW will assume responsibility for maintenance at city parks. Sottile backed off a plan to municipal trash pickup — which would have saved about $700,000 — in the face of strong public outcry.

The proposed spending plan makes good on Sottile’s stated intention to bring in a budget in compliance with the new state mandated 2 percent property tax increase cap. But, Sottile said, he was disturbed by the use of reserve funds, something he had chided the Common Council for in the past, to push down the tax levy.

“It’s extremely scary, but these are unprecedented times,” said Sottile. “Without mandate relief we don’t have a choice.”

Image: Mayor Sottile discusses the 2012 budget at a City Hall press conference Thursday morning. (Photo by Dan Barton)

There is one comment

  1. nopolitics

    He didn’t “have a choice” because somehow he is very actively angling to wiggle his way back into politics after exiting stage right but for a brief respite. They might have to make DPW chief an elected position and this would fit him perfectly–this way his yelling when he enters a building would work perfectly at DPW HQ(Tarzan did this too in the movies but we have to teach him to fluctuate his pitch a bit for better effect like Tarzan perfected– and listening to Helium voice Noble just isn’t quite the right training for that).
    The truly “scary” part of this is that under Sottile-Noble Benedictine Hospital gets the benefits of the large benefits paid by the city–which includes firemen with a drinking problem getting a nice stay on the euphemistically titled “Behavioral Health Unit”(whatever happened to AA? Well not enough $$$$ in that you see). whilst insurance paid by the city is bilked mercilessly for “Kingston’s great contribution to the routine healthcare fraud that is busting the federal budget collectively”–and for what? So they can put the Rule of St. Benedict in LARGER LETTERS(even as this becomes decreasingly meaningful?). MEH!

Comments are closed.